TEUBNEE'S
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL GUIDE
TO
AMERICAN LITERATIIEE;
A CLASSIFIED LIST OP BOOKS,
IN ALL DEPARTMENTS OF LITERATURE AND SCIENCE,
PUBLISHED IN
Stii ittitely states 0f §,\nxla
DUEIlfG THE LAST FORTY TEAKS.
WITH
AN INTRODUCTION, NOTES, THREE APPENDICES, AND AN INDEX.
LONDON:
TRUBNEE AND CO., 12, PATERNOSTER ROW.
1855.
LONDON :
THOMAS HAKBILB, PETNTEB, SILVEE STEEET, FALCON SQUAEE.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Preface v
Introdfctiox , vii
BiBLIO&RAPHY —
I. Theology 1
tl. Jurisprudence 13
III. Medicine and Surgery 16
lY. Natural History 25
V. Philosophy and Mathematics 31
YL Education 32
1. Science of Education 32
2. College AND School Books 34
3. Juveniles 36
YII. Philology , 38
YIII. Modern Languages 42
IX. History 44
X. Geography 52
XL Military and Naval Sciences 56
XIL Politics 58
XTIL Useful Arts 61
XIY. Belles Lettres ; 67
XY. Fine Arts 75
XYL Music 76
XYII. Freemasonry 76
X YIII. MORMONISM 77
XTX. Spiritualism 77
XX. Guide Books, Maps, etc 78
XXL Periodicals 82
Appendix —
A. List of American Libraries 85
B. Smithsonian Institution :.. 88
C. United States Exploring Expedition 91
Index 9g
PEEFACE.
The ^^ Bibliographical Guide to American Literature/^ here
presented^ supplies a practical want long felt^ and was sug-
gested by the business of the Publishers, who are conscious
of its defects, and will be most happy to receive suggestions
for the improvement of future editions. At the same time,
however, that they acknowledge its many imperfections, they
feel confident it will prove the most complete work of its
kind, solely devoted to American books, yet published on this
side of the Atlantic.
Whilst engaged on the work, the propriety of accompany-
ing it with an Introduction became evident, and the Pub-
lishers have therefore prepared, with considerable labour and
research, a few pages of facts, leaving others to draw their
own conclusions as to the subjects presented. In this it has
been their aim to give a fair survey of American literature,
and by so doing contribute their mite to bringing about a
better appreciation in the parent country of transatlantic
letters.
The majority of the books comprising the ^^ Guide ^^ are
in stock, the remainder have been described from actual
sight. The prices affixed are those at which the books can
be supplied in England.
It is intended to improve on this effort in course of time,
VI PREFACE.
SO as to increase the work to the dimensions and scope of a
Bibliotheca Americana^ or reliable catalogue raisonne of
American books.
In the course of their researches, the Publishers consulted
many works bearing upon the subject of which the Intro-
duction treats, and take pleasure in acknowledging their
obligation to the productions of Messrs. Norton, Eoorbach,
Munsell, Putnam, Griswold, and others, for valuable informa-
tion.
With these remarks the Publishers respectfully lay before
the searcher after the good in American literature this little
volume, confident that it will be found useful for reference.
TEUBNEE & Co.
INTEODUCTION.
CHAPTER I.
A Survey of American Mind and Literary Progress from 1640 to 1820.
The absurd theory of man's intellectual degeneracy in the New World
obtained considerable popularity among Europeans shortly subsequent to the
formation of the United States Government, the Abb© Raynal, in his
History of the Indies, being among the first of philosophers and sages to
publish the pitiful fiction. Since then, all who aim at the not very desirable
distinction of depreciating America have adopted the Abbe's argument, with
various modifications, according to time and circumstances, notwithstanding
the many able refutations it has received. Mr. Jefferson, third President of
the Republic, proved the Abbe in error from his own mouth, by quoting the
celebrated speech of Logan, the Indian chief, as one of the finest specimens of
human eloquence extant. This the churchman conceded ; but declared it to
be the production of Mr. Jefierson. The statesman received the reply both as
a compliment to himself and as a retraction of the Abba's absurdity, which
it clearly was. Since then, the decided progress of America in all tliat
ennobles man is too palpable to be openly denied, although there are many
who refuse to allow this merit, or attribute it to European influence. Much
of this feeliug is owing, doubtless, to a want of proper knowledge ; and, so far
as the subject of American literature is concerned, we design to present some
historical facts, as an appropriate introduction to the succeeding catalogue of
transatlantic books. Our position enables us to judge impartially, and we
venture some statements relative to American letters, which if not new to
all, will at least be so to many. In performing this self-imposed task we shall
endeavour honestly to trace the origin and rise of American literature, to
state its merits fairly, to name its brightest ornaments, and to call British
attention to the benefits a closer acquaintance with it would confer on the
reading public of this — the parent country. In executing this design, it is no
part of our purpose to take a partisan or prejudiced view ; we merely aim at
the recital and consideration of facts.
It is worthy of note that the printing press was early introduced into the
British American colonies. The men who battled with the inhospitable clime "
and savages of New England for a new home were not unconscious of its
value, nor regardless of its light. They arrived in the cold wilderness of
Massachusetts in December, 1620, and from that period until 1630 received
additions from the Old W"orld. In 1631 their second settlement was formed
at Cambridge — a name significant of their love of learning ; where, as early as
1638, they built an academy, which in process of time became an honoured
college, establishing a printing house at the same epoch, in which, in January,
1639, printing was first executed in that part of America which extends from
the Mexican GruK to the Arctic Ocean.
These handmaids to mental culture had their influence in creating a taste
for literature, and are to be regarded as the germs of that freedom of thought .
and universal intelligence which all concede as characteristic of the American
people. That the press was but partially employed at first is natural, from
Vlll INTRODUCTION.
the limited number of the colonists, and their occupations of farming and
repelling the Indians ; but it is a remarkable fact that, in a year after its
establishment, or in 1640, an American book was issued from it (being the
first published in what are now the United States), which was soon after re-
printed in England, where it passed through no less than eighteen editions,
the last being issued in 1754 ; thus maintaining a hold on English popularity
for one hundred and fourteen years ! This was the " Bay Psalm Book." It
passed through twenty-two editions in Scotland, where it was extensively
known, the last bearing date 1759 ; and as it was reprinted without the com-
piler enjoying pecuniary benefit from its sale, we have irrefutable proof that
England pirated the first American book, being in reality the original
aggressor in this line. This first American work enjoyed a more lasting re-
putation and had a wider circulation than any volume since of American
origin, having passed, in all, through seventy editions — a very remarkable
number for the age in which it flourished.
Success attended the colonial press ; and in 1663 the first Bible printed in
America was published at Cambridge. It was unlawful to print an English
version of the Scriptures — that right being a monopoly enjoyed by some Court
favourite in England. The one printed in Massachusetts was Eliot's famous
Indian Bible, and although fifteen hundred copies were struck off , they are
now quite rare, and '' sealed books," as the tongue in which they are written
is literally a " dead language;" the tribe and all who had a knowledge of the
dialect being long extinct. Eliot's work is unique ; being at once a monument
to his piety, perseverance, and learning. Its literary successor was Newman's
Concordance of the Scriptures. This was compiled by the light of pine knots,
in a log cabin, in one of the frontier settlements of Massachusetts. It was
the first of its kind, and for more than a century was admitted to be the most
perfect, holding its place in public esteem until superseded by Cruden's,
which it suggested.
That learning was appreciated by the Pilgrim Fathers is not very remarkable.
They were a thoughtful people, despising ignorance. The wonder is that they
found time, surrounded as they were by the multifarious troubles incident ta
the introduction of civilization into a wilderness, to regard letters at all ; and
it is not to be supposed their writings should be either profound or brilUant.
Scholarship, however, was common among them, there being but few men
educated in New England not familiar with the classics. Cotton Mather was
justly regarded one of the most learned men of his time. He wrote in seven
languages with facility, was the author of no less than three hundred and
eighty-three works — one of which at least is still preserved in the standard
religious literature — and became a Fellow of the Boyal Society, being the
first American to receive that honour. Franklin, whose authority is current
in England, bears testimony to Mather's merit. He says of his Essays to do
G-ood, " perhaps they gave me a tone of thinking that had an induence on
some of the principal future events of my life."
It is rare to observe literature and art growing simultaneously with the
planting of a colony. The rough work of clearing the forest allows but little
time for the elegancies of refined life, even where the inclination for such
exists ; and yet what monarchical colony, still under the fostering care of the
parent government, has added one tithe as much to man's stock of mental
delights as the American nation has done in the brief period of its existence ?
It is contended by Mr. Alison and others of his class that " European habits
and ideas are necessary to the development of mind in America." If this
theory be correct, Canada, so long under English ideas and control, ought to
be prolific in authors. But what are the facts in her case? Who can point
to a Canadian author of note ? That country was ceded to Great Britain in
1763. In the following year a press was established at Quebec, being the first
in the colony, and no other existed there until 1775, when one was set up at
I
INTRODUCTION. IX
Montreal. An English author, writing of the United States and Canada, in 1789,
says, '' There is one miserable bookseller in Quebec, who is supported by
publishing a weekly gazette, in French and English (which, however, is neither
French nor English) ; and another in Montreal, supported on the same
terms." This was the truth, nor was there a second press in Montreal until
an American introduced it there in 1807 ; and the first printing done at
Kingston, Canada, was also the work of an American. In the case of British
India the facts are still more noticeable. Bombay came into the possession of
England in 1601, and yet printing is not known to have been exercised there
until 1792, or more than one hundred and thirty years after! This contrasts
unfavourably with American extension of the press, and bears its own com-
ment. Other instances deserve notice. Calcutta, the capital of British India,
was founded in 1690, as an English factory. The exact period of the intro-
duction of typography is not clear, but the earliest books known to have been
printed there bear date 1778. In this instance "European ideas" do not
appear to have operated to create a literature in India, however much they are
supposed to have aided its development in America. But as a slight illustra-
tion of the effects of American and British achievements in encouraging
literary desires in new countries, the history of Shawneetown, on the Ohio,
offers a contrast to Calcutta. In 1818 that place was a forest ; in 1826, eight
years later, it was a thriving village, with two newspapers ! 1
A few other instances or parallel cases are conceived to be pertinent. Where-
ever American enterprise penetrates, the printing press is found. It follows, as
indispensable to American life. The citizen requires mental as well as alimentary
food, and so great is the desire for reading, that printing presses were carried
with the army into Mexico, in the war of 1846, from which newspapers were
regularly issued, giving all necessary particulars of the campaign.
But we design to turn attention to other facts more decidedly in the way of
contrast. We have shown that printing was exercised in America in 1639. The
first typography executed in Eochester, Kent, the seat of an English bishopric,
bears date 1648, or nine years after the art was introduced into the forests of
Massachusetts ; and the earliest printing done in the great manufacturing city
of Manchester was in the year 1732, or nearly one hundred years subsequent
to the establishment of a press in America. The art was first practised at Glas-
gow (Scotland) and Cambridge (Massachusetts) the same year ; at Exeter, the
seat of another English bishopric, in 1668 — thirty years later than in the United
States ; and not in the great commercial city of Liverpool until after the year
1750 — one hundred and eleven years later than in the tinited States — when the
population was not far short of 25,000 ; nor was a newspaper printed there
before May, 1756. New York, Philadelphia, and Boston were immensely in
advance of her then (as they are now), with fewer inhabitants.
Another instance of this kind, and we will revert to other matters. Louisiana
was settled by the French, under whose rule and that of Spain it continued for
more than a century up to 1803, when it was sold to the United States. At that
time there was but one press in the province, but in less than a year several print-
ing houses were established by Americans in the city of New Orleans alone, This
patronage of the press has its source in the literary tastes of the people, and
nothing is more natural than where there are printers there are authors. A taste
for reading induces authorship, just as appetite grows by what it feeds on.
Prejudice destroys appreciation, and in this we have the secret of that depre-
ciating opinion of American literature, so often expressed in Europe. To meet
with its opposite is refreshing in our days. The author of the work on American
books before quoted, although writing in 1789, speaks with so much liberality and
justice, that his views deserve repetition, as forming a strong contrast to those
of Mr. Alison. After some general observations he says, "America may claim
the possession of all useful learning. Science has not only reared her head, but
flourished with a degree of vigour in the New World that threatens to surpass
X INTRODUCTION.
the Old. Their orators, lawyers, physicians, historians, philosophers, and mathe-
maticians may be fairly opposed to our most successful cultivators of science
and the liberal arts j" and although this opinion is rather florid, it contains
much less extrava^rant praise than appears to the prejudiced mind, as a little
investigation will show. To make this apparent we intend to quote another
view of American mind, and then answer both quotations by facts.
In the January number of the Edinburgh Review, of 1820, at page 69, will
be found a criticism on Adam Seybert's Statistical Annals of the United States,
published at Philadelphia, in 1818. The writer, who subsequently proved to be
the Rev. Sydney Smith, says sneeringly of the Americans, *' during the thirty
or forty years of their independence they have done absolutely nothing for the
sciences, for the arts, for literature, or even for the statesmanlike studies of
politics or political economy j" and goes on to ask where are their Foxes, Burkes,
Scotts, Byrons, Siddons, etc., concluding this catalogue of confident *' wheres"
with a sentence whose spirit is frequently quoted, and which is as follows : —
" In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book ? or goes to
an American play ? or looks at an American picture or statue ? What have they
done in mathematics or science ?"
Now we propose to answer some of these confident interrogations ; and in
doing so shall confine ourselves to fact?, well known even to the writer of the
sneer. The witty Canon was so fond of irony, that the whole thing may have
been one of his jokes ; but, however that may be, we shall view it as commonly
received, and as its language warrants.
To the first query it may be answered, that many American books were then
read in England, which country may or may not be in one " of the four quarters
of the globe," according to individual opinion. Even Sydney Smith may have
read — aye, studied — an American book, for it is scarcely possible Englishmen
can be ignorant of the fact that Lindlet Mtireat was an American. His
Grammar of the English language, we suspect, commanded some attention in
the last century ; and it is not expanding probability too far to suppose the tart
reviewer to have acquired a scientific knowledge of his parent tongue from an
American work. Murray's Grammar was first published in 1795 — sufficiently
early to have fallen into Sydney's schoolboy hands— and has not yet either been
surpassed or entirely superseded. The same author compiled an English Header^
once very popular as a school book, and wrote a work on the Power of Re-
ligion, which passed through seventeen editions — six of which were published
in this country.
Other American books, on profound subjects, were not unknown here at that
time. Jonathan Edwards, said to have been the first man of the world during
the second quarter of the eighteenth century, has many European admirers now.
The British people need not be told he was an American, nor will those familiar
with his works deny his right to the above high encomium. As a theologian, Dr.
Chalmers and Robert Hall declare him to have been the greatest in all Christian
ages ; and as a metaphysician, in which abstruse science he particularly excelled,
those high authorities, Dugald Stewart and Sir James Macintosh, pronounce
him unsurpassed. His works supplied Godwin the fundamental principles of
his Political Justice ; and Dugald Stewart asserts that his essay on the Will
never was and never will be answered. He has been ranked with Bacon as a
philosopher — a position his genius fully justifies. And yet this man was bom
in a wilderness, and received his education in an institution inferior to many
second-rate preparatory schools of this time.
It is barely possible Englishmen are not aware Benjamin West, President of
the Royal Academy, was an American. His pictures were " loolced at^^ before
the advent of this century, if not in one, at least in a part " of one of the four
quarters of the globe." William Beckford, who was believed to be somewhat
of a critic in art, pronounced West's Lear " as fine as the Laocoon,' ' exclaim-
ing, when he beheld it, " The painter must have been inspired when he painted
k
INTRODUCTION. XI
;his— there are drama, expression, drawing, everytliing !" His pupil, Gilbert
Stuart, some of whose works adorn the Vernon Gallery, was an American, and
he best portrait-painter of his age. His pictures were " looked at" before 1820 ;
md so were those of G. S. Newton, another American, whose excellent gem of
Sterne and the Grisette is admired by thousands who are not aware of its
A-merican origin.
As to the achievements of transatlantics in medicine and surgery at that time
we have something to say. Chalmers, in his Biographical Dictionary, speaks
)f Dr. Benjamin Rush, of Philadelphia, as one who was constantly making
iiscoveries in the science of medicine. " He enlarged," says that writer, "our
riews of the animal economy, and threw more light on the true character of
Tout, dropsy, and consumption of the lungs, than is to be derived from the
nvestigations of any other writer." This is high praise, but it was deserved,
riie same authority further declares, "that the respect and consideration
?7hich Dr. Rush's publications procured for him among his contemporaries was
mch, that the highest honours were accumulated upon him in Europe." The
S-eedom of Edinburgh was voted him when quite a young man. He died in
1813 ; and had Sydney Smith's reading been as extensive as his censure of
America, he would not have asked in 1820, " What does the world yet owe to
American physicians ?"
Referring to the — "What have they done for the statesman-like studies
of politics or political economy ?" we may be excused for calling atten-
tion to Franklin, Jefferson, Hamilton, and Jay, as writers of great original
merit in this line. Of the Federalist, a work written by the celebrated
Alexander Hamilton, this same EdinhurgJi Review remarks, " it exhibits an
extent and precision of inforaiation, a profundity of research, and an acuteness
of understanding, loJiich ivould have done honour to the most illustrious states-
men of ancient or modern timesP Which opinion, if it be sincere, indicates
that America has done something " for the statesman-like studies of politics
or political economy."
At that time Rittenhouse and Godfrey had given to the world the results of
their mathematieal investigations. The first was an astronomer of some note;
and to say that the latter was the inventor of the Mariner's Quadrant, of
which honour he was openly robbed by Hadley, of London, to whom the in-
strument was sent by Franklin, may be quite as much of a surprise to some
as the statement that Lindley Murray was an American.
From these references to Americans already widely celebrated up to 1820,
we conclude that the United States had done much, very much, at that period
for art, for literature, for science, and even for the " statesman-like studies of
politics or political economy ;" more than all the colonies of the world com-
bined. Yes, more, up to that early date, than all those colonies had then done
or have accomplished since ; and her progress in all these mental fields, in the
subsequent thirty-four years to this date, must, when calmly contemplated,
command at least respect, if it do not excite wonder and astonishment. The
American can point with commendable pride to the intellectual achievements
of his countrymen, nor will any candid mind deny the propriety of the exulta-
tion, when he reflects that the Cnited States, in some seventy years, have sprung
from the position of hampered colonies, voiceless among the nations, to be the
second commercial power of the earth. Their swift advancement as an inde-
pendent people indicates excellence somewhere, and the general opinion is, that
their government is the parent of their progress. Seventy years ! Why, it is
the allotted life of man, and but little more than the length of time reigned by
one or more English kings. And yet what are the benefits discovered to man-
kind in George the Third's reign, when compared with the advantages conferred
on the human race by the United States in seventy years ? But little truly ;
still, people expect more. They seem to forget how brief is the national exist-
ence of the American Republic, and carp because she has not done more for
Xll INTRODUCTION.
literature, for art, and for science in seventy, than lias been accomplished by
some of the old States of Europe in a thousand years.
CHAPTER II.
American Literature considered particularly with reference to the last Forty Years, as illus-
trative of the following Catalogue,
Ceetain living European writers of note have endeavoured to prove that
" hterary and intellectual abilities of the highest class are comparatively rare
in America." Mr. Alison has several times put forth this declaration, with
modifications to suit the different periods at which editions of his History have
appeared. It is somewhat diverting to remark the ingenious revision his views
have undergone on this subject. In the tenth volume of the edition of 1844, he
confidently asserts that *' literature and intellectual ability of the highest class
meet with little encouragement in America;'^ and in the thirteenth volume of the
edition of 1850 the sentence reads " literary and intellectual abilities of the
highest class are comparatively rare in America.'^ Here we have a change
of opinion a child — and a very dull one, too — could comprehend. Why is
this ? What operated so powerfully on the historian to induce this variation ?
Or, if he discovered himself in error, why did he not honestly confess ? The
transmutation evinces determined illiberality, barbed with a spirit strongly
resembling envy. Surely, but little reliance can be reposed in the accuracy of
the historian who cancels his statement of yesterday by changing its sense
to-day. He that does so has no faith in himself, and his readers can have
none in him.
But we turn to others of Mr. Alison's facts. In the edition of his works
of 1844, he says, " the names of Cooper, Channing, and Washington Irving,
indeed, amply demonstrate that the American soil is not wanting in genius of
the most fascinating character, but their works are almost all published in
London ;" which, he sagely adds, "is a decisive proof that European habits
and ideas are necessary to their due development." This wise opinion was
also revised ; for in the edition of 1850 he condescends to tell us, that " so
great is the influence of English popularity in America, that the highest class
of American authors, such as Cooper, Prescott, and Washington Irving, publish
all their works in London, in preference to their own country."
These changes rung by the historian on American chimes show wonder-
ful skill in historical legerdemain, and the easy mutation of his opinions. We
have not searched subsequent editions of this author for further slight histori-
cal dissimilitudes ; but should his future corrections keep pace with what we
have quoted, it is likely enough he will be found to say that all these authors
not only published, but were born and wrote in this country.
His opinion of 1844 is rather vague — that of 1850 deficient in fact. The
reality is this. All Cooper's early works were first published in New York ;
his later ones simultaneously in Philadelphia and London. All of Washington
Irving's — with one exception — including the Sketch Book, were first issued
in New York ; and all Mr. Prescott 's first appeared in America. Of the
Sketch Book, the JEdinhuLrgh Review, No. xvii., August, 1820, says, *'it is the
work of an American, entirely bred in that country ; originally published
within its territory, and, as we understand, very extensively circulated and
very much admired among its natives." If only one case were needed to fix
premeditated misrepresentation on Mr. Alison, this would do it. Not one,
however, but numbers could be adduced ; and the surprise is that any man in
his senses — as Mr. Alison is presumed to be — would be guilty of printing such
a palpable fiction, so susceptible of disproof, as that "the highest class of '
INTRODUCTION. XIU
American authors * * * publish their works in London, in preference to
their own country."
His assertion, that high literary and intellectual abilities are comparatively
rare in America, will not bear investigation. We have already referred to many
great names in American literature, distinguished at home and abroad, that do
much to destroy this. It is our aim to mention others. Heretofore we have
dealt mainly with writers tolerably well known anterior to 1820. It is our pur-
pose in this paper to refer to such as have become known since that period, to
name a few of those who flourished prior to it, and to direct the reader's atten-
tion to the works of Americans, the titles of which compose our " Bibliogra-
phical Gruide to American Literature."
In Theology no country of this age can boast abler writers than America.
We need only mention the names of Barnes, Alexander, Cheever, Robinson,
and Stuart, in order to have our opinion confirmed on this subject by every
reader familiar with the works of these authors. Barnes's Notes on the Grospels
need no laudation at our hands. Bush's Notes are standard commentaries.
Cheever's various works abound in profound thought and valuable observation.
Edwards's works have already been fully characterised, and we refer to them as
described in our Catalogue. Dr. Robinson's Biblical Researches in Palestine is
a work that would do honour to the ablest biblical scholar of Europe. Moses
Stuart's Commentaries are remarkable for the research and learning of the author.
Bloomfield, in his Notes on the New Testament — the most elaborate and popular
of its kind produced in England in the present age — acknowledges that he has
work made large use of Stuart ; and his last edition owes its chief value to Stuart
and Robinson. The valuable publications of the American Bible Union should
be mentioned with praise. Gobat's Journal of Three Years' Residence in Syria,
the Life of Judson, the Missionary, and other American works relating to 'the
modern Church, are among the lighter class of this description of literature.
A long list will be found under the head of " Theology," at page 1, to which we
call attention.
History is justly regarded as the highest walk in literature. In order to be
successful the historian must possess mental, scholastic, and philosophical re-
quisites of the highest character ; and yet but few European writers who have
essayed this lofty theme of letters surpass Prescott, Bancroft, or Irving in
purity of style, eloquent description, philosophical deduction, or general accu-
racy. These stand in the front rank of modern historians. Each has marked
out a new style. Their works are purely national, particularly so those of
Prescott, whose pages are so imbued with the spirit of freedom, that conti-
nental publishers, in very many cases, have been obliged to alter their tone and
language so as to make them acceptable to th3 advocates of absolute monarchy.
Our space compels us to confine our remarks to a few works of this class. We
refer, however, to the appropriate heading, at page 44, where will be found a
most comprehensive list of American works in the department of history, par-
ticularly with reference to the United States. Am.ong them are Prescctt's vari-
ous works, Coopcris Naval History, Bancroft's valuable works, American Bio-
graphy by Sparks, Lossing's Field" Book of the American Revolution, School-
craft's History of the Indian Tribes, the writings of Washington, Franklin,
Webster, Jefferson, Jay, and others, together with Historical Collections of a
majority of the individual States.
But lew names among Mathematicians have a wider fame than that of Na-
thaniel Bovyditch, the self-taught translator of La Place's Mecanique Celeste.
His work is acknowledged to be superior to the original — a rare merit in a
translation— being extremely explicit, and adorned with new discoveries. W^hen
the first volume appeared, the London Quarterly JReview declared "the
idea savoured of the gigantesque," and even if not completed, the instalment
"should be considered highly creditable to American science, and as the har-
bmger of future achievements in the loftiest fields of intellectual powers." The
h
XIV INTRODUCTION.
successful accomplisliirent of the work is a monument to American talent
destined to last for centuries.
It is pretty generally conceded that none but superior minds successfully
master Science. No branch of this field of mental investigation has been neglected
by America. What has been done in this walk of human knowledge by Ameri-
cans is nearly all of a practical and useful character, particularly adapted to
the uses of man. The study of Meteorology has been pursued with very great
success in the United States, at least the results attained there equal those of
other countries. Franklin's discovery in Electricity stands alone. The inves-
tigations of E-edfield and Espy into the nature of storms show much ability,
as well as progress in discovery. Their ideas have been reduced to practice by
Lieutenant Maury, whose Wind and Current Charts (see Naval and Military
Sciences, page 26) have the confidence and approval of nautical men through-
out the globe. A. list of these invaluable contributions to navigation will be
found as above, with a comprehensive register of American works relating to
military and maritime affairs.
The Government of the United States has published many exceedingly valu-
able Maps and Charts illustrative of the gigantic Coast Survey of America now
in progress. These are engraved in the finest style, and their accuracy is com-
plete. The French Admiralty authorities have pronounced them superior to
anything ever accomplished in the same line in France ; and all who have ex-
' amined them agree as to their great practical value. (See page 57.)
In this general survey of books on Science, mention of a few works on the use-
ful arts of Agriculture, Architecture, Domestic Economy, Engineering, Manu-
factures, Grardening, Machinery, &c., is considered appropriate. Downing's Fruit
and Fruit Trees of America deserves to be more generally known in Europe.
Overman's work on the Manufacture of Iron is a leading book, not surpassed
by any similar publication. Maban's and Millington's books on Civil Engi-
neering are unequalled ; in fact, they are the most valuable works on this
science in the English language. Ewbank's Hydraulics is another leading pub-
lication, being the only production in the language on the subject. GrifRths's
treatise on Naval Architecture is not only valuable, but almost indispensable to
the modern ship-builder. In Practical Chemistry, Morfit's works on Soap and
Candle Making, Tanning, &c., are also leading books, being of immense
value to persons engaged in the trades of which they treat.
Mahan's Industrial Drawing is one of the most successful manuals yet pub-
lished on the subject ; and Minifie's Text-book of Geometrical Drawing has
been adopted for the last year or two as a text-book by the British National
Schools of Design : a compliment deservedly conferred.
In this connection we must not omit to refer to the masterly works of Lieu-
tenant-Colonel Stuart on the Naval Dry Docks and Naval and Mail Steamers
of the United States, as possessing much practical information, admirably pre-
sented to the reader, and particularly worthy the notice of marine engine and
ship builders. (See pages 61 to 66.)
The most valuable American works on Political Economy treat of the cir-
culating medium and manufactures. Those on Currency and Banking, by
Gallatin, Raguet, Tucker, and Gouge, are extremely valuable. The productions
of Wayland, Colton, and Yethake are text-books in American colleges. Mr.
Carey's able works on the Principles of Political Economy, the Production of
Wealth and Wages, and on the Credit Systems of France, England, and the
United Stales, have attracted extended notice in Europe, where the originality
of his views has excited much discussion and speculation. (See page 59.)
And appropriate to this subject, we may mention De Bow's Encyclopsedia
of the Trade and Commerce of the United States, and De Bow's Monthly
Review (page 83), as w^orks of merit, deserving notice. The latter is devoted
to the commercial and industrial interests of the South and West, and with
Hunt's Merchant's Magazine (page 83) furnishes a most intelligible and com-
INTRODUCTION. XV,
prehensive survey of the progress of American commercial, manufacturing
banking, agricultural, and industrial affairs.
A list of books more particularly relating to politics, banking, commerce
currency, political economy, and statistics, comprising tlie greater part of the?
authors above named, begins at page 58 of our Catalogue.
Mr. Alison permits himself to speak highly of American legal writers.
He says, " this class exhibits a degree of learning, judgment, and penetration,
which, honourable to any country, is in the highest degree remarkable in one,
the career of which has so recently commenced." This recognition of merit
involves an acknowledgment which must have been made without due con-
sideration, particularly as Mr. Alison is so loth, as a rule, to allow credit to
transatlantic mind ; but prejudice could not deny the worth of the labours of
Story, Kent, Bradford, Livingston, and Wheaton. The writings of these
have had a powerful influence on the common and positive laws of C hristendom.
Three of them are familiar to the English law student ; nor is Mr. Alison in
error when he asserts that " their works are superior to any systematic writings
of a similar description, which England has produced." Eor information as
to American law works see " Jurisprudence," at page 13.
Philology has enlisted many great minds in the exploration of its mysteries.
Dr. Johnson brought all his learning and the force of his mental powers to
the task of systematizing the English language, and with what success his
Dictionary bears evidence. Great, however, as his work undoubtedly is, it is
surpassed by that of Noah Webster. Of this transatlantic production, the
London Times — generally regarded high authority — says, "we can have no
hesitation in giving it as our decided opinion that this is the most elaborate
and successful undertaking of the kind which has ever appeared ; " and the
JEnglish Journal of Education emphatically declares Dr. Webster " the greatest
lexicographer that has ever lived." This brilliant instance of American
excellence in English lexicology needs no lustre from other names. There
have, however, been many successful American explorers of other languages.
The aboriginal dialects of America were subjects of early investigation.
Duponceau's Report on the Languages of the American Indians, Gallatin's
Indian Vocabulary, Pickering on Uniform Orthography for the Indian
Languages of North America, and Rigg's Grammar and Dictionary of the
Dakota Language, are works of wonderful merit. The Missionaries of the
United States have performed great service in this branch of science in all parts
of the globe. Their works are numerous, and therefore reference to a few of
the most valuable is all our limited space will permit. Among these are
Judson's English and Burmese Dictionary ; Knight's English and Tamil
Dictionary; Mason's Synopsis of a Grammar of the Karen Language, em-
bracing both dialects, Sgau and Pgho, or Sho ; the Grammar of the Mpongwe
Language, with Vocabularies, by the Missionaries of the Gaboon Mission,
West Africa ; Rhenius's Grammar of the Tamil Language ; Riggs on the
Armenian, Chaldee, and Bulgarian ; and the Chinese Vocabulary of Wells
Williams.
Duponceau's Dissertation on the Nature and Character of the Chinese
Language is a remarkable publication, second probably to no similar work.
The able Latin-English Lexicon of Mr. Andrews, founded on the celebrated
work of Dr. Freund, is beyond doubt the best of its kind, as well as an evidence
of the discrimination of American scholars. This is a class-book in English
colleges, and although of German origin, the British student is solely indebted
for it to the American press.
In connection with this subject we call the attention of linguists, philologists,
and those interested in antiquities, to the Catalogue from pages 38 to 42. In
this list will be found the truly scientific and scholarly Hebrew and English
Dictionary of Gesenius, by Professor Robinson, of New York. It is not
exaggeration to say this is the very best Hebrew- English Dictionary in existence.
XVI INTRODUCTION.
Dr. Eobinson was a pupil of the great scholar whose celebrated work he has
rendered so masterly into English, and is, beyond question, one of the pro-
foundest scholars of the age. The ability and labour bestowed upon this
production are acknowledged by all liberal minds who have devoted time to its
examination, and the honesty with which the work has been performed,
without commission or omission, adds much to its actual value.
A list of works on "Modern Languages," of American origin, begins at
pa^e 42.
Much attention has been devoted to Natural History by Americans. No
European ornithologist ranks above Audubon. Cuvier said of the great work
of this latter — the Birds of America — "it is the most splendid monument
which art has erected in honour of ornithology." The Quadrupeds of North
America, by the same author, aided by Dr. Bachman, is no less valuable
as a contribution to science. De Kay, Cassin, and Giraud have also adorned
these interesting subjects.
In the profound science of Ethnology America has gained honourable dis-
tinction. Morton's Crania Americana and Crania Egyptiaca are works of vast '
research and value, being among the most important ethnological productions
of the age, throwing much light upon the cranial peculiarities of the human
race. The researches of Gallatin, Squier, Bartlett, Pickering, and Hale are
important contributions to ethnology ; while Nott and Gliddon's Types of
MartTcind is, beyond question, among the ablest achievements in this science
published in either hemisphere during the last ten years. \
The names of Hare, Webster, Silliman, and Henry amply demonstrate I
American skill in Chemistry. Hitchcock, Jackson, Silliman, Mather, Hall,
Comstock, Owen, Dana, Eogers, Troost, and Percival have contributed vastly
to our knowledge of Geology ; and the excellent botanical works of Torrey
and Gray, the " Sylva " of Michaux, and the researches of Bartram, Barton,
and Elliott, show how widely tlie science of Botany is extended and appreciated
in the United States.
Learned societies in America have published many valuable essays and
memoirs on scientific subjects. Among these are the Transactions of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, of the American Geologists' and
Naturalists' Association, and those of others, all of which are inserted at page
30 of this Catalogue.
Under the appropriate head of " Natural History and Science," we are confident
our readers will discover the titles of many able works on Astronomy, Botany,
Chemistry, Anatomy, Conchology, Ethnology, Microscopy, Mineralogy,
Herpetology, and other kindred subjects, not the least important of which are
those illustrative of the Natural History of New York, published by the
authorities of that State.
The system of education is so liberal as to have enlisted some of the finest
talent of the country in the production of school and college class-books.
The labours of Dr. Anthon in this field of usefulness are known in Europe.
His contributions to our classical instructors are nowhere better appreciated
than in Great Britain. The list under the heading " Education," at page 32,
is comprehensive ; nor should w^e fail to call attention to w^orks enumerated
there of a more historical character — those of the Hon. Henry Barnard. This
gentleman has devoted a useful life to the subject of common schools, and the
results of his observations and experience, as recorded in his various works,
contribute greatly to elucidate the American system of National Education,
and to simplifying its practical workings. His labours as Superintendent of
Common Schools in Connecticut, in forwarding the cause of education, have
been very successful, and are properly appreciated in Europe, where, during
his last visit, he acquired an extended circle of warmly attached friends. We
regret to say Mr. Barnard's health is seriously impaired through his devotion
to his favourite pursuit — in fact, to such an extent as to oblige him to resign
INTRODUCTION. XVll
the post of Superintendent ; wMcli he so long, so ably, and so honourably
occupied.
As a natural result of their Common Schools, the Americans have produced
many exoellent Juvenile Works. The honoured name of Peter Parley (S. G-.
Goodrich) when pronounced calls to mind many of the pleasantest incidents
of our youth. For more than twenty years his delightful compositions have
instructed and edified children in both hemispheres ; and it is to be regretted
that unprincipled usurpers have invaded the field of his well-earned fame —
even under his own banner. A few of his more recent works are mentioned
under the appropriate head, beginning at ]3age 36, in which catalogue are
many productions admu^ably designed for the instruction and entertainment of
youth.
I Great attention has been given to the subject of Geography by Americans.
They are probably not behind any other nation in this field of research, as the
various gazetteers issued in the country testify, as well as the various maps and
other matters relating to this science. (See page 52.) To the wandering habits
of that people we owe some of the best books of modern travel, adventure, and
exploration. Stephens, Norman, Squier, Bartlett, and Fremont have written
fascinating works on the wonders of the New World. Among the more
delightful lighter works on travel are Cheever's Pilgrim in the Shadow of
Mont Blanc, Headley's Letters from Italy, Willis's Pencillings by the Way,
Taylor's Lands of the Saracens, and Dana's Two Years Before the Mast, all of
which are not only valuable as records of wanderings, but as possessing rare
literary merit.
In the higher branches of Philosophy and Speculation, Mathematics and
the Moral Sciences, the names of Edwards, Alexander, Way land, Robinson,
Upham, and Bowditch, before noted, are sufficiently known to receive
attention. A list of their works begins at page 31, under " Philosophy and
Mathematics."
Belles Lettres and General Literature have been successfully cultivated in the
United States. No arguments are needed to prove that true poets exist there.
The name of Longfellow is a household word in England, where the excellence
and beauty of his compositions are universally conceded. Bryant, Whittier,
Willis, Buchanan, Reed, and Edgar A. Poe, also, sustain reputations as poets
few will have the temerity to call in question. The Raven of the latter is the
most remarkable poem written in the last thirty years, "unsurpassed in
English poetry for subtle conception, masterly ingenuity of versification, and
consistent sustaining of imaginative power." The Closing Scene, by Mr.
Read, is an equally finished production, full of classic beauty and graphic
delineation. The North British Review pronounces it equal to Gray's Elegy —
which is praise justly deserved.
Dr. Channing's Essays exert a powerful influence for good even in Europe.
His masterly mind produced some of the richest intellectual fruits of the
present century. Southey declared him "a blessing and honour to his
generation and country ;" and his fellow-citizens fully value both his mental
and moral greatness.
In the field of Fiction American authors have been wonderfully successful.
The names of Cooper, Irving, Paulding, Bird, Kennedy, Ware, Willis, Poe,
Hawthorne, Mrs. Stowe, Miss Sedgwick, Mrs. Child, Miss Mcintosh, and
others, only need mention to make this clear to the most incredulous.
In light, racy writing, full of life pictures and luscious fancy, Ik. Marvel
(Donald G. Mitchell), Bayard Taylor, N. P. Willis, and H. Theodore Tucker-
man, have no superiors among the young writers of this age.
American humour has undoubted claims on attention. Its originality
cannot be denied. The Charcoal Sketches of Joseph C. Neal were so highly
thought of by Charles Dickens, that he had them published entire, in 1841, in
the middle of the '* Pic Nic Papers," without so much as condescending to
XVlll INTRODUCTION.
the littleness of giving the author's name. Sam Slick's oddities provoke
laughter from all, and the collections known as " Georgia Scenes," and " Big
Bear of Arkansaw," give promise of great achievements in that particular line
for the future.
For a list of works properly of the class of Belles Lettres and General Litera-
ture, comprising the productions of many of the authors above named, with an
extensive assortment of miscellaneous American light writings, see page 67.
Verplanck, Everett, and Emerson deserve high rank as profound thinkers —
men gifted with great talents, and minds stored with the choicest learning.
Many of their contributions to the Periodical Literature of America are of
the highest order of thought. The writings of each embellish the pages of
the North American Review (page 84) ; a Quarterly, British magazinists of
high standing have appreciated so thoroughly as to extract entire articles from
it, without condescending to give the proper credit. ; and of which the l^dinhurgh
Remeio, of August, 1820, remarks, "it is written with great spirit, learning,
and ability." These names indicate a high appreciation by the people of such
literature ; and in order to a more complete knowledge of the number and
worth of American periodicals, we refer to pages 82, 83, 84. The various
Behgious, Scientific, Medical, and other magazines of the country deserve to
be more extensively circulated in Europe. The Scientific American, the Mining
Magazine, and American Railroad Journal w^ould be particularly valuable to
European capitalists and staticians.
Several Americans have written ably on the Fine Arts. Dunlap's History of
the Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States, Huntington's General
View of Fine Arts, &c., and other similar works, described at page 75, exhibit
what has been accomplished in this department of letters.
The science of Music has not been neglected by the transatlantics, and
although they do not boast of any distinguished composers, several Americans
have devoted considerable time and talent to the subject of instruction in
music. As a work of value and an acquisition to musical literature, Moore's
Complete Encyclopaedia of Music, Elementary, Technical, Historical, Biogra-
phical, Yocal, and Instrumental, is unique. (See Music, page 76.)
Freemasonry has been a subject of much study in the IJnited States. The
most approved books relating to this order are arranged under an appropriate
head, at folio 76.
Mormonism has become an object of great regard of late, and the American
people have amply illustrated it by writings, historical and expositive. At page
77 a number of the most valuable of these are designated.
The strange theory of Spiritualism cannot ]3roperly be arranged under the
head of Science, and we therefore give it a separate title, at once descriptive
and appropriate. The most remarkable works yet written on the phenomenon
are catalogued at page 77. Among these are those of Andrew Jackson Davis,
J. W. Edmonds, and J. H. Koss.
The medical writings of Americans are numerous. Dewees, Dunglison, Earle,
Meigs, Wood, Chapman, and Eberle have contributed greatly to the stock of
medical knowledge. Morton's Illustrated System of Human Anatomy, Special,
General, and Microscopic, is a valuable manual. The works of Fox, Arthur,
and Harris, with reference to Dentistry, Wood and Bache's Dispensatory of
the United States, and Bell on the Bath, are among those of decided value. In
no country, except Germany, has Homoeopathy received more notice, or enlisted
more talent in its defence. Under *' Medicine and Surgery " (page 16), a list
of these is contained, together with works on Materia Medica, Medical Juris-
prudence, Obstetrics, Pathology, Pharmacy, Physiology, Surgery, &c. &c.
Considerable talent has been devoted to Geographical Illustration, the maps
of American origin being unusually reliable and comprehensive. We have
arranged a list of w^orks of this class, under the head of " Guide-books, Atlases,
Maps, and Charts," at page 78, where the titles of very many contributions to
INTRODUCTION. XIX
Geography will be found. The list comprises many productions of great prac-
tical value to emigrants and travellers.
In concluding this critical reference some remarks on the Oratory of the
United States is deemed applicable* Speeches are often among the noblest
intellectual efforts of a nation. Those of American orators that have been
recorded are vigorous, bold, and replete in the loftieat attributes of passionate
eloquence. Byron justly describes the famous Patriot Henry as
" The forest-born Demosthenes."
His life, by Wirt, contains a few specimens of his style that sustain this high
character. In more recent times, Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun, Henry
Clay, and Edward Everett have only demonstrated that true orators still
flourish in America. (See History, page 44.) Webster's and Clay's speeches
contain passages not surpassed by those of any modern orators, of whatever
nation, for profound reasoning, appropriate diction, and lofty patriotism ; and
the eloquence of Adams, Jefferson, Ames, and Otis is too well established to
be refuted.
We have thus presented a limited survey of American mind ; and meagre
though it be, we think the array of undoubted talent exhibited must satisfy
most readers of the incorrectness of Mr. Alison's declaration, that " literary
and intellectual abilities of the highest class are comparatively rcxre in AmericaJ'^
No branch of the study of letters has been neglected by American literary men,
and in the seventy odd years of the national existence of the United States, no
country has produced more men of decided ability ; nor have these been
neglected by their countrymen, as Mr. Alison implies in the edition of his
History published in 1844. The Americans foster native literature to an
extent unknown in many countries of the Old World. All travellers de-
scribe them as a nation of readers, and the success of Irving, Cooper, Prescott,
Barnes, Willis, Stephens, and a host of others, who have acquired ample for-
tunes at home by their works, sufficiently prove to the candid mind the absur-
dity of such fiction as is contained in the asseition that "literature and
intellectual ability of the highest class meet with little encouragement in
America. ^^
A few subjects of general interest relative to American Bibliology, not appro-
priate to a sketch like the preceding, have been added in an Appendix, to which
we call attention. The first is a comprehensive list, so far as it was possible to
obtain information, of the Public Libraries of the United States ; the second,
a History of the Smithsonian Institute, with a list of the publications issued
thereby ; and the third, some account of Captain Wilkes's Exploring Expe-
dition, with a record of the character and number of volumes published descrip-
tive of the discoveries made by the officers of that enterprise.
CHAPTER III.
Book-publishing in America.
Some account of the publishing establishments of the United States is appro-
priate here. We have elsewhere briefly referred to the earliest efforts in this
line made in that country ; but forward as were the colonists in publishing,
the trade was extremely small until the establishment of the present government.
In 1801 the American Company of Booksellers, consisting of members doing
business in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, was formed. They regulated
the sale of books by fairs, and prohibited auction sales by any of their members,
on pain of expulsion. In 1804, they offered a gold medal for the best American-
naade paper fit for printing ; and premiums for the best specimens of American
binding, and printing ink. The beneficial effects of this system were soon
XX INTRODUCTION,
observable in the improved state of the publications, and both cheapness and
excellence having been attained in the article of paper, publishing increased
vigorously. Matthew Gary, of Philadelphia, was most devoted to the business,
and contributed extensively to its improvement. Houses soon sprang up in all
the large cities and even in the small, and at this time there are above 355
distinct book-publishing establishments in the Union. Of these the most
noted is that of the Messrs. Harper, of New York. This firm possesses unri-
valled resources and facilities. They carry on, within their own concern, all
the details and machinery of publishing, with the exception of paper-making
and type-founding. They occupy an immense five-story structure, equal to six
or seven houses of the same height, which is divided into the several depart-
ments of composing-rooms, stereotype foundry, press-rooms, warehouse, bindery,
&c. Their annual sales have been estimated at about 2,000,000 volumes, includ-
ing pamphlets, and they emxiloy usually from 300 to 350 people in their
establishment.
Mr. Putnam, of the same city, is also extensively engaged in publishing, and
deserves especial mention for his strenuous exertions to raise the standard of
home literature, and the taste displayed in his numerous issues,
Messrs. D. Appleton and Co., of New York, rank among the first publishers in
the States. Their concern may justly be regarded among the best conducted in
the world ; and it may not be uninteresting to our readers to learn some par-
ticulars respecting the origin, progress, and present state of this remarkable esta-
blishment. About twenty years ago, Daniel Appleton and one of his sons com-
menced the bookselling business at No. 200, IJroadway. They soon obtained a
highly respectable mercantile character, and keeping themselves carefully aloof
from everything except their own particular business, they succeeded. Ten
years afterwards the senior member of the firm was gathered to his fathers.
One son after another w^as admitted into the business, until at the present time
it is managed by four brothers — a powerful fraternal union.
It was found about a year since that the old stand was not sufficiently com-
modious for the rapidly increasing business of the firm, and, early in 1853, the
Appletons purchased the Society Library buildings, corner of Broadway and
Leonard-street. This building was erected in 1835, and at an expense of
90,000 dollars. For the building and land the Appletons paid over 100,000
dollars, and the work of alteration, which was commenced on the 1st May,
1853, and which has just been completed, will make the entire value of the
building about 150,000 dollars. In the alterations, taste and convenience seem
happily combined. The entire interior was destroyed. The first-floor was
formerly used as a lecture-room, with a heavy staircase in the centre. A new
flight of steps, of glass and iron, have been constructed, to afford communica-
tion with the upper part of the building. New floors have been laid, and the
hall is divided into three compartments, by lines of Corinthian pillars, painted
in imitation of Sienna marble. These pillars also support the bookshelves,
which are of oak. The ceiling is ornamented in light fresco work, which gives a
pleasant relief to the eye. The basement has been conveniently fitted up, and has
five hundred lineal feet of shelving. There is a vault front of sixty feet under
the Broadway. This portion of the establishment is set apart as a packing
department, where orders from the country and abroad are received. In Catha-
rine-lane, a separate building, mainly glass and iron, has been constructed ;
here all the goods for the house are received, and the main entrances in Broad-
way will never be obstructed. There are also separate entrances in Leonard-,
street. The dimensions of the main building are sixty feet front, sixty-six feet
rear, and one hundred feet deep ; and this space has been most judiciously
disposed of. The building is heated by steam pipes, the boiler being placed in
Catharine-lane. By these means water is carried to the upper stories of the
building, and a quantity of hose is alw ays ready in case of fire. The printing
and binding of this house are done by contract. Their stereotype plates are
INTRODUCTION. XXI
kept in vaults in various parts of tlie city, for the sake of greater security.
Such, in brief, is the new establishment of the Appletons.
Everything can be found here, from the twenty-five cent up to the twenty-
five dollar volume. The arrangement of the books upon the shelves and the
classification of each department are excellent ideas.
The Appletons carry on all branches of the bookselling, book-im-
porting, and book-publishing business. They have a capital of about 750,000
dollars invested, and give employment constantly to about five hundred persons.
Their yearly sales amount to 700,000 dollars. They remit to London, for
English books, every year, not less than 150,000 dollars, and they have
ordersfor American books to the amount of 550,000 dollars yearly. They
print books for foreign countries, in foreign languages. They send many
books, including Spanish-English and Spanish-Erench dictionaries, to South
America, a market that had heretofore been supplied by Parisian publishers.
They average four new books per week, but have great difficulty in supplying
the demand for their educational publications and standard works. They
have supplied the London publishers with a fine edition of the Spectator,
which is in no way inferior in appearance to any English book of the same
class.
We also take pleasure in making honourable mention of Mr. J. S. Kedfield,
a most enterprising 'New York publisher, who, in a comparatively short period,
has achieved great and deserved success.
We have already extended the list beyond our original expectations, but
justice induces us to mention, in connection with the preceding, the names of
Mr. John Wiley and Mr. Charles B. Norton, both of whom are very honourably
known as publishers and general booksellers, but more particularly as efficient
library agents.
Nor can we close this brief notice of the New York trade without referring
to Messrs. J. H. Colton and Co., the eminent map publishers. The maps pro-
duced in their establishment are already favourably known in this country for
tasteful execution, pictorial effect, and thorough accuracy. They have com-
menced the publication of their great Atlas, a work which it is considered will,
if not surpass, at all events equal the best productions of the Old World in
that department.
Mr. Charles Scribner is another gentleman of the same city deserving espe-
cial mention for his many excellent publications. We might, however, increase
our sketch to a catalogue, but our limits will not permit, and therefore we
conclude this present reference to New York publi>hers with the single remark,
that for intelligence, business quahfications, and enterprising spirit, they have
no superiors.
In Philadelphia — a city ever famous for its love of literature — there are
several very large publishing and bookselling establishments ; that of Messrs.
Lippincott, Grambo, and Co. being regarded by many as the largest in the
country, if not in the world ; and high-sounding as this may appear to some,
it is almost verified by Mr. William Chambers, of the " Joui'nal" which bears
his name, whose veracitv none will doubt, in his "Things as they are in
America," where he remarks of this Philadelphia publishing and bookselling
concern as follows :^-
" Erom several publishing-houses there are issued vast quantities of books in
miscellaneous literature ; and here, among other curiosities which interested
me professionally, I alighted upon the large concern of Messrs. Lippincott,
Grambo, and Co., which, independently of a trade in publishing, carries on the
peculiar business of book-merchants. A spacious building, several stories in
height, is stored, floor above floor, wdth books gathered from all the publishers
in the Union, as well as from England, and ready for selection and purchase
by retail booksellers coming from every part of the States. Any person, for
example, wishing to open a book store in California, or some other distant
XXU INTRODUCTION.
quarter, may here, in a walk from bin to bin, acquire sucb a varied stcck as
suits his purse or inclinations. Say that he is going to open for a season at
Saratoga, the White Sulphur Springs of Virginia, or any other fashionable
watering-place, there he has his choice of handy little volumes flashily gilt, in
the light line. Or say that he wishes to go into the school or heavy trade,
still he finds a mine of material ready to his fingers. In an hour he might load
a waggon with all the varied literary wares he can possibly require ; just as a
country draper dropping into one of the streets about Cheapside, is able to lay
in his miscellaneous stock of haberdashery for the season. I was told by one
of the principals of the firm that it had dealings in every seat of population of
any importance from New Orleans to Toronto, and from the Atlantic to beyond
St. Louis. Think of commercial travellers being despatched on a j ourney of
2000 miles, as far as from London to Cairo or Jerusalem.
Such concerns as this are types of the manufacturing and trading establish-
ments of Philadelphia. * * * "
We can elucidate this to some extent. The amount of sales of this establish-
ment in a single year is enormous. Books go out daily by the ton. This is
not a metaphor but a fact. The average number of boxes sent out daily through
the year is not less than forty — often sixty, seventy, and sometimes a hundred,
are packed and shipped, and many of them weigh from three to five hundred
pounds; The firm occupies a very important position in the trade. Though
largely engaged in publishing, it is still more extensively engaged in the sale
and distribution of the books of other houses throughout the country. It is
the best systematized establishment in the United States, in every department.
Each of the five partners has not less than a quarter of a century's experience
in the calling of. the firm, and every salesman is thoroughly competent to his
position. Books from every publisher in the land are always kept for sale,
and when a countiy bookseller enters the immense concern, he finds himself
surrounded by everything he may desire, on as reasonable terms as can be
obtained from the publishers themselves. If he should want a book whose
publisher he cannot remember, a mention of the title secures it j and he may
have his choice in case there should be more than one edition.
The sales of the house are so large that they frequently order of other
concerns whole editions of standard books at a time. Of many new books
they frequently order two or three thousand, and they can always sell from
one thousand to fifteen hundred of any book they publish. Some of their
own works each reach a sale of one hundred thousand copies a year. This is
accounted for by their immense facilities for trade, extending all over the
country. The publishing activity of Philadelphia is truly stupendous. Space
prohibits us going into details, but we must mention the firms of Messrs,
Blanchard and Lee, and Lindsay and Blackiston, whose publications are
principally confined to medicine and the collateral sciences, and who carry
on a friendly rivalry, highly beneficial to science. The transactions of both
these firms are very extensive.
Messrs. A. Hart (succeeded by Parry and McMillan) and Henry 0. Baird
are justly celebrated as the publishers of a series of most excellent works
in the practical arts and sciences.
The Messrs. Johnson are extensively engaged in the publication of law
books, and are importers to a very considerable extent of the same class of
books from England.
Boston, the American Athens, can boast of a whole galaxy of very dis-
tinguished publishing firms, among which those of Messrs. Little, Brown, and
Co., and Ticknor and Fields, rank foremost. Messrs. Little, Brown and Co.
are as familiar as "household words" to the English book trade. Mr.
James Brown, the worthy representative of this firm, is deservedly esteemed
in this country, where during his many visits he has won much regard and
INTRODUCTION. XXIU
many friends. The publications of this house are of the first order ; they
issued the works of Judge Story, Mr. Bancroft, the historian, Sparks's
Biographies, Webster's Works, and many others of similar character ; they
are also foremost in the rank of importers of foreign books.
Messrs. Ticknor and Fields are both personally known and highly esteemed
in English literary circles. The pubUcations of this bouse may be said to
constitute the cream of American poetry and belles lettres. They are the
publishers of the works of Longfellow, Lowell, Whittier, Bayard Taylor,
Tuckerman, Willis, Holmes, Hawthorne, Whipple, Giles, Sumner, Grrace
Greenwood, Stoddart, Hillard, and others. The firm likewise devotes great
attention to general business and the importation of foreign books.
Messrs. Gould and Lincoln have published a series of excellent scientific
works, among others those of Professors Agassiz and Guyot.
Messrs. James Munro and Co. are among the oldest established booksellers
of Boston; they have published a number of important metaphysical books.
Messrs. Jewett and Co. are celebrated for constantly bringing forward
some truly new production. They were the original publishers of Uncle
Tom's Cabin, and have latterly again made a hit with the Lamplighter.
Their business is extensive and flourishing, as is also that of Messrs. Phillips,
Sampson, and Co., and of Crosby, Nichols, and Co., of the same city.
There are many large publishing and bookselling establishments in Albany,
Auburn, Bufi'alo, Baltimore, Columbia (S. C.), Mobile, Kew Orleans,
Charleston, Richmond (Va.), Washington, and other cities. We design, how-
ever, only to notice those of Cincinnati, the site of which, as elsewhere
remarked, was a wilderness in 1793. In 1850 this western city contained
116,000 inhabitants, and according to a recent German writer, it has at this
time twelve publishing houses, which give employment to about teven
hundred people. The value of the books and periodicals issued by these is
estimated at 1,250,000 dollars annually, or more than £250,000 sterling. He
considers there are more book readers in Ohio than in Germany, and states the
books most in demand to be educational and religious. When we reflect that
sixty-five years ago almost the entire territory of Ohio was in the sole posses-
sion of the red Indian, an unreclaimed wilderness, this statement brings to mind
one of the most remarkable wonders of the world ; and however much we
may be disposed to doubt the assertion, the fact is so patent that no one will
be able to disprove it.
Our facilities for obtaining the statistics of the entire book trade of the
country are necessarily limited ; but we have, nevertheless, secured some very
interesting items,- It is common with European publishers, and even readers,
to accuse our American friends of literary piracy, frequently growing quite
indignant over their achievements in the business ; but we find the fault is not
aU on one side.
In twelve years, up to 1842, the following works, original and foreign, were
printed in America : —
Original American. Keprints.
Biography 106 122
American History and Geography 118 20
History and Gcograpliy of Foreign Countries 91 195
Literary History — 12
Ethics 19 31
Poetry (in separate vols.) 103 76
Novels and Tales 115 *
Greek and Latin Classics, with original notes 36 None
Greek and Latin Translations — 36
* Greek, Latin, and Hebrew Text-books 35 None
* Not ascertained.
XXIV INTRODUCTION.
The figures stand, all things considered — except the reprinted novels and
tales — 623 original to 492 reprints.
There were about 783 new works published in the United States in 1853 ;
278 reprints of English works, and 35 translations of foreign authors. Of
the reprints several were Latin and Greek productions, such as Horace, Cicero,
Virgil, &C.J which really reduce the actual number of English books considerably.
The original works were divided as follows: — History, 46 ; Biography, 59 ;
Fiction, 148 ; Theology, 97 ; Poetry, 28 ; Travels, 29 ; Juvenile, 49 ; Educa-
tional, 24 ; Scientific, 45 ; Law, 14 ; Geography, 6 ; Philology, 6 ; Ethnology,
5 ; and Miscellaneous, 179. The English reprints of American books in 1853,
exclusive of such as appeared under disguised titles, were 119 ! Among them
were history, travels, poetry, divinity, romance, and works of a political
character. According to a carefully compiled table in Putnam's " Facts and
Figures," there had been published in England, in. the ten years ending in
1842, as many as 382 original American works, exclusive of ditferent editions.
To show that this system of reciprocating American appropriations of English
books is on the increase here, we find that no less than 185 American pro-
ductions were reprinted in England in 1854. In this number new editions
are included, which rule has also been observed by us in our estimate of the
American reprints of English works in 1853, In some cases the American
authors undoubtedly were remunerated ; but the same is the case with certain
English authors, whose works were reproduced in America. Since the decision
of the House of Lords as to foreigners holding English copyright, a decided
increase in the reprinting of American authors is observable, which bids fair
to equal in time the American reprints of original British works ; so that the
spirit to pirate exists here as well as in America. An International Copyright
Law wotdd put an end to this, and remove much acrimony ; but however great
is the desire for such a law, we do not consider it worth our whde to discuss
the subject here, particularly as it has been so ably treated in works more
especially devoted to its consideration.
That American publishers pay fair prices for good authorship can be very
clearly established. In 1817, Greorge Goodrich and Sons paid Koali Webster
40,000 dollars, or fully 8000 guineas, for the copyright of his Spelling -hook.
A Philadelphia publisher, prior to 1837, paid to native authors 135,000 dollars
in less than five years, of which 30,000 dollars were for two works. Mr.
Bancroft has received about 50,0C0 dollars for his histories ; Mr. Stephena
received 30,000 dollars from the Harpers for his entertaining travels ; Mr.
Barnes about the same for his jS^otes on the Gospels, which are republished in
England without pecuniary advantage to the author ; and Professor Anthon
has received from the same house considerably more. Professor Andrews
receivt-d 6000 dollars for his labours on the first edition of his Latin Lexicon ;
and Mr. Cooper, Washington Irving, N. P. Willis, Bayard Taylor, and others,
have each secured a competency through the liberality of American pubhshers.
So far as our means of judging extend, vv^e are forced to the conclusion that
good writers are as liberally remunerated in the United States as in Europe.
CHAPTEK lY.
Typography — Paper — Binding.
The typography of all new countries is more or less indifierent ; that of the
United States fifty years ago was, as a general rule, no exception to this,
although some American works of tliat period do credit to the printers. When
we reflect that manufactures were almost prohibited during the colonial exist-
INTRODUCTION. XXV
ence, this is not surprising. The callings of type-founding, of paper-making,
and of book-binding were but imperfectly practised before the Revolution ; so
that all these had, in reality, to be learned by the Americans after the close
of the war which secured their national independence. The spirit of improve-
ment in these trades soon developed itself, and made rapid progress with the
increased demand for books. The eight years' struggle, while it imposed
miseries, also brought advantages. In addition to political^ it aided to establish
productive and manufacturing independence. While it continued, paper and
types were required, and as these could not be imported, they were made on
the spot. Once it was ascertained these could be supplied at home, they were
no longer extensively sought abroad. At first the native products were
extremely deficient in quality, both of material and workmanship ; but time
and experience, backed by ingenuity and encouragement, remedied all defects.
Type-foundries and paper-mills increased rapidly. Several were established
in the early part of the present century, even in the wilderness of the West.
These beginnings soon expanded. Mr. Clymer, an ingenious American, as
early as 1816, brought to the notice of his countrymen his Columbian Press
The decided merit of this improvement on the common printing press was so
apparent that it instantly became popular. It was introduced into England,
where its excellence ensured its immediate use, and to this day the Columbian
Press maintains its reputation in Great Britain.
With improvements in the machinery of printing the Americans soon pro-
duced good, if not elegant, typography ; and it is not too much praise to say
that book-printing in America has attained as great perfection as in Europe.
The typography of Collins of Philadelphia, Morgan and Co. of Cincinnatiy
Harper and Brothers of New Tork, and other equally good printers in almost every
city of the Union, fully establishes this. The ^^ Adams Fress'^ is peculiarl,
American, being almost unknown in Europe, and yet its merits are undeniable.
This invention is in use from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and, wherever used,
produces the finest description of work.
In connection with this subject, which we have briefly referred to, because
of its incidental association with American books, some allusion to American
paper and book-binding is considered relevant. Much complaint is made by
Europeans of the sn^-parentflimsiness of American paper. This charge is conceived
to be more founded in imagination than reality. The material on which American
books are printed differs from that used in the same manufacture in Europe by
not being sized. In all other respects it is equally good with ours, and were it
made stiff by our artificial means, would doubtless meet with decided favour
here. The Americans argue that sizing in printing paper is more injurious
than beneficial ; for, while it wears the type unnecessarily, it possesses no more
lasting qualities than paper without sizing. And, further, they say soft paper
ensures a clearer impression than hard, and ia susceptible of being pressed into
a more compact form.
In book-binding the Americans have effected much that is creditable to
themselves. Their books are usually bound in a substantial manner, and,
where occasion requires, in a style of elegance and finish not inferior to much
of a high order produced in Europe. Many of the publications of Lippincott,
Grambo, and Co. of Philadelphia, Appleton and Co. of New York, and Little and
Brown of Boston, are bound in the best style of the art. In fact, it is natural
such should be the case, when these houses issue hundreds of thousands of
volumes yearly, and can command both skilfal workmen and the latest im-
provements in binding. The paper, printing, and binding sent forth from these
establishments exhibit, when compared with American books thirty or forty
years ago, the whole history for that time of American improvements in these
particular branches of industry.
XXVI INTRODUCTION.
CHAPTER V.
American Libraries.
" So wholly are they [the Americans] regardless of historical records or monu-
ments," says Mr. Alison, " that half a century hence the history of their
country, even of these times, could only be written from the archives of other
States." We conclude from this that the historian means to imply that
libraries are scarce in the United States, for surely they constitute " records "
and "archives" in a certain sense. But let us examine this with broader
range. How he ventured such an assertion in the face of his laudation of
Bancroft's history is curious.
The publication of the historical correspondence and memoirs of Washington,
Franklin, Jay, and Jefferson, of revolutionary memory ; of about two thousand
volumes of American State Papers, of the original public archives of the
separate States, and of the biographies, correspondence, and speeches of such
modern statesmen as Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, Daniel Webster, William
H. Seward, and Thomas H. Benton, rather tend to disparage Mr. Alison's
statement on this head. The Historical Societies of Massachusetts, ^ew
York, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Ohio, and other States, have issued hundreds of
works on local history reaching down to this very hour, which publications,
particularly as they have a wide circulation, refute the charge of Americans
*' wholly neglecting historical records." And it is irrefutable that more than
400 works on history, mostly relating to the United States, have been written
in that country.
But as libraries are generally believed to be the depositories of historical
records, we shall rapidly survey those of the Western B-epublic. In entering
on the subject, we beg, however, to remark that a nation of eighty years'
growth can scarcely be expected to possess a Bodleian Library, or a Bibliotheque
du Roi. But although America has no single collection of such extent, she
has a few collections of books which may properly be regarded as very fair
beginnings in the line of libraries. We append a list of some of the most
noted, commencing with the
Yoltimes.
Boston Athenseum 57,000
Astor Library (new) 80,000
New York Society Library 40,000
„ „ Mercantile Library 39,500
„ „ Historical Society 25,000
Philadelphia Library 65,000
Philosophical Society 20,000
Brown University Library 32,000
New York State Library 34,279
Congressional Library 40,000
432,779
Or nearly 450,000 volumes in ten comparatively young Institutions. Besides
the >e, however, books in large quantities have been collected by the
American Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia,
„ Philosophical Society, founded in 1769
„ Academy of Natural Sciences, Boston ... ,, 1780
Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences „ 1799
Literary and Philosophical Society, New York „ 1815
Pennsylvania Hospital , „ 1751
'Massachusetts Historical Society „ 1791
American Antiquarian Society,
„ Ethnological Society,
Geographical and Statistical Society, &c., &c., &c.
In this connection may be mentioned the College libraries, of which there
INTEODUCTION. XXVU
are 213, with a total of 942,321 volumes, according to the last census, all
selected with rei^ard solely to merit and value. The Public School libraries
are essentially different from those of the Colleges, though designed for purposes
of education. There are 12,067 of these, with 1,721,680 volumes. Several
States have taken great interest in supplying every township and school district
with a library, and others have commenced such collections. These are not
intended for pupils alone,, but for all the population of the district, and are
chiefly composed of valuable books, designed and adapted to disseminate popular
knowledge, and to cultivate the higher elements of character. They are,
according to Professor Jewett, " in general use, and their beneficial influence
cannot be over-estimated."
In addition to the foregoing, almost all the States in the Union have organized
State Libraries. Those which have not, possess collections of books which will
ere long serve as the foundation of such libraries. These are composed to a
great extent of public documents of the Greneral and State Grovernments —
records of current history —^iih works on statistics, political economy, and
local events. Some take a wider range — such, for instance, as the New York
State Library and Library of Congress — being supplied with scientific, philoso-
phical, and miscellaneous works of general literature. The public libraries of
the Union, at a rough estimate, contain about 5,000,000 volumes, which is
rather under than above the actual total. From what is being done by the
librarians of the United States to increase these useful Institutions, it would
not be a matter of surprise to us were the total volumes in the public libraries
of the Union to reach 10,000,000 at the census in 1860. The laudable exertions
now in operation to build up collections of books of from 1000 to 10,000
volumes in every town of the Republic warrants this conclusion.
We have heretofore purposely avoided reference to the Smithsonian Institute,
in order to speak more specifically of it than of any other American Institution
of a similar character. Our limits, however, oblige us to be brief, and we
shall therefore confine ourselves to a general statement of the objects of this justly
prized organization, referring such as seek a more circumstantial description of
it to the article " Smithsonian Institute," in our Appendix.
In the discussions in Congress on the bill to establish an Institution " for
the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men," in accordance with the
will of Mr. Smithson, many projects were presented. Not one, however, of the
numerous plans suggested met the approval of Congress, until Mr. Choate
proposed the establishment of a great central library of reference and research.
This idea met with approval, and was subsequently in the main adopted.
Congress fixed the maximum of the annual appropriation at £5000 sterling, on
which the Institution began its existence. The officers eventually settled upon
% more liberal design, by forming two great departments — one of collections in
literature, science, and art, the other of publications and scientific researches ;
and in the prosecution of these views the Institution is making safe and
manifest progress.
It was established about 1846, and from the first appears to have met with
dearty favour from the public. By law, all publishers are obliged to send
3ne copy of each copyrighted work they may publish to this Institution ; JDut,
Dwing to a defect in the regulation, this is not in all cases adhered to. No
provision was made for transmitting these books, which is an obstacle to their
reaching it, and although losses occurred in this way, by books not reaching
their destination, the increase of the library from various sources in the single
^ear of 1852— the sixth of its existence— was as follows : —
Other
Books. Parap. Parts. Engrs. Maps, Music. Drawings, articles. Tota
By Purchase 641 918 1568 — 1698 — — — 3127
„ Donations 1481 1D35 171 10 10 — — 41 5336
„ Copyrights ... 476 96 26 15 — €92 9 19 1313
2598 2949 1765 25 1708 692 9 60 9806
XXVlll INTRODUCTION.
being a small library in itself of some value. At the expiration of the year
the Institution possessed near 22,000 separate volumes and other works appro-
priate to a library.
The publications of the Institute are among the most meritorious contributions
to science and human knowledge of the age. The Regents — as the officers aro
called — entered upon their work with the characteristic energy of their nation ;
and yet, rapid as have been their movements in the publishing department, all
their works so far are most creditable, both with reference to their literary
and intrinsic merits.
We see in the Smithsonian Institute the germ of an establishment destined
to attain an influence, ere fifty years go by, equal to that of many great
European institutions of learning and knowledge —an establishment purely
national, out of which immense benefit must result to the American people.
The genius which presides over it is gathering with one hand treasuries of
intellectual wealth, to be held sacred to reference and verification, while with
the other she is spreading knowledge over the land, with a liberality deserving the
widest emulation. The publishing feature is new ; and from its very originality
demands particular attention. By this the influence of the Institute is ex-
tensively felt, receiving in return for its publications the cordial support of the
various libraries of the country. In order that our readers may understand
this feature more clearly, we quote from the Annual Reports of the Insti-
tution the subjects of the pubHcations and the manner of their distribution.
Among the former are Contributions to the Fhysical Geography of the
United States, by Professor Ellet j A Memoir on the Reciprocal Action of
tioo Galvanic Currents, by Mr. Secchi ; On the Classification of Insects from
JEmhryological Data, by Professor Agassiz ; On the JExplosiveness of Nitre,
by Dr. Haee ; Observations on Terrestrial Magnetism ; Researches on Electrical
Wieometry ; Natural History of the Fresh-water Fishes of North America ;
The Marine Algce of the Coast of the United States ; The Law of Deposit of
the Flood Tide, its dynamical action and office. As to the manner of distri-
bution, the following rules have been adopted : —
" 1. They are to be presented to all Learned Societies which publish transac-
tions, and give copies of these in exchange to the Institution.
"2. ^o diW. Foreign Libraries of the first class, provided they give in ex-
change their catalogues, or other publications, or an equivalent from their
duplicate volumes.
** 3. To all Colleges in actual operation in this country, provided they furnish
in return meteorological observations, catalogues of their libraries and of their
students, and all other publications issued by them relative to their organization
and history.
'*4. To all States and Territories ; provided they give in return copies of all
documents published under their authority.
" 5. To all incorporated Public Libraries in this country, not included in
either of the foregoing classes, containing more than seven thousand volumes ;
and to smaller Libraries, where a whole State or large district would be other-
wise left unsupplied.
" The author of each memoir receives, as his only compensation, a certain
number of copies, to distribute among his friends, or to present to individuals
who may be occupied in the same line of research. In this way single memoirs
are distributed to individuals, and especially to those who are most actively
engaged in promoting discoveries. Copies of the reports, and also in some
cases of particular memoirs, are sent to our meteorological observers. Besides
these, we have placed on the list the more prominent Academies and Lyceums,
as recipients of the minor publications. It is also intended, in order to benefit
the public more generally, to place on sale copies of memoirs and reports ;
though, on account of the number required for the supply of Institutions, we
have not as yet been able to carry this plan into effect.
INTRODUCTION. XXIX
" No copyright has been taken for the Smithsonian publications ; they are
therefore ^ree to he used hy the compilers of books, and in this way they are
beginning to reach the general reader , and to produce a beneficial effect on the
public mindJ^
The liberality of this plan has already created a greater desire among
Americans, than they ever before entertained, for valuable works of all de-
scriptions, and excited them to a national sense of the necessity of accumulating,
from every country, rare books of merit ; so that Americans now are the best
customers at London sales of such collections. This has been observed fre-
quently of late, and in most cases the buyers not only pay the highest prices,
but exhibit taste and discrimination in selection. It has been remarked that
the most valuable of our old works recently brought to the hammer cross the
Atlantic, many of them to the Smithonian Institute. This fact is significant,
and would doubtless have gratified Mr. Justice Story, could he have been
made aware of it, and removed hia honest misgivings as to his nation's biblio-
tlieoal future.
CHAPTEE YI.
The American IS'ewspaper Press.
A people's character fSr intelligence may be correctly estimated by the extent
and ability of its newspaper press. Travellers tell us of the immense number
of journals in the United States, their circulation and influence. It is the
practice of some Europeans, however, to underrate the value of these, and it is
rather singular Mr. Alison is not of the class. He says the American press
"is vehement and impassioned ; often in the highest degree able." This cha-
racter we shall take as correct, without venturing a dispute, being satisfied with
the mere statement, considering whose it is. But the history of so powerful
an engine, and its influence in the formation of the literary tastes of the people,
demand more than a passing notice.
But little was done in the colonies in this branch of publishing compared
with what has been effected in the States. The first attempt to set up a news-
paper in North America, so far as can be ascertained, was made at Boston, in
1690. Only one copy of this sheet is known to be in existence, that being in
the State Paper Office, in London. A more successful efibrt was made in 1704,
in the same city, by the establishment of the Boston Neios Letter, It was
regularly published for seventy-two years, and was discontinued in 1776. The
second American newspaper was the Boston Gazette y begun December 21, 1719 ;
and the day following, the third of the race appeared in Philadelphia. These
were miniature sheets, however, compared with the issues of the present day.
A few others followed at long intervals, in various parts of the country, during
the rule of Great Britain ; but no rapid increase was observed until after the
Kevolutionary war, when in 1790 there were about seventy newspapers in all
the United States. As if in fulfilment of Bishop Berkeley's noble lines on
"planting arts and learning in America," the press was introduced into the
wilds of Kentucky in 1786, and into Tennessee in 1793, being in reality the
" star of empire " moving westward. In 1795 a newspaper was established at
Cincinnati, then an Indian tradiog post on the extreme border of Western
civilization ; and in the same year, " as a proof of the commerce and trade of
America," an English paper remarked, " there are four daily papers printed in
the city of New ^Tork, and it is not uncommon to enumeaate 350 advertise-
ments in a single paper," naively concluding with the following sly sarcasm : —
XXX INTRODUCTION.
** But what injares th.e beauty and authenticity of these is the want of a little
red mark at one corner of the sheet, a blessing that has been withheld from
them since the imprudent declaration of independence."
Increase and improvement went hand in hand, in American journalism, in
the early part of this century. In 1814 there were 280 weekly, 30 semi-weekly,
18 tri-weekly, and 28 daily newspapers in the E-epublic, issuing about 23,150,000
copies annually, or 3,000,000 more than the entire newspaper circulation of
Grreat Britain. In 1850 the number had increased almost incredibly. An
authentic and reliable Gj-overnment report classifies them as follows : dailies,
350 ; tri-weeklies, 150 ; semi-weeklies, 125 j weeklies, 2000 ; semi-monthlies,
monthlies, and quarterlies, 175 ; making a grand total of 2800, being an
increase of more than two thousand in 36 years. Of these 72 were published
in California, the greater part of which country was a wilderness less than two
years before — San Francisco sustaining no less than eight dailies. The aggre-
gate circulation was about 5,000,000, and the entire number of copies printed
annually amounted to 422,600,000.
A press of so great an extent must wield a powerful influence, nor is it going
too far to assert that the American press is more potent than that of G-reat
Britain. Its universal popularity and cheapness extend its dominion, and
create readers. A city of 2000 inhabitants, which in England would not sup-
port a journal of its own of any description, has its daily in America ; and
cities of 20,000 people, which in England are content with their semi -weeklies
or weeklies, in the United States support four or five dailies, with as many
weeklies into the bargain. Even villages of a few hundred inhabitants have
their papers, which, if not supported in the hamlet, draw patronage from the
surrounding rural population, and almost every family takes at least one
journal. Cheapness ensures circulation, and merit is also an essential to
success.
That many of these journals are conducted loosely is natural ; but taken as
fb whole, the circumstances being duly and impartially weighed, they are found
to be very little inferior, in point of literary excellence, to most European
journals, and superior to tliose of any colony. The rage of parties spares no
personality, and hence the political press of America often indulges in personali-
ties rather alarming to some readers on this side the ocean. The
freedom of speech and the wholesome practice of investigating the actions,
motives, and characters of men aiming at the confidence and suffrages of the
people, so prevalent in the United States, induce this to some extent ; but
violent and calumniating as slander occasionally is in American journals, it is
sometimes equalled by that of journals in this country. The relative
positions of the English and American editors unfit them exactly to under-
stand this, although the fact can be made apparent. We all know that a
newspaper article in which an obnoxious individual is ridiculed, no matter how
Tile its language, if not really low, commends itself to the taste of some, and
particularly those opposed to the person attacked. Now such an effusion in
fin English paper would appear to an American, unacquainted with the
prompting causes, most inexcusable and disreputable ; while to the Englishman
|t is the reverse, because he feels towards the victim of satire as if the editor
had given him his deserts. The same case reversed appUes to the American
press : what there appears slanderous to an Englishman, is not generally so
regarded by Americans ;. and if the man assailed be a politician, he is proud
to invite investigation into, his character, and if unjustly attacked, the slander
defeats its aim by advancing his object. The truth mostly prevails, be it for or
against, and when partisans bring any hidden misdoings to light, they render
a service the people usually appreciate according to its value. An uncommon
or even common indulgence of personal attacks on private individuals cannot
honestly be charged on the American press. The public would never sanction
iu.ch conduct, and the few vile prints which occasionally resort to such baseness-
INTRODUCTION.
XXXI
are not to be considered as types of American newspapers, but tlie most decided
exceptions and excrescences.
American journalism, like the cbaracter of the people, is versatile, flexible,
and practical. Energy is a characteristic of the publishers — adaptability,
brevity, point, and terseness, of the editor. The former is ever on the watch
for the earliest information, and would be restless to-night should his paper of
to-day have appeared without a telegraphic report of the state of yesterday's
New Orleans markets — two thousand miles distant. The editor aims not so
much at fine writing — which, if examined, generally amounts to nothing — or
the delicate rounding of a period, as at felicity, explicitness, and force. He
often says more in a brief paragraph than is discovered in the columns of elon-
gated ideas in an eloquent London editorial, his paragraphs being the very
perfection of newspaper writing. Condensation is aimed at, and the point of
his sentences is evident to the dullest comprehension.
Of the many able journals in the United States, the Natiofial Intelligencer,
at Washington City, for moral tone and literary character, has but few supe-
riors in Europe. The Journal of Commerce, JEvening Post, Courier and
Enquirer^ Tribune, and Times, ,at New York ; Pennsylvania Enquirer, at
Philadelphia ; Journal, at Louisville ; and Patriot, at Baltimore, would do
credit in every respect relating to journalism to any nation. The list is suscep-
tible of increase, but there is no occasion for that. Those named fairly represent
the ability, scope, excellence, and tone of the respectable American press, and
if more quoted from in Europe, would greatly contribute to remove the erro-
neous impressions respecting American newspapers now unfortunately too
unjustly prevalent here.
■The books to which we are indebted for some of the facts mentioned in the
preceding pages are the following ; they constitute at the same time a tolerably
complete list of American bibliographical works.
ippLETON & Co.'s New Catalogue of
American and English Books ; comprising a
most extensive assortment of the best Works
in every department of Literature and
Science. With a complete Index. 8vo,
pp.242. New York, 1855.
^SHEB. — Bibliographical and Histo-
rical Essay on the Dutch Books and Pamph-
lets relating to New Netherland and to the
Dutch West India Company, as also on the
Maps, Charts, &c., of New Netherland ; ac-
companied by an Historical Map of the
Country. Compiled from the Dutch Public
and Private Libraries, and chiefly from the
Collection of Mr. Frederick Miiller, in Am-
Bterdam, By G. M. Asher. Part I, post
8vo, 5 sheets, sewed, Ss. 6d. Will be com-
pleted in Six Parts.
AsTiNWALL. — Bibliotheca Americse
Soptentrionalis ; being a choice Collection of
Books relating to North America. By J.
I Aspinwall. 8vo. Paris, 1820.
telBLIOaRAPHICAL CATALOGUE OE
I Books, Translations of the Scriptures, and
other Publications in the Indian Tongues of
the United States. With brief Critical No-
tices. 8vo. Washington, 1849.
Bibliotheca Americana ; or, a Chro-
nological Catalogue of the most curious and
interesting Books, Pamphlets, State Papers,
&c,, upon the subject of North and Soute
America, from the earliest period to the
present, in Print and Manuscript ; for which
research has been made in the British Mu-
seum, and the most celebrated public and
private Libraries, Eeviews, Catalogues, &c.
With an Introductory Discourse on the
Present State of Literature in those Coun-
tries. 4to. London, 1789.
Catalogue of Books relating to
America, including a large number of rare
Works printed before 1700; amongst which a
nearly complete Collection of the Dutch
Publications on New Netherland from 1612
to 1820. On Sale, at the Prices affixed, by Fr.
Miiller, Herrengragt, Amsterdam. 12mo,
pp. 104, sewed. Amsterdam, 1854.
GiKAED. — Bibliographia Americana
Historico-Naturalis ; or. Bibliography of
American Natural History for the year 1851.
By Charles Girard. Svo, pp. 70, sewed.
Washington, 1852.
Jewett. — Notices of Public Libraries
in the United States of America. By 0. C.
Jewett. Svo. Washington, 1851.
Library Manual ; containing a Ca-
talogue Eaisonne of upwards of 12,000 of
the most important Works in every Depart-
ment of Knowledge in all Modern Lan-
guages. In Two Parts. Part. I.— Subject*
xxxu
INTRODUCTION.
Alphabetically arranged. Part II. — Biogra-
phy, Classics, Miscellanies, and Index to
Parti. 12s.
LuDWiG-. — The Literature of American
Local History ; a Bibliographical Essay. By
H. E. Ludwig. 8vo. New York, 184.6.
Marvin. — Legal Bibliography; or, a'
Thesaurus of American, English, Irish, and
Scotch Law Books, together with some Con-
tinental Treatises, interspersed with Critical
Observations upon their various Editions
and Authority ; to which is prefixed a co-
pious List of Abbreviations. By J. G.
Marvin, Counsellor- at-Law. 8vo, bound, 30s.
MuNSELL. — Typographical Miscellany.
By Joel Munsell. 8vo. Albany, 1850.
Noeton's Literary Register and
Bookbuyer's Almanack for 1852 ; containing
important Literary Information, Accounts
of American Libraries, Literary Necrology,
&c. &c. The same for 1853, 1851, and
1855.
Norton's Literary G-azette and Pub-
lisher's Circular ; comprising complete Lists
of American and European Publications,
&c. Fortnightly. lOs. per annum.
The Publication commenced in 1851.
Poole. — An Index to Periodical Lite-
rature ; comprising all the prominent sub-
jects in the Reviews and Periodicals, in Al-
phabetical order; together vrith the names
of the Writers, when known. By A. B.
Poole. Second Edition. 8vo,pp.600. £1103.
New York, 1853.
Putnam. — Bookbuyer's Manual ; a
Catalogue of Foreign and American Books,
with a Classified Index. By G. P. Putnam.
Koyal 8vo, half-bound, 58.
Rich. — A Catalogue of Books relating
principally to America. Arranged under the
Years in which they were pnnted. By O.
Rich. Part I., a.d., 1500 to 1600. Part II.
1600 to 1700. 8vo. London, 1832.
Rich. — A Catalogue of Books relating
principally to America. Arranged under tho
Years in which they are printed. By 0. Rich.
Printed since 1700. Vol. I., 1700 to 1800.
Vol. II., 1801 to 1830. 8vo. London, 1835
to 1844.
RooRBACH. — Bibliotheca Americana ;
Catalogue of American Publications, includ-
ing Reprints and Original Works from 1820
to 1852 inclusive, together with a List of
Periodicals published in the United States.
Compiled and arranged by O. Roorbach. 1
vol. royal 8vo, cloth, £2 23.
Ternaux . — Bibliotheque Americaine,
ou Catalo^ae des Ouvrages relatifs a I'Am^.
rique, qui ont paru depuis sa Decouverte
jusqu'a I'an 1700. Par H. Ternaux. 8vo,
pp. 200. Paris, 1837.
Thomas. — History of Printing in
America. By Isaiah Thomas. 2 vols. 8vo.
Worcester, Massachusetts, 1818.
Warden". — Bibliotheca Americana;
being a choice Collection of Books, Maps,
Engravings, and Medals relating to North
and South America and the West Indies.
By D. B. Warden. 8vo. Paris, 1840.
Wiley and Putnam's American Book
Circular, with Notes and Statistics. Classi-
fied List of some of the most important and
recent American Publications. 8vo, pp. 64,
sewed. New York, 1843.
TRiJBNER'S
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL GUIDE
TO
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
THEOLOGY.
SICLICAL COMMENTARIES, ECCLESIASTICAL BIOGRAPHY AND
HISTORY, MISSIONARY ENTERPRISE, SERMONS,
DEVOTIONAL WORKS, ETC,
Adams. — The Elements of Christian
Science, a Treatise upon Moral Philosophy
aiul Practice. By WiUiani Adams, S.1;P.
bvo, cloth, 13s. 6d,
A.DAMS. — The Friends of Christ in
the New Testament. Thirteen Discourses by
Nehemiah Adams, D.D., Pastor of Essex
Street Church, Boston, Second Edition, 8vo,
cloth, 7s. 6d,
A.LEXANDEE. — A History of the
Israelitish Nation, from their Origin to their
Dispersion at the Destruction of Jerusalem by
tJiie Romans. By Archibald Alexander, D.D.,
late Professor in the Theological Seminary at
Princeton, New Jersey. 1 vol, 8vo, cloth, 15s.
Alexander, — Outlines of Moral Sci-
ence. By Archibald Alexander, D,D., late
Professor in the Theological College at Prince-
ton, N.J. 12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d,
Alexander. — Thoughts on Religious
Experience. By Archibald Alexander, D.D.
Post 8vo, 4s. 6d.
Alexander. — TheCanons of Scripture.
By Archibald Alexander, D.D. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Alexander. — Brief Compend.of Bible
Truth. By Archibald Alexander, D.D. With
portrait. 12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Alexander. — A Commentary on the
Prophecies of Isaiah. By J. A. Alexander.
Abridged by the Author. 3 vols, crown 8vo,
cloth, 16s.
Alexander. — The Psalms Translated
and Explained. By J. A. Alexander. 3 vols,
crown 8vo, cloth, 24s.
Alexander. — Consolation in Dis-
courses on Select Topics, addressed to the
Suffering People of God. By James W. Alex-
ander, D.D. 8vo, cloth, 12s.
Alexander. — Life of Dr. Arch. Alex-
ander. By Dr. J. W. Alexander. 8vo, 16s. 6d.
Alger. — History of the Cross of
Christ. By the Rev. William B. Alger. 18nio,
2s. 6d.
Alston. — Sermons by the Rev. Philip
Whitmel Alston, M.A., late Hector of Calvary
Church, Memphis, Tennessee. With a Bio-
graphical Notice and Funeral Sermon by the
Eight Rev. Jas. 11 Otey,D.D., Bishop of Ten-
nessee, with portrait. 456 pp., 8vo, cloth. 14s.
American Bible Union's Publica-
tions. — 1. The Second Epistle of Peter, the
Epistles of John and Judas, and the Revela-
tions. The Autliorized Version, the Greek
Text, and the New Translation of the Bible
Union, with Notes. 253 pp., 4to, boards, 5s.
2. 11 Nuovo Testamento. Traduzioue dal
Greco per cura di G. Achilli. 344) pp., 8vo,
cloth, 3 s.
3. A Specimen of Revision of the Gospel of
St. Matthew. Greek Text, common and re-
vised Version, with Notes, 40 pp., 8vo, Is.
4 L'Evangile suivant Jean. The Gospel of
St. John. A new French Version. 32 pp.
8vo, sewed, Is,
Frogramnie and Abstract of Report to be had
on application to TKiiBNER & Co., the
Agents of the Union ior Europe.
American Biblical Repository and
Classical Review, conducted by Drs. Robinson,
Peters, Edwardes, and others', from the com-
mencement in 1831 to July, 1850, with General
Index to 1st and 2d Series, in all 80 parts,
large paper. 8vo, sewed, clean as new, £16. 16s.
nett, original price £30
" A complete set of this valuable work is
now rarely to be found, most of the Urst series
being out of print "
Andrew. — True Constitution of Gro-
vernment in Sovereignty of the Individual as
the iinal Development of Protestantism, &c.
By S. P. Andrew. 3d edition, post 8vo, 6s.
Anspach. — The Sepulchres of our De-
parted. By the Rev. E. R. Anspach, A.M.,
Hagerstown, Maryhnid. 460 pp., 12mo, cl. 6s.
Appleton. — Works of. —
Embracing his Course of Theological Lectures,
Academic Addresses, Selections from his
Sermons, Memoir of his Life and Character,
&c. 2 vols. 8vo.
A Presbyterian Clergyman Looking
for the Church. By'One of Three Hundred.
Post 8vo, cloth, Gs. (id.
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
AEMSTEONa. — Memoir and Sermons of
Kev. Wm. J. Armstrong, D.D., late Secretary
of Am. Bd. of Com. for For. Missions. Edited
by llev. Hollis Read. Grown 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
AuTOBioGRAPHYof a New Churchman J
or, Incidents and Observations connected with
the Life of John A. Little. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Badger. — Memoir of Rev. Jos. Bad-
ger. By E. G. Holland. 3d edition, post 8vo,
7s. 6d.
Baird. — Eehgion in America. Includ-
ing a View of the Various Religious Denomi-
nations in the United States, &c. By Robert
Baird, I).D. 8vo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Baird. — Sketches of Protestantism in
Italy, Past and Present, including a notice of
the Origin, History, and Present State of the
Waldenses. By Robert Baird. 12mo, Ss.
Baker. — Revival Sermons. Second
Series. By the Rev. Dan. Baker, President
of Austin College, Texas. With an Appendix.
386 pp., post 8vo, cloth, 7s. Gd.
Baldwin. — Themes for the Pulpit ;
being a Collection of nearly 3000 Topics ; with
Texts, suitable for Public Discourses in the
Pulpit and Lecture Room. By A. C. Baldwin.
12mo, cloth, 7s. 61.
" For those wlio are young in the ministiy,
Mr. B. has performed a valuable service " —
Bihl. Repos.
Ballou, — A Series of Lecture Sermons,
deUvered at the Second TJniversalist Meeting,
in Boston. By Hosea Ballou, Pastor. 12mo,
cloth, 8s. 6d.
Bangs. — The Present State, Prospects,
and Responsibilities of the Methodist Epis-
copal Church, witli an Appendix of Ecclesias-
tical Statistics. By N. Bangs,D.D. 13mo, 29. 6d.
Bangs. — A History of the Methodist
Episcopal Church. By Nathan Bangs, D.D.
4 vols. 12mo, 20s.
Bangs. — Lifeof James Arrainius,D.D.,
compiled from his Life and Writings, as pub-
lished by Mr, James jSichoUs. By Nathan
Bangs. 18mo, 2s. Cd.
Bantard. — A Pictorial Question Book
or Incidents in the Life of our Saviour, with
numerous Engravings. By Rev. Joseph Ban-
vard. 18mo, Is.
Bartlet. — The Frontier Missionary.
A Memoir of the Life of the Rev. Jacob Bailey,
A.M., Missionary at Pownalborough, Maine,
Cornwallis, and Annapohs, N.S.; with Hlus-
trations, Notes, and an Appendix. By William
S. Bartlet, A.M., Rector of St. Luke's, Chelsea,
Mass., and a Corresponding Member of the
Maine Historical Society . With a Preface by
the Right Rev. George Burgess, D.D., Bishop
of the Episcopal Church m the Diocese of
Maine. 8vo, cloth, 16s.
Bartlett. — Memoir of Rev. Jacob
Bailey, Missionary. By Wm. S. Bartlett, with
Preface' by Bp. Geo. Burgess. 8vo, 9s.
Bartol. — Discourses on the Christian
Body and Form. By C. A. Bartol. Crown 8vo,
cloth, 7s. Gd.
Bedell.— Sermons by the Rev. G^. T.
Bedell, D.D. 2 vols. 8vo, 24s. Scarce.
Beecher. — Works by Lyman Beecher,
D D., (Father of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe.)
Vol. L Lectures on Political Atheism ; Vol. 11.
Sermons, delivered on various occasions. Post
8>vo, cloth, IGs. Vol. III. Views of Theology.
7s. 6d.
Beecher. — The Conflict of Ages ; or,
the Great Debate on the Moral Relations of
God and Man. By Edward Beecher, ldl>.
Svo, 7s. 6d.
Belcher. — The Clergy of America:
Anecdotes illustrative of the Character of the
Ministers of Rehgion in tlie United States.
By Joseph Belcher, D.D. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Bellamy. — The Works of Joseph
Bellamy, D.D., First Pastor of the Church in
Bethlem., Conn. With a Memoir of his Life ;
and Character. In 2 vols. 8vo, 283.
Bertram (J. M'Grregor) Missionary
Life in St. Helena a-nd Cape of Good Hope.
By Dr. Hatfield. Post 8vo, 43.
Bibliotheca Sacra. And Theological
Review, 1814 to 1853. 10 vols. 8vo-, £10 10s.
Blake. — Every Day Scripture Read-
ings. By J. L. Blake. Post Svo, 73- 6d.
Bledsoe. —A Theodicy j or, Yindioa-
tion of the Divine Glory, as manifested in the
Constitution and Government of the Morai
World. By Albert Taylor Bledsoe, Professor
of Mathematics and Astronomy in the Univer-
sity of Mississippi. 366 pp., 8vo, hf. mor. 93.
BoARDMAN. — The Bible in the Count-
ing House. A Course of Lectures to Mer-
chants. By H. A. Boardman, D.D. Crown
Svo, cloth, 6s. (Copyright.)
BoARDMAN. — The Bible in the Family ;
or Hints on Domestic Happiness. By the
Rev. H. A. Boardman. 12mo, 6s.
BoGrE. — Lectures of Rey. David
Bogue, D.I). Containing 121 Lectures on
Theology 73 on Divine Revelation and Bib-
lical Criticism; 4 on the Dispensation of Re-
ligion,. 29 on Church History; 16 on Jewish
Antiquities > 14 on Sacred Geography ; 22 oh
Coxuposition of Sermons ; and 40 on the Pas-
toral Offices. Edited by Rev. Joseph Samuel
C. F. Irey. Svo, cloth, 14s.
BowEX. — Lowell Lectures on the Ap-
plication of Metaphysical and Ethical Science
to the Evidences of Religion. By Erancis
Bovven. Svo, cloth, 14s.
Brown. — A Dictionary of the Holy
Bible ; containing an Account of the Persons,
Piaces, and other Objects, whether Natural,
Artificial, Civil, Religious, or Military ; and an
Explanation of the Appellative Forms men-
tioned in the Old and JNew Testament. With
a Life of the Author, and an Essay on the
Evidences of Christianity. By the Rev. John
Brown, Svo, 10s.
Brown and Taylor. — Discussion be-
tween Rev. T. Brown and Wm. B. Taylor, on
the Obligation of the Sabbath. Post Svo, 5s.
Bryant. — Millennarian Views, with
Reasons for receiving them, to which is added
a Discourse on the Fact and JNature of the
Resurrection. By Alfred Bryant. 12mo, 6s.
Bryant. — The Attractions of the
World to Come. By Rev. Alfred Bryant.
12mo, cloth, 5s.
BiJCKMiNSTER. — The Works of Rev.
J. S. Buckminster; with Memoirs of his Life.
2 vols. 12mo, 14s.
THEOLOGY.
SuLFiNCfi. — Hebrew Lyrical History;
or. Select Psalms, arranged in the order of the
Events to which they relate. With Introduc-
tory Notes. ByThos. Bulfinch. Fcp., cloth, 59.
3trRCHAiiD. — Daughters of ZioG. By
S. D. Burchard 13mo, 9s,
BuEaESS. — The Last Enemy; con-
quering and conquered. By George Burgess,
B:B., Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal
Church in Maine, 12nio, cloth.
BuEEOWES. — A Commentary on the
Song of Solomon, By the Rev, George Bur-
rowes, Professor in Lafayette College, Easton,
Pa. Post 8vo, cloth, 7s.
Bush. — Notes, Critical and Practical,
•OR tk« Book of Genesis, designed as a General
Help to Bi'b&eal Rea&ing and Instructioa. By
sGeorge Bush. 3 vols. 12mo, 12s.
Bush. — JSotes, Critical and Practical,
on the Book of Exodus, designed as a General
Help to Biblical Reading and Instruction. By
George Bush, 2 vols, 1 2nio, 12s.
Bush. — Notes, Critical and Practical,
on the Book of Leviticus, designed, &c. By
George Bush. 12mo, 5s.
Bush. — Notes, Critical and Practical,
on the Book of Joshua, designed as a General
Help to Biblical Beading and Instruction. By
George Buslu 12mo, 5s.
Bush. — Notes, Critical and Practical,
on the Book of Judges, designed, fcc. By
George Bush. 12 mo, 5s.
Bush. — Anastasis, or the Doctrine of
the Resurrection of the Body Rationally and
•Scriptiiraily considered. By George Bush.
12mo, 6s,
Bush. — A Treatise on the Millenium.
By George Bush. 12mo, 4s. Cd.
Bush. — The Soul, or an Inquiry into
Scriptural Psychology, as developed b_y the
use of the Terme— Soul, Spirif, life, &c.
viewed in its bearings on the Doctrine of the
Resurrection. By George Bush. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Bush. — Scripture Illustrations; chiefly
from the Works of Modern Oriental Travellers.
By George Bush, A.M. Imp. 8vo, 24s.
BusHNELL. — Christ in Theology. By
Horace BushnelL 12rao, cloth, 8s.
BusH¥ELL. — Discourses on Christian
Nurture. By Horace Bushnell. 12mo,.eJ.4s. 6d.
BuNaEiSTEE. — The Preacher and the
Kin^ ; or, Bourdaloue in the Court of Louis
XIv ; being an Account of the Pulpit Elo-
quence of that distinguished Era. Translated,
from the French of L. Bungener. Paris, 12th
Edition With an Introduction by the Rev.
Geo. Potts, D.D., Pastor of the University
Place Presbyterian Church, Nevi^ York. Crowii
6vo, 6s. (Copyright.)
BuNaEifEE. — The Priest and the
Huguenot ; or, Rabaut and Bridaine in the
Time of Louis XV. Translated from the
Trench of L. Bungener. 2 vols, post 8vo, 12s-
(Copyright.)
BuTLEE. — Old Truths and New
Errors, By the Rev. C. M. Butler, D.D.,
Rector of Trinity Church, Washington. 12mo,
cloth, 4s.
BrTTEEWOETH. — Concordance to the
Holy Scriptures, in a Single Alphabet, being
the most comprehensive and concise of any
before published. By the Rev. John Butter-
worth, With numerous illustrative Engrav-
ings. Royal 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Canno>^.— Lectures on Pastoral Theo-
logy. By the Rev. James Spencer Cannon,
D !>., late Professor of Pastoral Theology, and
Ecclesiastical History and Government m the
Theological Seminary of the Reformed Dutch
Church, New Brunswnck, New Jersey. 8vo,
cloth, with Portrait, 12s,
CAU&HEr. — Help to a Life of Holiness
and Usefulness.; or, Revival Miscellanies,
containing Eleven Revival Sermons and
Thoughts on various Subjects. By Rev. Jas.
Caughey. Edited by Allen and Wise. Sixth
Edition, 1 vol. crown 8vo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
CAuaHET.— Methodism in Earnest :
History of a Revival ia Great Britain. By
Jas. Caughey. Post 8vo, 6s, 6d,
Chapin. — Characters in the G-ospel.
By Rev. E. H. Chapin. 12mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Chapin. — Discourses on the Beati-
tudes. By E. H. Chapin. 158 pp., 12mo,
cloth, 3s-
Chapmast. — ^The American Episcopal
Church. Sermons upon the Ministry, Worship,
and Doctrines of the Protestant Episcopal
Church, By G. T, Chapman, D.D. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Chaeity and the Clergy; being a
Review by a Protestant Clergyman of the
" New Themes Controversy ; " together with
Suadry Serious Refieetions upon the Religious
Press, Theological Semiaaries, Ecclesiastical
Ambition, Growth of Moderation, Prostitution
of the Pulpit, and General Decay of Chris-
tianity. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d,
Cheever. — The Powers of the World
to Come, and the Church's Stewaidship as
invested with them. By Geo. B. Cheever,
D.D. 12mo, 6s. 6d.
Ckeevee (Eev. G^eorge B.). — Wan-
derings of a Pilgrim in the Alps. Part I. In
the Shadow of Mont Blanc. Part II. In the
Shadow of the Jungfrau Alps, 1 vol, cL 6s.
Cheevee (Eev. Oeorge B.). — The
Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, in 1620.
Reprinted from the original volume ; with His-
torical and Local Illustrations of Providences,
Principles, and Persons. 1 vol. 12mo, cl. 6s.
Cheevee (Rev. Greorge B.) — A Defence
of Capital Punishment. New Edition, 1 vol.
12mo, cloth, 3s.
Cheevee (Rev. Greorge B.) The Hill
Difficulty, and some Experiences of life in the
PkinsofEase. With other Miscellanies. (Part
1. Allegorical and Imaginative. Part 2. De-
scriptive and Meditative. Part 3. Critical and
Speculative.) 1 vol. 12mo, cloth, with a Steel
Portrait of the Author, 6s.
Cheevee. — The Life and Trials of a
Youthful Christian in pursuit of Health, as de-
veloped in the Biography of Nathaniel Cheever,
M.D. By Rev. Henry T. Cheever, with an
Introduction by Rev. George B. Cheever, D.D.
1 vol. 12mo, 6s.
Cheevee. — Windings of the River of
the Water of Life in the Development, Disci-
pline, and Fruits of Faith. By George B.
Cheever, D.D. 1 vol. 12nio, 7s.
Child. — Isaac T. Hopper : a True Life.
By L. Maria Child, author of the " Mother's
Book,'' '^c. ^osjt 8vo, njrith Portrait, cloth, 9s.
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Christianity, and its Relations to
Poetry and Philosophy. 12mo, 2s. 6d.
Clark. — The Methodist Episcopal
Pulpit; A Collection of Original Sermons
from Living Ministers of the M. E. Church ;
Collected and Revised. By Rev. Davis W.
Clark, A.M. 12mo, 6s.
Claem. — Formation of Character, a
Series of Lectures. By the Rev. Thomas M.
eiai-k, D.D. Foolscap, cloth,. Gs. 6d.
GiAEK. — Memoir of Rev. J.E. Emer-
son. By R. W. Clark. 18mo, 23.
Claeke, — Heaven, and its Scriptural
Emhlenw. By the Rev. Rufus W. Clarke.
With five beautiful steel engravings. 8vo,
cloth extra, 16s.
Clayton. — Remarks and Reflections
touching the Agency and Ministration of Holy
Aag.els, with reference to their History, Rank,
Titles, Attributes, Characteristics, Residence,
Society, Employments, and Pursuits; inter-
spersed with Traditional Particulars respect-
ing them. By George Clayton, Jun. Embel-
lished with original Illustrations. 12mo, 8s.6d.
Coit. — Puritanism, or Churchman's
Defence against its aspersions by an Appeal
to its own History. By Rev. T. W. Coit.
12ino, cloth, 6s. 6d.
CoLEMAK. — Ancient Christianity Ex-
emplified in the Private, Domestic, Social, and
Civil Life of the Primitive Christians, and in
the Original Institutions, Offices, Ordinances,
and Rites of the Chmxh. By Lyman Coleman.
Royal Bvo, cloth, 14s.
Coleman. — An Historical Geography
of the Bilile, illustrated by Maps from the
Is^eat aad most authentic sources of various
countries mentioned in the Scriptures. By
Rev. L. Coleman. Bvo, 8s. bound.
Coleman. — An Historical Text-Book
and Atlas of Biblical Geogi'aphy. By Lyman
Coleman. With 6 Coloured Maps and a Plan.
160 pp., imp. 8vo, 8s.
Colton. — The Genius and Mission of
the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Uni-
ted States. By Rev. Calvin Colton, LL.D.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 7s.
Consecrated Talents; or, the Mission
of the Childi-en of the Chui-ch. 16mo, 3s.
Convention Sermons at New York,
Sept., 1852. 8vo, 12s.
Cox. — Interviews, Memorable and Use-
ful, from Diary and Memory. Reproduced by
Samuel Hanson Cox, D.D. Post 8vo> cloth, 9s.
Croswell. — Memoir of Rev. Dr. W.
Croswell. By his Pather. Royal 8vo, 14s.
Curtis. — Communion ; the Distinc-
tion between Christian and Church Fellow-
ship, and between Conjmunion and its Sym-
bols ; embracing a Review of the Arguments
of the Rev. Robert Hull and Rev. Baptist W.
Koel, in favour of a Mixed Communion. By
T. T. Curtis. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Davis. — A General History of the
Sabbatarian Churches, embracing Accounts of
the Armenian, East Indian, and Abyssinian
Episcopies. By Mrs. Tamar Davis. 12mo, 4s.6d.
Davies. — Sermons on Important Sub-
jects. By the Rev. Samuel Davies, President
of the College of New Jersey. With an Essay
on the Life and Times of tlie Author, by
Albert Barnes. S vols, crown 8to, cloth, 188.
Davies. — ^Substance of Sermons. By
Samuel Davies, A.M., formerly President of
Nassau Hall, New Jersey, given in his owa
words, in one volu-me, by fihe C^mpilex of the
Sailor's Companion. 12mOy43.
Deems.— An Appeal in behalf of Fa-
mily Worship ; with Prayers and Hymns, and
Calendar Lesso»s from Scripture, for Family
Use. By Chas. P. Deems, Editor of the
Southern Methodist Pulpit. 12m^, cloth.
De Wette.— a Critical a^ncl Historical
Introduction to the Canonical Scriptures- of
the Old Testament. From the German of
Wilhelm de Wette. Translated and Enlarged
by Theodore Parker. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth, 24s.
Dewey. — Discourses on Human Na-
ture, Human life, and the Natui-e of Religion,
By Orville Dewey, D.D. 12mo, 8s,
Dewey. — Discourses on the l^Tature ©f
Religion; aed on Commerce and Business;
with some Occasi®nal Discom'ses. By OrviUe
Dewey, D.D. 12mo, cloth, 8s.
Dewey. — Discourses and Reviewsupon
Questions in Controversial Theology and
Practical Religion. By Orville Dewey, D.D.
12mo, cloth, 6s.
Dewey. — Moral Tiews of Society,
Commerse, he. By Orville Dewey, D.D.
12mo, 6s.
Discrssioir between Rev. T. Brown
and Wm. B. Taylor, on the Obligation of the
Sabbath. Post 8vo, 5s.
DoANE. — Sermons on various occasions
and subjects. By G. W. Doane, D.D., Bishop
of New Jersey. Bound in one voL 8vo, 16a..
Doiys. — ImmortaiBty TriumphaBrU. 1h©
Existence of a God and Human Immortality
philosophically considered, and the Truth of
Divine Revelation substantiated. By J. B.
Dods. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
DowLlNG. — Romanism from the Ear«
liest Corruption of Christianity to the Present
Time. New Edition, with Supplement, com-
prising Historical Sketches of the last Pope,
Gregory XVI,, and of the present Pope^
Pius IX. By John Dowling, D.D. &vo, cloth, 188.
Duncan. — The Life, Character, and
Acts of Jolm the Baptist, and the relation of
his Ministry to the Chri&tian Dispensation.
Based upon the " Johannes tier Tauter " of L
Yon Rohden. By Rev. Wm. C. Duncan, M.A.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Dr Pui. — An Exposition of the Pro-
phecies of the Apocalypse. By the Rev. Janxe*
Du Pui, A.M., Chaplain in the U.S. Army.
12mo, cloth, pp. 220, 5s.
DwiGHT. — Christianity RcTived in the
East; or, a Narrative of the Works of God
among the Armenians of Turkey. By H. G.
0. Dwjght, Missionary of American Board of
Missions. 12mo, cloth, 7s.
DwiGHT. — Theology Explained and
Defended; with Life and Portrait of the
Author. By Timothy Dwight, IjIx-D. 4 vols.
8vo, cloth, 36s.
Eddy. — Heroines of the Missionary
Enterprise, or Sketches of Prominent Pemale
Missionaries. By Daniel C. Eddy. Foolscap,
cloth. 12mo, ^s,
THEOLOGY.
Edwards. — The Writings of Prof. B.
B. Edwards. AVith a Memoir by Rev. Prof.
Park. In two volumes, 12mo, cloth, 14s.
Edwards. — The Works of President
Edwards. Reprinted from tlie Worcester
Edition, with valuable Additions, and a copious
General Index. In 4 vols, royal 8vo, £3. 16s.
This is the first complete Edition of Ed-
wards' Works. It contains Six Works not in
the London Edition. The latter is also de-
fective in other respects. — See Dr. Robinson's
Notice in " Bibliotheca Sacra."
Edwards. — Charity, and its Fruits on
Christian Love, as Manifested in the Heart
and Life. By Jonathan Edwards, President
of the College of New Jersey. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Edwards. — Works of Jonathan Ed-
wards, jun. 3 vols. 8vo, cloth, 16s.
Edwards. — On the Freedom of the
Will. By Jonathan Edwards. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Edwards. — New Testament, with
Notes and Instructions. By Rev. Dr. J.
Edwards. 8vo, 5s.
Edwards. — Family Testament and
Commentary. By Dr. Justin Edwards. 8vo,
cloth, 3s. 6d.
Ellet. — Watching Spirits. By Mrs.
Ellet. With Six Illustrations. 8vo, 14s.
Ellis. — The Organ, and Church Music.
Two Discourses deUvered in Harvard Church,
Charleston, Sept. 20, 1852. By George G.
Ellis. 8vo, sewed. Is. 6d.
Emmons. — The Works of JS'athaniel
Emmons, D.D. With his Life by Jacob Ide,
D.D. 7 vols, royal 8vo, cloth, £6. 5s.
Comprising 240 Sermons, by "one of the
most eloquent and able preachers of his time."
Essay on the Primitive Church Offices.
Reprinted by Permission from the Princeton
B.eview, with Corrections and Additions by
the Writer. 1 vol. 12mo. 4s.
Essays. — Theological Essays, printed
from the Princeton Review. First and Second
Series. 8vo, cloth, 15s. each.
Encyclopedia of Rehgious Know-
ledge; comprising Dictionaries of the Bible,
Theology, Biography, Religious Denomina-
tions, Ecclesiastical History and Missions.
Edited by the Rev. B. B. Edwards and the
Rev. J. ]N. Brown. In one very large volume,
pp. 1,276, imperial 8vo, with Plates, cloth, 24s.
This valuable Work comprises a complete
library in itself, on the above subjects, from
the mos^ authentic sources; with copious
original articles, by the ablest American
writers. Episcopal, Congi-egational, Presby-
terian, Methodist, and Baptist.
Evidences of Christianity; Lectures
on the Evidences of Christianity, Delivered at
tlie University of Virginia during the Sessions
of 1850-1851. 8vo, cloth. Portraits, 18s.
Family Illuminated and Pictorial Bi-
ble, including the Apocrypha. Superbly em-
bellished by over Sixteen Hundred Illustra-
tions, exclusive of a series of rich Illumina-
tions in Colours, comprising Frontispieces,
Presentation Plate, Family Record, Title-
pages, &c. Forming an elegant Wedding Pre-
sent. Small folio, mor. extra, £4. 14s. 6d.
Fenelon and GtUYON. — Spiritual Pro-
gress ; or. Instructions in the Divine Life of
the Soul. From the French of Fenelon and
Madame Guyon. Edited by James W. Met-
calf. 12mo, cloth, 348 pp., 5s.
Finney. — Lectures on Eevivals of
Religion, by Charles G. Finney. Originally
reported in the New York Evangelist, by
Joshua Leavitt. Revised by the Author.
12mo, cloth. 6s.
Flint. — Sermons by James Flint,
D.D. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Feothingham. — Sermons in the Or-
der of a IVelvemonth. By N. L. Frothing-
ham. 8vo, cloth, 370 pp. 7s. 6d.
GrAiLLAED. — The History of the Re-
formation in the Church of Christ ; continued
from the close of the Fifteenth Century. By
Thomas Gaillard. 8vo, cloth. 15s. 6d.
Giles. — Christian Thought on .Life;
in a Series of Discourses. By Henry Giles.
Second Edition, 12mo, 5s.
GoBAT. — Journal of Three Years' Re-
sidence in Abyssinia. By Rev. Samuel Gobat,
now Bishop of Jerusalem. Preceded by an
Introduction, Geographical and Historical, on
Abyssinia, translated from the French, by
Rev. Sereno D. Clark. Accompanied with a
Biographical Sketch of Bishop Gobat, by Robt.
Baird, D.D. 12mo, cloth. 7s. 6d.
GooDELL. — The Old and the New; or,
the Changes of Thirty Years in the East, with
some allusions to Oriental Customs as eluci-
dating Scripture. By William GoodeU, Mis-
sionaiy in Constantinople. With an Intro-
duction by Rev. WiUiam Adams, D.D. With
Portrait. Post 8vo, cloth, 7s.
Goodrich. — Pictorial and Descriptive
View of all Religions ; embracing the Forms
of Worship practised by the several nations of
the kftown world. Also a History of the Jews
and Life of Mahomed. By Rev. Charles A.
Goodrich, A.M. 8vo, bound. 14s.
GoRRiE. — The History of the Metho-
dist Episcopal Church in the United Statt«
and Canada. By Rev. P. D. Gorrie. 12mo„ 7s.
GoREiE. — The Churches and Sects of
the United States -. containing a brief Account
of the Origin, History, Doctrines, Church
Government, Mode of Worship, Usages and
Statistics of Each Religious Denomination,
so far afi known. By the Rev. P. Douglas
Gorrie. 12iuo, 4s.
GoERTE. — Episcopal Methodism, as it
was and is; or, an Account of the Origin,
Progress, Doctrines, Church Polity, Usages,
Institutions, and Statistics of the Methodist
Episcopal Church in the United States. Em-
bracing also a Sketch of the Rise of Method-
ism in Europe, and of its Origin and Progress
in Canada. By Rev. P. Douglass Gorrie.
12mo, cloth. 6s.
GoEEiE. — The Lives of Eminent Me-
thodist Ministers; containing Biographical
Sketches, Incidents, Anecdotes, Records of
Travel, Reflections, &c. By Rev. P. Douglass
Gorrie. 12mo, cloth.
Gould. — Church Music in America :
comprising its History and its Peculiarities at
different Periods, with cursory Remarks on
its Legitimate IJse and its Abuse; with
Notices of the Schools, Composers, Teachers,
and Societies. By N. D, Gould. 12mo, cl, 5s.
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Greenleap. — A History of the
Churches of all Denominations m the City of
New York, from the first Settlement. By
Jonathan Greenleaf. l8nio, 3s.
Geiffin. — Sermons not before Pub-
lished, on Yarions Practical Subjects. By the
late Edward Dorr Griffin, D.D. 1 vol. 8vo,
cloth, 9s.
Gbiffin. — The Gospel its own Advo-
cate. By George Griffin, LL.D. 12mo, cl. 6s.
Geiswold. — Scenes in the Life of the
Saviour, bv the Poets and Painters. Edited
by Rufus Griswold. With Illustrations. 240
pp., 8vo, splendidly bound in full calf, antique
gilt edges, 25s.
Geiswold. — Memoir of the Life of the
Rt. Rev. Alexander Yiets Griswold, D.D., Bi-
shop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in
the Eastern Diocese. By John S. Stone, D.D.,
Rector of Christ Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.
With an Appendix, to which are added a Ser-
mon, Charge, and Pastoral Letter of the late
Bishop. 8vo, cloth, 14s.
Hackett. — A Commentary on the ori-
ginal Text of the Acts of the' Apostles. By
H. B. Ilackett, Professor of Biblical Literature
in Newton Theological Institution. 1 vol.
8vo, 18s.
Hall. — Memoir of Mary L. Ware,
Wife of Henry Ware. By E. B. Hall. 12mo.
7s. 6d:
Hall. — The Puritans and their Prin-
ciples. By Edwin Hall, Eourth Edition, 8vo,
cloth. 12s. 6d.
Hamilton. — The "Friend of Moses ;"
or, a Defence of the Pentateuch as the Pro-
duction of Moses, and an inspired Document
against the Objections of Modern Skepticism.
By Wm. T. Hamilton, D.D., Pastor of the Go-
vernment Street Church, Mobile, Ala, 8vo,
cloth. 12s. 6d.
Haesha. — Nature, Eifect, and Pardon
of Sin. By T, W. Harsha. 18mo, 3s. 6d.
Haebaugh.— Heaven : or an earnest
and Scriptural Inquiry into the abode of the
Sainted dead. By the Bev. H. Ilarbaugh,
4th Edit , revised and improved. 12rao, 5s Gd,
Haebaugh. — The Heavenly Recog-
nition; or, an Earnest and Scriptural Dis-
cussion of the Question ; AVill we Know our
Eriends in Heaven? By the Bev. H. Harbaugh.
12mo, 5s. 6d.
Haebaxjgh. — The Heavenly Home ; or,
the Employments and Enjoyments of the
Saints in Heaven. By the Rev. H. Harbaugh,
A.M. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
HAEBArGH. — On the Future Life. In
3 vols. Yol. I. Heaven and the Sainted Dead.
A^ol. n. The Heavenly Recognition. Yol 111.
The Heavenly Home. Crown 8vo, cloth, 16s.
HaeeijvGTOX. — Sermons by Rev. Jo-
seph Harrington, of San Francisco, California.
A\ ith a Memoir by William Whiting. 276 pp.
post 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Haetley. — Lessons at the Cross ; or,
Spiritual Truths familiarly exhibited in their
Relation to Christ. By Sherman Hartley. With
an Introduction, by the Rev. George W. Blag-
den, D. D, I'oolsca]), cloth, 4s.
Hatfield.^ — St. Helena and the Cape
of Good Hope: or Incidents in the Missionary
Life of the Rev. James M'Gregor Bertram, of
St. Helena. By Rev. Edwin F. Hatfield, B.D^
with an Introduction by Rev, George B.
Cheever,D.D. 12mo, 4s
Hawes. — Reasons for not Embracing
the Doctrine of Universal Salvation. By T.
Hawes. 24mo, 2s.
Hawks. — Egypt and its Monuments ;
or, E^ypt a Witness for the Bible. Illustra-
ted with Engravings from the works of Cham-
pollion, Rosellini, Wilkinson, and others ; and
Architectural Yiews of the principal Temples.
By Rev. F. L. Hawks. 8vo, cloth, 14s.
Heablet. — Sacred Scenes and Charac-
ters. By J. T. Headley, Author of " Sacred
Mountains," &c. ; with Original Designs by
Darley. 8vo, cloth, gilt, 16s.
Headley. — Women of the Bible. His-
torical and Descriptive Sketches of the
Women of the Bible, from the Eve of the Old,
to the Marys' of the New Testament. By
P. C. Headley. 7s. fid.
Headley. — The Sacred Mountains,
By J. T. Headley. 1 vol. 8vo, embossed cloth,
extra gilt. Illustrated with 12 engravings, by
Burt, with designs by Lossing. 20th thousand.
15s
Headley. — The Saered Mountains.
By J. T. Headley. I2mo, cloth, gilt. 7s. 6d.
Headley. — The Sacred Mountains.
By J. T. Headley. 12mo, full gilt. 10s. 6d.
Hengstenbeeg. — Christology of the
Old Testament, and a Commentary on the
Predictions of the Messiah by the Prophets.
By E. W. Hengstenberg, Prof, of Theol.,
Berlin. Translated by Ruel Keith, D. D., ProL
in Theol. Sem., Yirginia. 3 vols. 8vo, cloth, 36s.
Hengstekbeeg. — Egypt and the
Books of Moses; or, the Books of Moses
illustrated by the Monuments of Egypt.
Translated by R. D. C. Bobbins. 12mo, 7s.
Hening. — History of the African
Mission of the Protestant Episcopal Church
in the United States; with Memoirs of De-
ceased Missionaries, and notices of Native
Customs. By Mrs. E. E. Ilening, I2mo^ 5s.
HiNES. — Oregon : its History, Con-
dition, and Prospects, with Personal Adven-
ture among the Indians while connected with
the Oregon Missions. By the Rev. G. Hines.
12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d,
HiSTOEY of the division of the Pres-
byterian Church in the U. States, by a Com-
mittee of the Synod of New York and New
Jersey, post 8vo, 5s. 6d,
HiTCHCOCK.^^ (Anglo-American Li-
brary). Rehgious Lectures on Peculiar Phe-
nomena in the Four Lessons; delivered
to the Students in Amherst College, in 1845,
1847, 1848, and 1849. By Edward Hitchcock,
D.D. LL-D. New Edition, 12mo, sewed. Is.
Hitchcock. — The Religion of Geology.
By Edward Hitchcock, D.D., with Diagrams.
8vo. 7s. 6d.
HoBAET.— The Works of the Right
Rev. J. IT. Hobcirt,D D., late Bishop of New
York. 3 vols. Bvo, £1. 13s.
HoDGE.-A Commentary on the Epistle
to the Romans. By Charles Hodge. Abridged
by the Author for the Use of Sunday Schools
and Bible Classes. 12th edition, 12mo, half
bound, 4s. Gd.
THEOLOGY.
HoDaE.-A Commentary on the Epistle
to the Romans. The Questions separate.
18nio, half bound, Is. 3d.
Hoffman. — A Treatise on the Law of
tlie Protestant Episcopal Churcli in the United
States. By Murray Iloflfman. 1 vol. 8vo,
cloth, 14s.
Holmes. — The Wesley Offering ; or,
Wesley and his Times. By Rev. D. Holmes,
A.M., Author of 'Pure Gold,' kc. 12mo, el. 6s.
Holy Bible for Students. — Con-
taining the Old Testament, translated out of
the original Hebrew, and with the former
translations diligently compared and revised ;
and the Greek New Testament printed from
the Text, with the various Readings of Knapp,
together with the commonly received English
Translation, designed for the Use of Students,
with ruled paper, arranged to allow of most
numerous notes. 8vo, half russia, 35s — ito,
half russia, 42s.
Hopkins. — The History of the Con-
fessional. By John Henry Hopkins,^D. D.,
Bishop of the Diocese of Vermont. "^ 1 vol.
post Svo, cloth, 7s.
Hopkins. — Works of Samuel Hopkins
with Memoir. 3 vols. Svo, £3. 2s.
Hopkins. — The End of Controversy
(Controverted. By the Right Rev. John H.
Hopkins, D.D., Bishop of Vermont. 2 vols.
Svo, pp. 900, 10s.
A refutation of the well-known M'ork by the
IU)mish Bishop Milner, entitled, "The End of
Controversy," by one of the most eminent
American Divines.
HoppiN. — Notes of a Theological Stu-
dent. By James Mason Hoppin. Pp. 256,
12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Hug. — An Introduction to the Wri-
tings of the New Testament. Translated from
the German of Hug. By D. Eosdick, jun.
Royal Svo, IBs.
Huidekopee. — The Belief of the first
three Centuries concerning Christ's Mission
to the underworld. By Erederic Huidekoper,
Pp.200, Svo, cloth, Boston, 4s. 6d.
Inskip. — Methodism Explained and
Defended. By J. S. Inskip. i2mo, 4s.
Ives. — The Obedience of Faith : Seven
Sermons delivered on his Visitations to the
Churches in his Diocese, during 1848-9. By
tlie Rev. L. Siiliman Ives, ^.D. 12mo, cloth,
3a. 6d.
Jacobus. — Notes on the Gospels :
Critical and Explanatoiy. And incorporating
with the notes, on a new plan, the most im-
proved harmony of the four Gospels. With
illustrations, by Melancthon AV. Jacobus D.D.,
Professor of Biblical Literature in the Western
Tlieological Seminary, at Alleghany, Pa. Vol. I.
Matthew. 12mo, 5s. Vol. II. Mark and Luke.
12nio, 5s. Vol. III. John and Acts. (In pre-
paration).
Jahns. — Biblical Archaeology, trans-
lated from the Latin, with Additions and Cor-
rections. By Thomas C. Upham, Professor of
Moral and Intellectual Philosophy, and of the
Hebrew Language in Bowdvin College. Eifth
Edition, stereotyped. Svo, cloth. 15s.
Janney. — The Life of William Penn,
with Selections from his Correspondence and
Autobiography. By Samuel M. Janney. Se-
cond edition. Svo, 12s.
Janney. — The Life of G-eorge Fox,
with Dissertations on his Views concerning
the Doctrines, Testimonies, and Discipline of
the Christian Church. By Samuel Janney,
Svo, 9s.
Jones. — The Psalms of David, ren-
dered into English Verse of various Measures,
divided according to their Musical Cadences,
and comprised in their own limits. By Abner
Jones, Professor of Music. 32mo, cloth, 2s 6d.
JuDD. — Life and Character of the Rev.
Silvester Judd. With Frontispiece and por-
trait, pp. 552, 12mo, cloth, Boston, Ss.
JuDD. — The Church; in a Series of
Discourses. By Rev. S. Judd. Crown Svo,
pp. 284, cloth,6s.
JuDSON. — Memoir of Adoniram Jud-
son, being a Sketch of his Life and Missionary
Labours. By J. Clement, Author of " JS'oble
Deeds of American Women." 12mo, cloth. 6s.
JrDSON. — Memoir of Sarah B. Judson,
of the American Mission to Burmah. By
Emily F. Judson, ISmo, 5s.
Judson. — The Lives of Mrs. Anna H.
Judson and Mrs. Sarah B. Judson, with a Bio-
gra )hical Sketch of Mrs. Emily C. Judson,
Missionaries to Burmah. 3 parts. By Ara-
bella W. Stuart. 12mo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
Keneick. — The Four Gospels trans-
lated from the Latin Vulgate. By the Rer.
P. Kenrick. Svo, 16s.
Keyseb. — The Religion of the North-
men. By Rudolph Keyser, Professor of His-
tory in the University of Norway. Translated
by Barclay Pennock. 12mo, pp. 346, cloth, 8s.
Kip. — The Catacombs of Rome, as il-
lustrating the Church of the first three Cen-
turies. By the Right Rev. William Ingraham
Kip, D.D., Missionary Bishop of California.
12mo, pp. 212, with illustrations, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Kip. — The Double Witness of the
Church. By the Rev. William Ingram Kip,
D. D., Author of the " Christmas Holidays
in Rome." Fifth edition. Foolscap Svo, 5s.
Kip.— The Early Conflicts of Chris-
tianity. By Rev. Dr. Wm. J. Kip. 12mo,
cioth, 4s. 6d.
Kip. — Early Jesuit Missions in North
America. By Rev, W. J. Kip. 12mo, cloth,
5s. 1S47.
KiRWAN. — Romanism at Home. Let-
ters to the Hon. Roger B. Taney. By Kirwan,
12mo, 5s.6d«
Knight. — A new Memoir ot Hannah
More; or. Life in Hall and Cottage. By Mrs.
Helen C. Knight. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
KoLLOCK. — Pastoral Reminiscences.
By Shepard K KoUock, with an Introduction,
by A. Alexander, Professor in the Theological
Seminary at Princeton, New Jersey. 12mo,
cloth, 5s.
Larned. — The Life and Eloquence of
the Rev. Sylvester Lamed. By R. R. Gurley.
Post Svo, 7s. 6d.
" Larned's eloquence as a preacher was far-
famed."
Larrabee. — Wesley and his Coad-
jutors. By the Rev. W. C. Larrabee, A.M.
Edited by the Rev. B. F. Tefft, D. D. 3 vols.
12mo, Ss.
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Laurie. — Dr. Grrant and the Mountain
Nestorians. By the Rev. Thomas Laurie,
Surviving Associate in that Mission. With
Portrait, Map of the Country, Illustrations,
&c. Post 8vo, cloth, 7s. (Copyright).
Laweence. — Lighten the Dark Kiver;
or. Memorials of Mrs. Henrietta A. L. Ham-
lin, Missionary in Turkey. By Margaret W.
Lawrence, 12rao, 6s. 6d.
Lectuees on the Evidences of Chris-
tianity. Delivered in Philadelphia, by Clergy-
men of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in
the FaU and Winter of 1853-4. With an In-
troductory Essay by Alonzo Potter, D.D.,
LL.D., Bishop of the Diocese of Pennsylvania.
Bvo, pp 408, cloth, 16s.
Lee. — Life of the Apostle St. Peter, in
a Series of Practical Discourses. By Dr. Lee,
Bishop of Delaware. Eoolscap, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Lee. — Memou-s of Kev. Joseph Buck-
minster, and of his Son, Bev. Joseph Stephen
Buckminster. By Eliza Buckuiinster Lee.
Second edition. 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Lewis. — Confession of Christ. By
Rev. W. H. Lewis, D.D. 12mo, cloth, 3s.
Lewis. — Plato Contra Atheos. Plato
against the Atheists ; or. Tenth Book of the
Dialogue on Laws, accompanied with Critical
Notes, and followed by extended Dissertations
on some of the main Points of the Platonic
Philosophy and Theology, especially as com-
pared with the Holy Scriptures. By T. Lewis,
LL.D. 12mo, cloth, 9s.
Lewis. — Confession of Christ. Eleven
Sermons on the Sacraments. By the Rev. Wm.
H. Lewis, D.D., Rector of the Church of the
Holy Trinity, Brooklyn, L.J. 12mo, cloth,
pp. 124, 3s.
Lewis. — Sermons for the Christian
Year. By the Rev. W. H. Lewis, D. D. Second
Edition, 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Leyboijen. — The Soldier of the Cross ;
a practical Exposition of Ephesians, vi, 10-18.
By the Rev. John Leybourn, D. D. 12mo, 7s.
Little. — Autobiography of a New
Churchman ; or, Incidents and Observations
connected with the Life of John A. Little.
12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
LiVEEMOEE. — Discourses. By Abiel
Abbot Livermore. Crown 8vo, pp. 434, cloth,
7s. 6d.
LiVEEMOEE. — The Epistle of Paul to
the Romans ; with a Commentary and revised
Translation, and Introductory Essays. By
Abiel Abbot Livermore. 12mo, pp. 256, cl. 5s.
LoED. — An Exposition of the Apoca-
lypse. By David N. Lord. 8vo, cloth, 14s.
LoED. — The Epoch of the Creation.
The Scripture Doctrine contrasted with the
Geological Theory. By Eleazar Lord. With
an Introduction by Richai'd W. Dickineon, D.D.
12mo, 6s 6d.
LowEiE. — Manual of Missions ; or,
Sketches of the Foreign Missions of the Pres-
byterian Church. By J. C. Lowrie Obi. 8vo, 5s.
Magoon. — Republican Christianity ;
or. True Liberty as exhibited in the Lite, Pre-
cepts, and Early Disciples of the Great Re-
deemer. By E. L. Magoon. 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Magoon. — Proverbs for the People;
or, Illustrations of Practical Godliness drawn
from the Book of Wisdom. By E. L. Magooa
12mo, 6s.
Mahan. — The Exercise of Eaith, in its
relation to Authority and private Judgment.
By Rev. M. Mahan, A.M. 18mo, cloth. 2s. 6d.
Mann. — A few Thoughts for a Young
Man on Entering the World. By the Hon.
Horace Mann, First Secretary to the Massa-
chusetts Board of Education. 18mo, sewed, 6d.
Manual of Devotions for Families and
Sunday Schools. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Mason. — The Complete Works of John
Mason, D.D. Edited by his Son, Ebenezer
Mason. 4 vols. Bvo, £2. 8s.
Mason. — A Pastor's Legacy : being
Sermons on Practical Subjects. By the late
Rev. Erskine Mason, D. D. With a brief
Memoir of the Author. By Rev. Wm. Adama,
D.D. With Portrait, 8vo, cloth, 12s.
Mathee. — Magnaha Clmsti Ameri-
cana ; or. Ecclesiastical History of New Eng-
land. By Cotton Mather, 2 vols. 8vo, 30s.
M'Calla. — An Argument for Cleansing
the Sanctuary, delivered in the Presbytery of
Philadelphia. By W. M'Calla. With an Intro-
duction. 12mo, boards, 2s. 6d.
McClintock. — Sketches of Eminent
Methodist Ministers. By John McClintock.
Royal 8vo, ISs.
M'Clijee. — The Translators Eevived :
a Biographical Memoir of the Authors of the
English Version of the Holy Bible. By A. W.
M'Clure. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
McGrEEGOE. — The Figures and Sym-
bols of Divine Inspiration, and the Method of
Learning their Meaning. By Rev. Edwin
Ruthven McGregor, A.M. 18mo, 2s. 6d.
M'Ilvaine. — Sermons, by the Right
Reverend C. P. M'Ilvaine, Bishop of Ohio. 2
vols. 8vo, 25s.
M'Ilvaine. — The evidences of Chris-
tianity in their External or Historical Division,
exhibited in a Course of Lectures. By Charles
Petit MTlvaine, D.D. ^Ninth Edition, revised.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 4s.
M'Ilvaine. — The Tree of the Know-
ledge of Good and Evil. By J. H. M'Ilvaine.
12mo, cloth. 5s.
Miles. — Philosophical Theology ; or,
Ultimate Grounds of aU Rehgious Behef based
in Reason. By J. W. Miles. 8vo, bound, 6s.
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, An-
cient and Modern; in which the Rise, Pro-
gress, and Variation of Church Power are con-
sidered in their Connection with the State of
Learning and Philosophy, and the Political
History of Europe during that period. Trans-
lated with Notes, &c., by A. Maclaine, D.D,
A New edition continued to 1826, by C. Coote,
LL. D. 2 vols. 8vo, 18s.
Methodist Peeachee. — Containing
Twenty-eight Sermons on Doctrinal and Prac-
tical Subjects. By Bishop Hedding, Dr. Eisk,
Dr. Bangs, Dr. Dulben, and others. 8vo, cl. 6s.
Mtiedock. — New Testament Trans-
lated from the Syriac Peshito Version. By
Dr. Murdock, 8vo, 14s.
National Peeachee (American),
Comprising Sermons by Clergymen of Eive
Different Denominations. Vol. 27 for the year
1853. Bvo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
THEOLOGY.
9
Neandee. — The Epistle of St. James
Practically Explained. By Dr. Augustus
Neander. Translated from the German by
Mr. H. C. Gonant. 12mo, cloth, 38. 6d.
KEANDER.-^Explanation of First Epis-
tle of St. John. By A. Neander, Translated
by Mrs. Gonant. rost 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Keandeb. — The Epistle of Paul to the
Philippians Practically Explained, By Augus-
tus J^ eander, D. D. Translated from the Ger-
man. By Mrs. H. G. Gonant. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Neander. — The Life of Jesus Christ,
in its Historical Gonnection and Historical De-
telopment. By Augustus Neander, Author of
*• History of the Ghurch," &c. Translated from
the Fourth German edition, by Professors
M'Glintock and BlumenthaU; with a Preface,
by a Glergyman of the GJiurch of England.
Royal 8vo, cloth, 12s.
Neil. — Epistle to the Ephesians ; a
Practical Exposition, in a Series of Lectures,
adapted to be read in Famihes and Social
Meetings. By the Rev. Wm. ^eil, D.D.
Foolscap, cloth, 2s. 6d.
Nelson. — The Cause and Cure of In-
fidehty; including a Notice of the Author's
Unbelief and the Means of his Rescue. By
the Rev. David Nelson. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Netin. — Biblical Antiquities, a Sum-
mary of, for the Use of Schools, Bible Glasses,
and Families. By J. W. Nevin, D.D. 12mo, 5s.
Nbvin. — On Mystical' Presence. By
J. W. Nevin. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
New Themes. — For the Protestant
Clergy. — Greeds without Gharity, Theology
without Humanity, and Protestantism with-
out Christianity. 12mo, 6s.
NewThemes. — Condemned; or, Thirty
Opinions upon " New Themes." 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Newcomb. — Young Lady's Guide to
Development of Christian Character. By Har-
vey Newcomb. New Edition, revised, 12mo,
6s. 6d.
NoBTON. — A Statement of Eeasons for
liot believing the Doctrine of Trinitarians
concerning the Nature of God and the Person
of Christ. By Andrew Norton. Post 8vo,
cloth, 7s.
Norton. — Evidences of the Genuine-
ness of the Gospels. By Andrew Norton,
Second Edition, 3 vols. 8vo, 30s.
Notes. — A New Translation of the
Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Canticles;
with Introductions and Notes, chiefly explana-
tory. By G. R. Noyes, D, D. 12mo, 7s.
Notes. — A New Translation, of the
Book of Psalms, with an Introduction and
Notes, chiefly explanatory. By G. R. Noyes,
D. D. Second Edition. 12mo, 7s,
NoTES.^ Version of the Book of Job.
By G. R. Noyes. 12mo, 7s.
Notes. — A New Translation of the He-
brew Prophets,arranged in Chronological Order.
By G. R. Noyes, D.D. 3 vols. 12mo, 21s.
Notes. — Lectures on the Truth of the
Bible. By Eli Noyes, D.D. 12mo, 6s. 6d.
Olin. — The Life and Letters of Ste-
then Ohn, D.D., late President of the Wesleyan
University in the United States. 2 vols, post
§vo, cloth, iis. yniforin with Uis Works.
Olin.— The Works of the late Dr. Ste-
phen Ohn, late President of the Wesleyan
University. With a Portrait. Comprising the
Srincipal Sermons, Sketches, and Addresses
elivered by this learned and excellent divine ;
for the depth, originality, and clearness of
wliich they have attained an estimation in the
United States equalled only by those of the
late Dr. Chalmers. 2 vols. 8vo, 14s.
Olmsted. — Noah and his Times, em-
bracing the consideration of various inquiries
relative to the Ante-diluviau and earlier Post-
diluvian periods,as well asDiscussions of several
of the leading questions of the present day.
By Rev. J. Munson Olmsted, M.A. 12mo. 7s.
Onderdonk. — Sermons and Episco-
pal Charges. By the Right Rev. Henry U.
Onderdonk. D D. 2 vols, cloth, 8vo, £1. 89.
Osgood. — God with men; or. Foot-
prints of Providential Leaders. By Samuel
Osgood. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Palfeet. — Jewish Scriptures and An-
tiquities, Academical Lectures on the. By
John Gorham Palfrey, D.D. 4 vols. 8vo, cl. £3.
Palfeet. — The Relation between
Judaism and Christianity, illustrated in Notes
on Passages in the New Testament, contain-
ing Quotations from, or References to, the Old.
By John Gorham Palfrey, D.D., LL D. 8vo,
pp.366, cloth, 15s.
Palmee. — The Way of Holiness, with
Notes by the "Way ; bein^ a Narrative of Re-
ligious Experience resulting from a Determi-
nation to be a Bible. By Mrs. Phoebe Palmer.
18mo, 3s.
Passion Flowees. (Poems). Boston.
12mo, cloth, 192 pp.
Paekee. — Sermons on Various Sub-
jects. By Joel Parker, D.D. With Portrait
of the Author. Post 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Paek. — Discourse Delivered at the Fu-
neral of Prof. M. Stuart. By E. Park. Is. 6d.
Patson. — Memoir, Select Thoughts
and Sermons of the late Rev. Edward Parson,
D.D. Compiled by the Rev. Asa Cummings.
3 vols. 8vo, 31s. 6d.
Peabodt. — Lectures on Christian Doc-
trine. By A, P. Peahody. New Ed, with an In-
troductory Lecture on the Scriptures. 8vo, 53.
Peabodt. — Sermons ; with a Memoir
by his Brother, By W. B. 0. Peabody. Second
Edition, post 8vo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
Peethes. — The Life of John Chrysos-
tom, based on the investigations of Neander,
Boehringer, and others. By Frederic M.Perthes.
Translated from the German by Alvah Hovey
and David B. Ford. 8vo, cloth, 4s.
Phillips. — Memoir of the Life, La-
bours, and extensive Usefulness of the Rev.
Christmas Evans, a distinguished Minister of
the Baptist Denominatiooj in Wales. Extracted
from the Welsh Memoir. By David Phillipg.
12mo, cloth. 5s.
PlEESON.— Memoirs of the Missiona-
ries of America. By H. W. Pierson, M.A.
With Portraits. Bvo, cloth, 12s.
Plumee. — The Grace of Christ; or,
Sinners saved by unmerited Kindness. By
William S. Plumer. D.D. 12mo, 5s.
10
AMERICAN LitERATtJRfi.
J^OLITICS FOR AmEEICAN ChEISTIANS:
A Word upon Our Example as a Nation, Our
Labour, Our Trade, Elections, Education, and
CJongressional Legislation. With Appendix,
and some Notice of a Review, by a Layman, of
New Themes for the Protestant Clergy. 8vo,
boards, 3s.
POPKIN. — A Memorial of the Rev. John
Snelling Popkin, D.D., late Elliot professor of
Greek Literature in Harvard University v
Edited by Cornelius C. Pelton, his successor
in Office. With portrait, Crown 8vo, cloth, 9s.
J^EATER Book. — The Book of Com-
mon Prayer, according to the Use of the Pro-
testant Episcopal Church in America, Various
sizes and prices, from 3s. to 10s. 6d.
Presbyterian Clergyman Looking for
the Church. By One of Three Hundred.
12nio, cl. 6s. 6d
Price. — Memoir of Philip and Rachel
Price. 12mo, cloth, 33.
Peime.— Thoughts on the Death of
Little Children. By S.T. Prime. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Primitive Church Offices. From the
Princeton Review. Uniform with Alexander
on the Psalms. 1 vol. 8vo, 3s. 6d.
Pulpit Reporter. — A Religious
Volume, containing over Sixty Sermons,
recently dehvered by Eminent Living Divines,
in various parts of the United States ; also,
Portraits and Biographical Sketches of several
prominent Living Clergymen, Skeleton Ser-
mons, &c. 1 vol. imp. 8vo, 10s. 6d.
Bavenscroft. — The Works of Right
Rev. Bishop Ravenscroft, of South Carolina.
2vols.8vo, dBl.lOs.
Reinhard. — Plan of the Founder of
Christianity, by F. V. Reinhard, S.T.D., Court
Preacher at Dresden. Translated from the
Fifth German Edition, by Oliver A. Taylor,
A.M., Resident Licentiate, Theological Semi-
luiry, Andover. 8vo, 6s,
Report of the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions, presented
at the 45tli Annual Meeting, held in Hartford,
Connecticut, Sept- 12—15, 1854. 8vo, pp. 248,
sewed, 2s.
Richards.— A Selection of Twenty
Sermons. By the late Rev. James Richards,
D.D. With An Essay on his Character, by
William B. Sprague, D.D. 12mo, 8s.
RiGGS. — Manual of the Chaldee Lan-
guage; comprising a Grammar, Crestomathy,
&c. By Elias Riggs, A.M. 8vo, 9s.
Ripley. — The Four Gospels, with
Notes, chiefly Explanatory, designed for
Teachers in Sabbath Schools and Bible Classes,
and as an Aid to Family Instruction. By H. J.
Ripley. In 2 vols, post 8vo, Kinth Ed. cl. 8s.
Ripley. — The Acts of the Apostles,
with Notes Chiefly Explanatory, designed for
Teachers in Sabbath Schools, and Bible classes,
and as an Aid to family lustmction. By Henry
J.Ripley. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Ripley. — Sacred Rhetoric ; or, Com-
position and Delivery of Sermons. By II. J,
Ripley. To which are added. Hints on Ex-
temporaneous Preaching. By Henrv Ware,
D. D. 12mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
!|^OSi^spN.— Biblical Researches in
Palestine, &c. By Edward Robinson, D.D., and
Rev. E. Smith. 3 vols. 8vo, £2. 6s.
Robinson. — The Harmony of the Four
Gospels, in English. By Edward Robinson,
D.D. 12mo, cloth, os.
Robinson* — The Harmony of the Four
Gospels, in Greek. By Edward Robinson, D.D.
8vo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Robinson.— A Greek and English
Lexicon of the New Testament. By E. Ro*
binson, D.D. New and Revised Ed. 8vo, 28g.
Rowland.— "On the Common Maiimg
of Infidelity. By H. A. Rowland. 12mo,5s.6d.
Rfffner. — The Fathers of the Desert ;
or, An Account of the Origin and Practice of
Monkery among the Heathen Nations; its
passage into the Church, and some wonderful
Stories of the Fathers concerning the pri-
mitive Monks and Hermits. By Henry
RuflFner. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, 14s.
Rijpp. — 'Original History of all the
Religious Denominations existing in the
United States. Compiled and edited by J.D.
Rupp, Author of " Der Maertyrer Geschichte,"
&c. Royal 8vo, cloth, 18s.
RussEL. — Pulpit Elocution, compri-
sing Suggestions on the Importance of Study,
Remarks on the effect of manner of Speaking,
the Rules of Reading exemplified from the
Scriptures, Hymns, and Sermons, Observations
on tlie Principles of Gesture, and a Selection
of Pieces in Reading and Speaking. By
William Russell. 2d edit., 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Sawyer. — Organic Christianity ; or»
the Church of God, with its Officers and Go-
vernment, and its Divisions and Variations,
both in Ancient, Mediaeval, and Modern Times,
embracing a thorough Exposition and Defence
of Church Democracy. By Leicester A. Sawyer,
8vo, cloth, 5s.
ScHAEF. — What is Church History ?
A Vindication of the Idea of Historical De-
velopment. By Philip Schaff. (Translated
from the German). 12mo, 128 pp. 2s.
Schaff. — Principles of Protestantism.
By Philip Schaff. 12mo, 2s.
Schaff. — History of the ApostoHc
Church. By Rev. P. Schaff. lYanslated under
the Superintendence of the Author. 8vo, 16s.
ScHAUFFLER. — Meditations on Last
Days of Christ. By W. G. Schauffler. 12mo,7s.
SCHMUCKER. — The Errors of Modem
Infidelity Illustrated and Refuted. By. S . M.
Schmucker, A.M. 12mo, cloth, 7s.
ScHWARZ. — A Descriptive Geography
and Brief Historical Sketch of Palestine. By
Rabbi Joseph Schwarz. Translated by Isaac
Leeser. Illustrated with Maps and Engrav-
ings. 1 vol. 8vo, clpth, 18s.
Seabury. — Discourses on the Con-
tinuity of the Church of England. By S.
Seabury. 8vo, 3s.
Sharp. — Memoir of Martha T. Sharp.
By Rev. J. J. Helm. 18mo, Is. Gd.
Shimeall. — End of Prelacy; or, a
Treatise on Ministerial Party and the Non-
Efficiency of Sacramental Grace, versus the
Romanism of the Prelatical Dogma of an un-
broken Succession, and its Cognate, Sacra*
men^arianism, Papal, Tractarian, and High
and Low Church. In three Parts. By Rev,
R. C. Shimeall. 8vo, cloth. 14s.
THEOLOGY.
11
Smith and Chottles. — The Origin and
History of Missions, Compiled and Arranged
from Authentic Documents. By the Rev.
T. Smith, and Rev. J. 0, Choules, A.M. cl. SOs.
Spencer. — The Christian Instructed
in the Ways of the Gospel and the Church ; a
Series of Discourses deUvered in St. James's
Church, Goshen, New York, during the years
1840-3. By the Rev. J. A. Spencer, A.M.
12mo, cloth, 6s.
Spencer. — A Pastor's Sketches; or,
Conversations with Anxious Inquirers respect-
ing the Way of Salvation. By. J. S. Spencer,
Pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church.
12mo, cloth, 8s.
Spencer. — -Pastor's Sketches ; or, the
Way of Salvation. By J. S. Spencer. Second
Series. 12mo, 8s. 6d.
Spencer. — Conversion ; its Theory and
Process, Practically Delineated. By Rev. Theo.
Spencer. 8vo, pp. 408, 7s.
Sprague. — Women of the Old and
New Testaments. A Series of Eighteen exqui-
sitely finished Engravings of Pemale Charac-
ters of the Old and New Testament. With De-
scirptions by eminent American Clergymen.
Edited by W. B. Sprague, D.D. Royal 8vo,
mor. ex, £2. 2s, ; cheap binding, £1. lis, 6d.
Spring. — The Bethel Flag: a Series
of short Discourses to Seamen. By Gardiner
Spring, D.D. , Pastor of the Brick Presbyterian
Church, in the City of New York. 12mo, cloth
6s.
Spring. — Glory of Christ, in His Cha-
racter and History. By Card. Spring, D.D,
2 vols. 8vo, 20s.
Spring. — Memoirs of the late Hannah
L. Murray, or, a Pastor's Tribute to^one of his
Elock. By Card. Spring, D.D. 8vo, 9s.
Spring.— The Power of the Pulpit.
By Gard. Spring, D.D. 12mo, 8s.
Spring. — The Obligations of the World
to the Bible. By Gard. Spring, D.D. 12mo, 8s.
Spring. — The Works ^of Gardiner
Spring, LL.D., in uniform style. 10 vols,, cr.
8vo, cloth, £3. lOs.
Vols. 1, 2, First Things.— 3, 4, Glory of Christ.
—5. Attraction of tlie Cross.— 6. Mercy Seat.
—7. Power of the Pulpit.— 8. Obligations of
the World to the Bible.— 9. Short Sermons for
the People. — 10. Not out yet.
Staneord. — The Aged Christian's
Companion, containing a variety of Essays
adapted to persons ddva need in l^e. By the
Rev. John Stanford, D.\). 8vo, cloth, 12s,
Stearns. — The Great Lamentation ; a
Sermon in Commemoration of Daniel Webster,
delivered in Cambridge on Sunday Morning,
November 21, 1852. By Rev, WiUiam A.
Stearns. 8vo, sewed. Is. 6d.
Seeele. — The Sovereigns of the Bible.
By Eliza R. Steele, Author of " Heroines of
Sacred History," "Summer Journey to the
West," &c. 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Sterns. — Sermon on Justification by
Faith, By T. F. Sterns. 18mo, 2s. 6d.
Stockton. — Sermons for the People.
By T. H, Stockton, Cr. 8vo, pp 420, cloth, 8s.
Stone. — The Mysteries Opened: or.
Scriptural Views of Preaching and the Sacra-
ments, as distinguished from certain Theories
concerning Baptismal Regeneration and the
Real Presence. Bv John S. Stone D D
12mo, 6s. 6d. ' » • •
Stork.— The Children of the New
Testament. By Rev. Theophilus Stork, D D.
2nd Edition, 8vo, cloth, 186 pp. 4s, 6d,
Stow. — The Missionary Enterprise, a
Collection of Discourses on Christian Missions.
Bv American Authors, Edited by Baron
Stow, 12rao, 5s. 6d.
Strong. — Harmony and Exposition of
the Gospels. By Jos. Strong. Royal 8vo, 21s.
Strickland. — History of the Ame-
rican Bible Society, from its Organization to
the present time. By W. P. Strickland, 8vo,
10s. 6d.
Stuart. — A Commentary on the Book
of Daniel, By Moses Stuart. 1 vol. 8vo, 18s.
Stfart, — A Commentary on the Book
of Proverbs. By Moses Stuart. 8vo, 8s,
Stuart. — A Commentary on Ecclesi-
astes. By Moses Stuart. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Stuart. — A Commentary on the Apo-
calypse. By Moses Stuart. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth, 30g.
Stuart. — Hints on the Interpretation
of Prophecy. By M. Stuart. 2nd Ed. 12rao, 5s.
Stuart.— Critical History and Defence
of the Canon of the Old Testament. By Moses
Stuart. 8vo, 83.
Stuart. — The Lives of Mrs. Ann H.
Judson and Mrs. Sarah B. Judson, wdtli a
Biographical Sketcli of Mrs. Emily C. Judson,
Missionaries to Burmah, in three parts By
Arabella W. Stuart. 12mo, 6s. 6d.
Stuart. — Miscellanies, consisting of—
1, Letters to Dr, Clianning on the Trinity.
2. Two Sermons on the Atonement. 3. Sacra-
meTital Sermon on the Lamb of God. 4, De-
dication Sermon— Real Christianity. 5. Letter
to Dr. Channing on Religious Liberty 6
Supplementary Notes and Postscripts, By
Moses Stuart, 12ino, 8s.
Stuart. — A Grammar of the New
Testament Dialect. By M . Stuart, 2nd Ed 12s
Student's Bible.— The Holy Biblej
containing the Old Testament, translated out
of the Original Hebrew, and with the former
Translations dihgently compared and revised ;
and the Greek New Testament printed froui
the Text, with the various readings of Knapp,
together with the commonly received En'-iish
Translation, designed for the Use of Students
with ruled paper arranged to allow of most
numerous notes, 8vo, half-russia, 35s • 4to
half-russia, 42s, ' '
Sullivan. — Sermons on Christian
Communion ; designed to promote the growth
of the Religious Affections, By Living Ministers
Edited by T. R, Sullivan. 12mo, cloth, 6s. 6d.'
Summereield.— Sermonsand Sketches
of Sermons. By the Rev, John Summerfield,
A.M.; with an Introduction by the Rev
Thomas E, Bond, M.D. 8vo, cloth, 128,
Swedenborg.— A Compendium of the
Theological and Spiritual Writings of Emanuel
Swedenborg ; being a Systematic and Orderly
Epitome of all Ins Religious Woi ks, selected
from more than thirty volumes, and embracing
all his fundamental principles, with copious
illustrations and teachings; with an appro-
priate Introduction, prefaced by a full Life of
12
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
the Author, with a brief view of all his Works
on Science, Philosophy, and Theology. With a
Portrait of Swedenborg. Royal 8vo, cloth, 12s
Taylor. — Apostolic Baptism. Facts
and Evidences on the Subjects and Mode of
Christian Baptism. By C. Taylor, Editor of
" Calmet's Dictionary of the Bible." With 13
Engravings, 12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Taylor. — The Indications of the Crea-
tor ; or, the Natural Evidences of Final Cause.
By George Taylor. Second Edition, crown
8vo, cloth, 7s.
Teacy. — History of the American
Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
Compiled chiefly from the published and un-
pubhshed Documents of the Board. By Joseph
Tracy. Second Edition, carefully revised and
enlarged. 8vo, boards 15s.
Treatise on the Law of Repulsion ;
or, Mosaic History of Creation Vindicated.
8vo, Is. 6d.
TrENBULL. — Christ in History; or
the Central Power among Men. By Rev.
Robert Turnbull, D.D. 8vo. 7s. 6d.
Turner. — The Epistle to the Romans,
in Greek and English ; M'ith an Analysis and
Exegetical Commentary. By Samuel H.
Tm-ner, D.D. 250 pp. 8vo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Turner. — St. Paul's Epistle to the
Hebrews, in Greek and English, with an Ana-
lysis and Exegetical Commentary. By Samuel
H. Turner, D.D. 8vo, cloth, 7s.
TuSTiN. — The Doubting Communicant
Encouraged. By Rev. Septimus Tustin, D.D.
Second Edition. 24mo, cloth, 2s.
Tyng. — Christ is All. By Stephen H.
Tyng, D.D. 8vo, 10s. 6d.
Tynq. — Israel of God. By Stephen
11. Tyng, D.D. 8vo, 10s. 6d.
Tyng*. — Lectures on the Law and the
Gospel. By Stephen H. Tyng. 8vo, 10s. 6d.
*Tyng-. — Christian Titles : a Series of
Practical Meditations. By Stephen H. Tyng,
D.D. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Tyng. — Sermons Preached in the
Church of Epiphany, Philadelphia. By Stephen
H. Tyng. bvo, 12s.
Tyng. — A Lamb from the Flock. By
Stephen 11 Tyng, D.D. 18mo, 2s.
Union Bible Dictionary, for Schools,
Bible Classes, and Families. 18mo, 4s. 6d.
Upham. — The Life of Faith, in Three
Parts. By Thomas C. Upham, D.D. 12mo,
cloth, 8s.
Upham. — Principles of the Interior or
Hidden Life; designed particularly for the
Consideration of those who are seeking As-
surance of Faith and Perfect Love. By Thomas
C. Upham. Eighth Edition, 12mo, 7s. 6d.^
Upham. — Life of Madame Catharine
Adorna. Including some leading Facts and
TVaits in her Ueligious Experience. Together
with Explanations and llemarks tending to
illustrate the Doctrine of Holiness. By T. C.
Upham. 12 mo, 4s.
Upham. — Religious Maxims, having a
connection with the Doctrines and Practice of
Holiness. By Thomas C. Upham, M.D. Se-
cond Edition/with Additions. ISnio, pp. 148,
Philadelphia, cloth, 2s. 6d.
Upham. — Madame de laMotheGuyon,
her Life and Experience, together with some
Account of the Personal History and Religious
Opinions of Fenelon. By Thomas F. Upham.
An entirely New Edition, revised and cor-
rected by a Clergyman of the Church of Eng-
land. With a Portrait of Madame Guy on, en-
graved expressly for this Edition, by R. J.
Lane, Esq., A.R.A. 1 vol. demy 8yo, cloth,
10s. 6d.
Vinet. — Pastoral Theology; or, The
Theory of the Evangelical Ministry. By A.
Vinet. Translated and Edited by Rev. Thomas
H. Skinner, D.D., Professor of Sacred Rhetoric
and Pastoral Tlieology in the Union Theolo-
gical Seminary, New York. 12mo, 63. 6d.
Vinet. — Homiletics ; or, the Theory
of Preaching. By A. Vinet, D.D. Translated
and Edited by Thomas H. Skinner, D.D., Pro-
fessor of Sacred Rhetoric and Pastoral Theo-
logy in the Union Theological Seminary of
New York. 8vo, pp. 524, cloth, Ss. 6d.
Wainweight. — The Women of the
Bible. — A Series of Eighteen highly finished
Steel Engravings, with descriptions by various
American Divines. Edited by the Rev. J. M.
Wainwright, D.D. Royal 8vo, morocco extra,
£2. 2s. ; cheap binding, £1. lis. 6d.
WAiNWEiaHT.-Our Saviour with Pro-
f)hets and Apostles. — A Series of Eighteen
lighly finished Steel Engravings, with de-
scriptions by various American Divines.
Edited by the Rev. J. M. Wainwright, D.D.
Royal 8vo, morocco extra, £2. 2s.; cheap
binding, £1. lis. 6d.
Wainwright. — An Order of Family
Prayer for every Day in the Week, and for the
Commemoration of the Holy Days and Sea-
sons of the Church. Selected and Arranged
from the Bible, the Liturgy, and various Books
of Devotion. By the Rev. J. M. Wainwright,
D.D., Assistant Minister of Trinity Church,
New York. 12mo, 5s.
Wainwright. — Pathways and Abid-
ing Places of our Lord. By T. M. Wainwright.
8vo, £1. 5s.
Ward. — India and the Hindoos ; being
a Popular View of the Geography, History,
Government, Manners, Customs, Literature,
and Religion of that Ancient People, with an
Account of Christian Missions among them.
By F. De W. Ward, late Missionary at Madi-as .
12nio, cloth, plates, 8s.
Watland. — Twenty-one Sermons, de-
livered in the Chapel of Brown University.
By Francis Wayland, President of the Uni-
versity. Second Edition, 12mo, 8s. 6d.
Wayland. — Occasional Discourses.
By IVancis Wayland. 12mo.
Weiss. — A Discourse occasioned by
the Death of Daniel Webster. Delivered in
the Unitarian Church, New Bedford, Novem-
ber 14, 1852. By John Weiss. With Webster's
Portrait. 8vo, sewed. Is. 6d.
Weld. — Sacred Poetical Quotations;
or, Scripture Themes and Thoughts, as para-
phrased by the poets. Selected and arranged
by the Rev. H. Hastings Weld. 12nio, 7s. 6d.
Weld . — The Women of the Scriptures.
Edited by the Rev. H. Hastings Weld. Embel-
lished with 12 Plates. 8vo, pp. 3-10, calf an- '
tique, gilt edges, £1. 5s.
JURISPRUDENCE.
13
West. — A Complete Analysis of the
Holy Bible, containing tlie wliole of the Old
and New Testaments, collected and arranged
systematically, in 80 Books (based on the work
of the learned Talbot), together with an In-
troduction, setting forth the character of the
Work, and the immense facility this method
affords for understanding the Word of God :
also three different TaVjlcs of Contents pre-
fixed, and a General Index subjoined, so ela-
borated and arranged in Alphabetical order,
as to direct at once to any Subject required.
By Rev. Nathaniel West, i).D. Imperial 8vo,
pp. 1023, half calf, £3. 2s.
Whiston's Constitution of the Holy
Apostles ; including the Canons. Translated
by Dr. Chase. 8vo, cloth, 13s.
Whitney. — Principles of Restricted
Communion Examined. By S. W. Whitney.
l8mo, 23. 6d.
Why should I be a Pastor ? or,
Conversations on the Authority for the Gospel
Ministry. 12mo, 3s.
WiCKES. — An Exposition of the Apo-
calypse, in a Series of Discourses. By Thomas
Wickes. 13mo, 8s.
V\^ILLIAMS. — Voices from the Silent
Land : Consolation for the Afflicted. By Mrs.
H. D. Williams. 12mo, 68. 6d.
Williams. — Lectures on the Lord's
Prayer. By William R. Williams. ISnio, 6s.
Williams. — Discourses on the Deve-
lopment of the Christian Character. By Wil-
liam R. Williams. 13mo, cloth, Gs. 6d.
Williams. — Discourses and Essays.
By Wilham R. Williams. 8vo, 13s.
ViLLiAMS. — Miscellanies. By Wil-
liam R. Williams, D.D., author of " Religious
Progress." "Lectures on Lord's Prayer."
New, improved edition. (Price reduced).
12mo, 8s.
ViLLiAMS. — The Middle Kingdom ; a
Survey of the Geography, Government, Edu-
cation, Social Life, Arts, Religion, &c., of the
Chinese Empire and its Inhabitants. With a
New Map of the Empire, and Illustrations,
principally engraved by J. W Orr. By T.
Wells Williams. Eourtli Edition, in 2 vols.
8vo, cloth, £1. Is.
Wills. — Christian Ordinances and
Ecclesiastical Observances Reconsidered. By
Sam. Wills. Post 8vo, 3s. Gd.
Wills. — Exposition of the Epistles to
the Seven Churches. By Sam. Wills. 8vo, 5s.
Wills. — Scriptural Expositions ; or,
Daily Meditations, By Sam. Wills. 4 vols.
8vo, IBs.
WiLMER. — The Episcopal Manuel ; a
Summary Explanation of the Doctrine, Disci-
phne, and Worship of the Protestant Epis-
copal Church in the United States of America;
with an Appendix. By the late Rev. Wm. H.
Wiluier, D.D. New and improved Edition,
12mo, 7s. 6d.
WiLSOX. — The Church Identified, by
a Reference to the History of its Origin, Per-
petuation, and Extension into the United
States. By the Rev. Vf. D. Wilson, D.D. 8vo,
cloth, 6s.
Winer. — A Grammar of the Idioms
of the Greek Language of the New Testament.
By Dr. Geo. B. Winer. Translated by Agnew
and Ebbeke. 8vo, ISs.
Winer. — Grammar of the Chaldee
Language, as contained in the Bible and Tar-
gums. By Dr. Geo. B. Winer. Translated by
H. B. Hackett. 8vo, 7s.
Wines. — Commentaries on the Laws
of the Ancient Hebrews ; with an Introduc-
tory Essay on Civil Society and Government.
By E. C. Wines. 8vo, cloth, 14s.
WiNTHROP. — Essay on the Character-
istics and Laws of Prophetic Symbols By Edw.
Winthrop. Second Edition. Post 8vo, 5s.
Wise. — History of the Israelitish ]S"a-
tion. By J. M. Wise. Vol. I, 8vo, Us.
WiSNER. — Wisner's Life of a Pastor.
Incidents in the Life of a Pastor. By William
Wlsner, D.D. 12mo, G^. Gd.
Woods. — The Works of Leonard
Woods, D.D., lately Professor of Christian
Theology in the Theological Seminary, Ando-
ver. 5 vols. 8vo, cloth. 45s.
II.
JURISPRUDENCE.
CIVIL AND CRIMINAL LAW, CONSTITUTIONS, LEGISLATION,
REPORTS, STATUTES, ETC. ETC.
Lbbott. — On the Law of Merchant
Ships and Seamen. With Annotations. By
Joseph Story, LL.D., and an Appendix, con-
tainmg the American Acts, &,c. 5th American
edition, 8vo. Boston, 1843.
lmericans' Guide : comprising the
Declaration of Independence, the Articles of
Confederation, the Constitution of the United
States, and the Constitution of the several
states composing the Union. 12mo, cloth, Gs.
Beck. — Elements of Medical Juris-
prudence. ByTheodoric Romeyn Beck, M.D.,
LL.D., Professor of Materia Mediea in the
Albany Medical College, &c. &c., and John B,
Beck, *M.D., Prof, of Mat. Med. and Medical
Jurisprudence in the College of Physicians
and Surgeons of the City of New York, &c.
Tenth Edit. 1850, in 2 vols. 8vo, sheep, £4.
BouviER. — Institutes of American
Law. By John Eouvier. 4 vols. 8vo, bd. 90s.
2
14
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Bentham. — Theory of Legislation.
By Jeremy Bentham. ' Translated from the
Trench of Etienne Dumont, by R. Hiidreth.
2 vols. 12mo, cloth, 9s.
BiGELOW. — The American's Own
Book, or the Constitution of the several States
of the Union. By J. B,. Bigelow, Second
Edition, 8vo, bd. 12s.
BouviER. — Law Dictionary, adapted
to the Constitution and Laws of the United
States of America; with References to the
Civil and other Systems of I'oreign Law. By
John Bouvier. Fourth Edition, revised and
enlarged. 2 vols, royal 8vo, bd. SOs.
Brazils. — Colleccao das Leis do Im-
perio do Brazil. Vols. 13, p. 1 and 14, p. 1,
8vo, sewed. Rio de Janeiro, 1853. 15s.
Beowf. — Reports of Cases in the High
Court of Chancery, during the time of Lord
Chancellor Thurlow, and of the several Com-
missioners of the Great Seal, and Lord Chan-
cellor Loughborough, from 3778 to 1794, with
the Annotations of Mr. Belt and Mr. Eden.
By William Brown. Edited by Hon. J. C.
Perkins. 4 vols. 8vo, bd. £3.
BuELEiGH.— The Legislative Guide,
containing all'the Rules for conducting busi-
ness in Congress, Jefferson's Manual, and the
Citizen's Manual. By T. B. Burleigh. 8vo,
bound, 6s. 6d.
Calhoun. — A Disquisition on Govern-
ment, and a Discourse on the Constitution
and Government of the United States. By
John C. Calhoun, Esq. 8vo, 14s.
Chandler.- American Criminal Trials.
By Peleg W. Chandler. With a Portrait of
Major Andre. 2 vols, post 8vo, cloth, 14s.
Civil Code of the State of Louis-
iana. — With Annotations by Wheelock S.
Upton, LL.B., and N. R, Jennings. In 3 vols.
Svo, 63s.
Code of the Civil and Criminal Pro-
CEDrKE of the State of New York. — Re-
ported complete by the Commissioners on
Practice and Pleadings. 2 vols. 8vo, bd. 56s.
Code of Procedttre of the State of
New York, as Amended July 10, 1851. With
Copious Notes to each Section, the Supple-
mentary Act, and an Appendix, containing
the Rules of all the Courts. By a Member of
the New York Bar. 8vo, 21s.
Constitution of the several States
of the Union and United States, including
the Declaration of Independence and Articles
of Confederation. 8vo, cloth, 12s.
Constitutional Text Book : contain-
ing Selections from the Writings of Daniel
Webster; the Declaration of Independence;
the Constitution of the United States; and
Washington's Farewell Address. With copious.
Indexes. For the Higher Classes of Educa
tional Institutions, and for Home Reading"
8vo, cloth. 83. 6d.
CusHiNa. — Manual of Parliamentary
Practice. By L. S. Cushing. 16mo, 2s.
Dean, — Principle of Medical Juris-
prudence : designed for the Professions of
Law and Medecine. By Anions Dean, Coun-
sellor at Law, and Professor of Medical Juris-
prudence in tlie Albany Medical College,
bvo, bound, ,£1 ]')s.
De Hart.— Courts Martial. Obser-
vations on Military Law, and the Constitution
and Practice of Courts Martial; with a suiri^
mary of the law of Evidence, as applicable to
Military Trials; adapted to the Laws, Regu-
lations, and Customs of the Army and Navy
of the U. S. By Capt. W. C. De Hart. 8vo,
law sheep, ISs.
Dew. — Digest of the Laws, Customs,
&c., of the Ancient and Modern Nutions. By
T. Dew. Svo, 12s.
Domat. — Civil Law in its Natural
Order. By Jean Domat, Edited by Hon.
Luther S. Cushing, late one of the Judges in
the Court of Common Pleas, now Lecturer (it
Civil and Parliamentary Law in Harvard Uni-
versity. 2 vols, royal Svo, cloth, £2. 12s. 6d,
DuER. — A Lecture on the Law of Ke-
presentations in Marine Insurance. With
Notes and Illustrations, and a Preliminary
Lecture on the Question, " Whether Marine
Insurance was known to the Ancients ? " Bv
John Duer, LL.D. 8vo, cloth, 10s.
DuER. — The Law and Practice of Ma- :
rine Insurance deduced from a Critical Exam- i
ination of the Adjudged Cases, the Nature '
and Analogies of the Subject, and the General
Usage of Commercial Nations, By John Duer,
LL.D. 2 vols. 8vo, New York, 1845, 42s.
DuRFEE. — The Complete Works of
the Hon. Job Durfee, LL.D.. late Chief Justice ,
of Rhode Islands. With a Memoir of the Au--i
thor. Edited by his Son. 8vo, cloth, 12s. i
Elliott. — Debates in the Federal Con- •
vention on the Formation of the Constitution
of the United States. Edited by J. ElUctt.
4 vols. Svo, £3. 13s. 6d. Washington, D.O. j
Federalist (The) ; or, the New Con- j
stitution. Written in the Year 1788. By Alex- ^
ander Hamilton, James Madison, and John s
Jay. With an Appendix. Sixth Edition. 8vo,
cloth, 12s.
Goodrich. — The Science of Govern-
ment, as exhibited in the Institutions of the
United States of America. By Charles B.
Goodrich. 1 vol. 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Greenleae. — Treatise on the Law of
Evidence. By Simon Greenleaf, LL.D. Fifth '
Edition. 2 vols, royal Svo, bound, £3. 2s.
Hamilton Papers.— ^The Official and
other Papers of the late Major-General Alex-
ander Hamilton, Secretary of the I'l-easury
under Washington, one of the Authors of "The
Federalist," &c., edited by Rev. Dr. Hawks,
Vol. I, Svo, 16s. New York, 1842.
One of the ablest of the early Statesmen.
HiCKEY. — The Constitution of the
United States of America, with an Alpha-
betical Analysis, the Declaration of Indepen-
dence, the Articles of Confederation, the pro-
minent Political Acts of Washington, &c &c.
By W. Hickey. Small Svo, 8s.
Kent. — Commentaries on American
Law. By James Kent. Fifth Edition. 4 vols.
8vo, £5. 5s. ]^e\v York, 1844.
Kent. — The same Work abridged by
Johnson. 8vo, 14s. ^cw York, 1841.
Holcombe's Digest of the Decisions
of the Supreme Court of the United States,
from its commencement to the present time.
Large Svo, law sheep, £1. 10s.
JURISPRUDENCE.
15
Holcombe's Supreme Court Leading
Cases in Commercial Law. 8vo, law sheep, 24s.
Holcombe's Law of Debtor and Cre-
ditor in the United States and Canada. 8vo,
law sheep, 24s.
Laws of the Colonial and State Go-
vernments relating to India and Indian Affairs,
from 1633 to 1831, inclusive. 8vo, cloth, 5s.
LiviisrasTON. — System of Penal Law
for the United States. By Edw. Livingston
(afterwards Secretary of State). Folio. Wash-
ington, 1828.
Livingston. — A Penal Code for the
State of Louisiana. 8vo, 25s. Philadelphia.
Livingston (J.) — Law Eegister for
1852. 8vo, 9s.
Maeshall. — The Writings of John
Marshall, late Chief Justice of the United
States, upon the Federal Constitution. 8vo,
cloth, 18s.
Mason.— The Structure and Opera-
tions of the General and State Governments
of the United States of America. By Charles
i^Iason, A.M., Counsellor at Law. 13mo, 5s. 6d.
Boston, 1843.
Public Statutes at Laege, and
Treaties of the United States of America,
from the Oi*ganization of the Government in
1789 to March 3, 1851 ; arranged in Chrono-
logical order, with references to the matter of
each Act, and to the suhsequent Acts on the
same Suhject, and copious Notes of the Deci-
■gions of the Courts of the United States con-
struing those Acts, and upon the Subjects of
the Laws, with an Index to the Corvtents of
• each Volume, and a full General Index to the
whole Work in ,the concluding Volume : to-
gether with the Declaration of Independence,
the Articles of Confederation, and the Con-
stitution of the United States; and also. Tables
in the last Volume, containing Lists of the
Acts relating to the Judiciary, Imposts, and
Tonnage, the PubUe Lands, 8lc. By Authority
of Congress. Edited by ilichard Peters, Esq.,
Counsellor-at-Law. And uniform with the
above, A Synoptical Index to the Laws and
Treaties of the United States of America, from
March 4, 1789 to March 3, 1851 ; with refe-
rences to the Edition of the Laws published
by Bioren and Duane, and to the Statutes at
Large, published by Little and Brown, under
the Authority of Congress. Prepared under
the Direction of the Secretary of the Senate.
10 vols, royal 8vo, sheep, £12. 12s.
BoCKWELL. — Spanish and Mexican
Law in relation to Mines. By J. A. Eockwell.
Vol. 1, 8vo, £2. 12s. 6d.
BoELKEE. — The Constitutions of
France, Monarchical and Republican; together
with brief Historical Remarks relating to
their Origin, and the late Orleans Dynasty.
By Bernard Roelker,ofthe Boston Bar. 12mo,
cloth, 3s 6d.
Spoonee. — Trial by Jury, and the
Rights and Duties of Jurors; a Legal Essay.
By Lysander Spooner. 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d
Statesman's Manual; containing the
Presidents' Messages, Inaugural, Annual, and
Special, from 1789 to 1851 ; with their Me-
moirs, and Histories of their Administrations ;
together with a very valuable Collection of
Natiojial and Statistical Documents, &c. Com-
piled from Official Sources, by Edwin Williams.
Embellished with Portraits of the Presidents,
engraved on Steel by Vistus Balch. New and
enlarged Edition, 4- vols. 8vo, pp. 2060, cloth,
£2. 16s.
Statutes of the State of New York, of
a Public and General character, passed from
1829 to 1851, both inclusive ; with Notes, and
References to Judicial Decisions, and the Con-
stitution of 1846. Compiled and arranged by
Samuel Blatchtord. With a copious Index by
Clarence A. Seward. 8vo, cloth.
Story. — Commentaries on the Con-
stitution of the United States ; with a Pre-
liminary View of the Constitutional History
of the Colonies and States, before the adoption
of the Constitution. By Joseph Story, LL.D.
Second Edition. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth, £2. 2s.
The Same, abridged by the Author. 1 vol.
8vo, pp. 736, £1. 4s.
Stoey. — A familiar Exposition of the
Constitution of the United States. By Joseph
Story, LL.D. 12mo. cloth, 5s.
Stoey. — Commentaries on Equity
Pleadings and the Incidents thereto, accord-
ing to the Practice of the Courts of Equity of
P^ngland and America. By Joseph Story, L L.D.
Fourth Edition. 8vo. Boston, 1849. £1 lis. 6d.
Stoey. — Commentaries on Equity Ju-
risprudence, as administered in England and
America. By Joseph Story, LL.D. Fifth
Edition. 2 vols. 8vo. Boston, 1849. £2 16s.
Stoey, — Commentaries on the Conflict
of Laws, Foreign and Domestic. By Joseph
Story, LL.D. Fourth Edition. 8vo, cloth.
Boston, 1852 £1 4s.
Stoey. — Commentaries on the Law of
Bailments, with Illustrations from the Civil
and the Foreign Law. By Joseph Story, LL.D.
Fifth Edition. 8vo. Boston, 1851. £1 5s.
Stoey. — Selection of Pleadings in Civil
Actions, with Annotations. By Joseph Story,
LL.D. Second Edition, with Additions, by
Benjamin L. Oliver. 8vo. Boston, 1829. £1 5s.
Stoey. — Commentaries on the Law of
Agency as a Branch of Commercial and Mari-
time Jurisprudence, with occasional Illustra-
tions from the Civil and Foreign Law. By
Joseph Story, LL.D. Fourth Edition. 8vo.
Boston, 1851. £1 5s.
Stoey. — Commentaries on the Law of
Bills of Exchange, Foreign and Inland, as ad-
ministered in England and America. By Joseph
Story, LL.D. 2dEd.,8vo. Boston, 1847. £1 5s.
Stoey. — Commentaries on the Law of
Promissory Notes and Guaranties of Notes
and Checks on Banks and Banking, with occa-
sional Illustrations from the Conmiercial Law
of the Nations of Continental Europe. By
Joseph Story, LL.D. Second Edition. Svo.
Boston, 1847. £1 6s.
Stoey. — Commentaries on the Law of
Partnership as a Branch of Commercial and
Maritime Jurisprudence, with occasional Illus-
trations from the Civil and Foreign Law. By
Joseph Story, LL.D. Second Edition. 8vo.
Boston, 1846. £1 6s.
Stoey. — Reports of Cases Argued and
Determined in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the First Circuit. By William W.
Story. 3 vols, Svo. Boston, 1842, £3.
16
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Stoey. — Miscellaneous Writings of
Joscpli story. Edited by his Son, William
W. Story. 8vo, £1. Is.
Story. — A Treatise on the Law of
Contracts not under Seal. By William W.
Story. 2d Edit. 8vo. Boston, 1847. £1 Us. 6d.
TEOruAT. — On the Law of Commanda-
tory and Limited Partnersliip. By J. Troubat.
Bvo, sheep, £1. 12s.
WHAETOJf. — State Trials of the United
Stares, during tlie Administrations of Wash-
ington and Adams ; with Notices on the Poli-
tics ol the Times. By F. Wharton. Thick
royal Bvo, £1. 4s.
Wheaton. — Elements of International
Law. By the late Hon. Henry Wheaton, LL.D.
Fourth Edition, Revised, Annotated, and
brought down to the present time, with a Bio-
grapliical Notice of Mr. Wheaton, and an Ac-
count of the Diplomatic Transactions in which
he was concerned. By Hon. William Beach
Lawrence, formerly Charge d' Affaires at liOn-
don. In one volume, Svo, £1. 15s.
Wheaton. — History of the Law of
Nations in Europe and America, from the
Earliest Times to the Treaty of Wasliington.
By Henry Wheaton, LL.D. 8vo, £1. 16s. New
York, 1845.
III.
MEDICINE AND SURGERY.
ANATOMY, DENTISTEY, HOMCEOPATHY, HYDROPATHY, MATE-
EIA MEDICA, MEDICAL JURISPRIJDENCE, OBSTETRICS,
PATHOLOaY, PHARMACY, PHYSIOLOaY,
PSYCHIATRY, SURaERY, ETC.
ALCOTT.-Lectures on Life and Health ;
or, the Laws and Means of Physical Culture.
By William A. Alcott, M.D., Author of nume-
rous Works on Education, Morals, Health,
and Physiology. With Illustrations, crown
Svo, cloth, 6s.
Andeal. — Essay on the Blood in
Disease. By G. Andral. Translated by Drs.
Meigs and Stille. 8vo, 7s.
Andeal. — Manual of Diagnosis of
Diseases of the Heart, preceded by Clinical
Researches for the Study of those Affections.
By F. Andral. Translated from the French
by Samuel Kneeland, jun., M.D. 12mo, 5s.
Aeaist. — Practical Manual of the Dis-
eases of the Heart and Great Vessels. A work
intended to facilitate and extend the Study of
these Diseases. By F. A. Aran. Translated
by W. A. Harris, M,D. 18mo, 6s.
Aethtte. — A Popular Treatise on the
Diseases of the Teeth; with Description of
their Structure and Modes of Treatment.
Usual Mode of inserting Artificial Teeth. By
R. Arthur. 28 Illustrations, 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Atlee. — Notes on M. Bernard's Lec-
tures on the Blood. With an Appendix. By
Walter F. Atlee, M.D. Cr.8vo,pp. 224, cl. 5s.
Baetlett. — An Essay on the Philo-
sophy of Medical Science. By Elisha Bartlett.
8vo, cloth, 12s.
Baetlett. — The History, Diagnosis,
and Treatment of Typhoid and of Typhus
Fever, with an Essay on the Diagnosis of
Bilious Remittent and of Yellow Fever. By
E. Bartlett, M.D. Svo, cloth, 12s.
Beck. — Adulterations of various Sub-
stances used in Medicine and the Ai-ts, with
tlie means of detecting them, intended as a
Manual for the Physician, the Apothecary,
and the Artizan. By L. C. Beck. 12mo, 9s.
Beck. — Elements of Medical Juris-
prudence. ByTheodoric Romeyn Beck, M.D.,
LL.D., Professor of Materia Medica in the
Albany Medical CoUege, &c., &c., and John B.
Beck, M.D., Prof, of Mat. Med. and Medical
Jurisprudence in the College of Physicians
and Surgeons of the City of New York, &c.
Tenth Edit. 1850, in 2 vols., Svo, sheep, £4.
Beck. — Essays on Infant Therapeutics,
to which are added Observations on Ergot
and an Account of the Origin of the Use of
Mercury in Inflammatory Complaints. By J.
B. Beck. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Bell and Stoke' s Lectures on the
Practice of Physic. 2 vols, royal Svo, bd. 26s.
Bell. — Treatise on Baths : including
Cold, Sea, Warm, Hot, Vapour, Gas, and Mud
Baths. Also on the Watery Regimen, Hydro-
pathy, and Pulmonary Inhalation; with a
Description of Bathing in Ancient and Mo-
dern limes. By John Bell. 12mo, 12s.
Beezelitjs. — The Kidneys and Urine.
By J. J. Berzelius. Ti'anslated from the Ger-
man by M. H. Boye and F. Leaming, M.D.
Svo, 7s'. 6d.
Bigelow. — Nature in Disease, illus-
trated in various Discourses and Essays. To
which are added Miscellaneous Writings,
chiefly on Medical Subjects. By Jacob Bige-
low, M.D. Crown Svo, pp. 400, cloth, 7s- 6d.
BiLLAED. — Treatise on the Diseases of
Children, founded on recent Clinical Obser-
vations and Investigations in Pathological
Anatomy, made at tlie Hospice des Enfans
Trouves, with a Dissertation on the Viabihty
of the Child. By C. M. Billard. With Notes
by Dr. 011i\ier of Angers. Translated from
the French, with an Appendix, by James
StcM-art, M.D. 8vo, 18s.
Bond. — Practical Treatise on Dental
Medicine, being a Compendium of Medical
Science as connected with the Study of Dental
Sui-gery. By Thos. E. Bond. 2d edit. Svo, 12s.
BowDiTCH. — The Young Stethosco-
pist; or, the Student's Aid to Auscultation.
By Henry T. Bowditch, M.D., one of the Phy-
sicians of Mass. Genl. Hospital. 2d Edition,^
12mQj sheep, 7s. 6d,
MEDICINE AND StTKGERY.
17
Beierre de Boismokt. — Hallucina-
tions ; or, tlie Rational History of Apparitions,
Visions, Dreams, h^cstacy, Magnetism, and
Somnambulism. By A. Brierre de Boismont,
Docteur en Medicine de la Faculty de Paris,
&c. &c. First American, from the Second
enlarged and improved Paris Edition. 8vo,
cloth, 14 s.
Caenochan. — Treatise on Etiology,
Pathology, and Treatment of Congenital Dis-
locations of the Head of the Pemur. By John
M.Carnochan. Hlustrated with Pits. 8vo,l-ls.
Cazeaux. — Theoretical and Practical
Treatise on Midwifery, including the Diseases
of Pregnancy and Parturition. By P. Cazeaux.
Translated from the second French Edition,
with occasional Notes and a copious Index,
by Robert P. Thomas, M.D. 8vo, 21s.
Chailly. — A Practical Treatise on
Midwifery. By M. Chailly. Translated from
the French, and edited by G. S. Bedford, A.M.,
M.D. Svo, pp. 536, illustrated with 21 wood-
cuts, cloth, l4s.
Chaining. — Etherization in Child-
birth: illustrated by Five Hundred and
Eighty-one Cases. By Walter Channing, M.D.
Svo, cloth, 14s.
Chapman. — Compendium of Lectures
on Theory and Practice of Medicine, delivered
by Professor Chnpman in the University of
Pennsylvania. Prepared, with permission,
from Dr. Chapman's Manuscripts, and pub-
lished with his approbation, by R. D. Benedict,
M.D. Svo, 12s.
Clymee. — Diseases of the Gtenito-
. Urinary Organs. By M. Clymer. Svo.
Cock. — A Manual of Obstetrics. By
Thomas F. Cock, M.D. Cr. Svo, pp. 250, cl. Cs.
CoLOMBAT. — Treatise on the Diseases
and Special Hygiene of Females. By De
L'Isere Colombat. Translated from the
French, with Additions, by Charles D. Meigs,
M.D. New Edition, revised, with Woodcut
Illustrations. Svo, 21s.
CoMFOET. — The Practice of Medicine
on TiioMSONiAN Principles, adapted as
well to the Use of Families as that of the Prac-
titioner. Containing a Biographical Sketch
of Dr. Thomson ; Proposition illustrative of
the Philosophy of Thomsonianism ; a Brief
History of the Symptoms, Peculiarities, and
General Course of Disease, in its different
Forms and Varieties; with Practical Direc-
tions for Administering the Thomsonian Me-
dicines, including the various Methods of
Administering Vapour Baths, Emetics, &c.,
and a Materia Medica adapted to the Work.
By J. W. Comfort, M.D. 4th Edit., Svo, bd. 16s.
CoNDiE. — Practical Treatise on the
Diseases of Children. By D. F\ Condie. 3d
Edition, Svo, 18s.
Daeeach. — Drawings of the Ana-
tomy of the Groin, with Anatomical Remarks.
By W. Darrach. With Engravings. Roy. 8vo, 9s,
Dean. — Principles of Medical Juris-
prudence : designed for the Professions of
Law and Medicine. By Anions Dean, Coun-
sellor at Law, and Professor of Medical Juris-
prudence in the Albany Medical College.
Svo, bound, £1. 10s.
Dewees. — Compendious System of-^
Midwilery, chiefly designed to facilitate the
Inquiries of those who may be pursuing this
branch of Study. By William P. Dewees.
Illustrated by occasional Cases and with many
Engravings. 11th Edition, Svo, 18s.
Dewees. — Treatise on the Physical
and Medical Treatment of Children By
AVilliam P. Dewees, 9th Edition, with the
Author's last improvements and Corrections,
Svo, 18s,
Dewees. — Treatise on the Diseases of
Females. By William P. Dewees. 9th Edition,
with the Author's last improvements and cor-
rections. Svo, 18s.
Deake. — A Systematic Treatise, His-
torical, Etiological, and Practical, on the Prin-
cipal Diseases of the Interior Valley of North
America, as they appear in the Caucasian,
African, Indian, and Esquimaux Varieties of
its Population. 19 Maps & Plates, Svo, cl. 36s.
Deake. — A Systematic Treatise, His-
torical, Etiological, and Practical, on the Prin-
cipal Diseases of the Interior Valley of North
America, as they appear in the Caucasian,
African, Indian, and Esquimaux Varieties of
its Population. By Daniel Drake, M.D. 2d
Series, Edited by S. Hanbury Smith, M.D ,
and F'rancis G. Smith, M.D, Svo, pp. 986,
bound, £2. 5s.
DuNaLisoN. — Dictionary of Medical
Science, Ninth Edition; containing a concise
explanation of the various Subjects and terms
of Physiology, Pathology, Hygiene, Therapeu-
tics, Pharmacology, Obstetrics, Medical Juris-
prudence, &c. With the French and other
,Synonjmes; Notices of Climate and of cele-
brated* Mineral Waters : Formulse for various
Officinal, Empirical, and Dietetic Preparations,
&c. By Robley Dunglison, M.D. An entire
New Edit., revised and enlarged. 1 vol. Svo, 15s.
DliNaLisoN. — Greneral Therapeutics
and Materia Medica, adapted for a Medical
Text Book. By Robley Dunglison, With
120 Illustrations, 3d Edition, revised and im-
proved. 2 vols. Svo, 28s.
Dunglison. — New Remedies. By
Robley Dunglison. 5th Edition, with exten-
sive Additions. Svo, 18s.
DiJNGLisoN. — Practice of Medicine ;
a Treatise on Special Pathology and Thera-
peutics. By Robley Dunglison. 3d Edition,
2 vols. Svo, 32s.
Dunglison. — Human Physiology. By
Robley Dunglison. 7th Edition, revised and
enlarged, with nearly 500 Illustrations. 3
vols. 36s.
Dunglison. — Human Health ; or, the
Influence of Atmosphere and Locality, Change
of Air and Climate, Seasons, Food, Clothing,
Bathing and Mineral Springs, Exercise, Sleep,
Corporeal and Intellectual Pursuits, &c.. on
Healthy Man ; constituting Elements of Hy-
giene. ByRobleyDunglison. New Ed. Svo, 14s.
Eaele. — An Examination of the Prac-
tice of Bloodletting in Mental Disorders, By
Pliny Earle, M.D. Svo, pp.126, cloth, 6s,
Eaele. — Institutions for the Insane,
in Prussia, Austria, and Germany. By Pliny
Earle, M.D., Visiting Physician to the Lunatic
Asylum of New York, &c. &c. Svo, pp. 248, Ss.
Ebeele. — Treatise of the Materia Me-
dica and Therapeutics. By J. Eberle. Fourth
Edition, Svo, £1. 4s,
2§
18
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Eberle. — Treatise on the Practice of
Medicine. By Jolm Eberle. With Notes and
Additions, by George McClellan, M.D. Sixth
Edition. 2 vols. 8vo, £2. 2s.
Ebeele. — Treatise on the Diseases and
Physical Education of Children. By J. Eberle.
Third Edition. 8\ o, 18s.
ESQUIEOL. — Treatise on Insanity. By
M. Esfjuirol. Translated, with Notes, by
E. K. Hunt. 8vo, 14s.
Flagg. — Ether and Chloroform; their
employment in Surgery, Dentistry, Mid-
wifery,Therapeutics, &c. B' J.B. Elagg, M.D.,
Surgeon Dentist. In one volume, 12mo, 5s.
EoREY. — The Climate of the United
States, and its Endemic Influences; based
chiefly on the Records of the Medical Depart-
ment,' United States' Army. By Samuel Forry,
M.D. 8vo, with a Map, 16a. New York, 1842.
"Highly interesting facts, condensed into
the smallest compass," — " creditable to the
Medical Science of the United States." * * *
Athenoiiim.
Eos GATE. — Sleep Psychologically con-
sidered, with Reference to Sensation and Me-
mory. ByBlanchard Fosgate, M.D., Physician
to the New York State Prison at Aubui-n.
12mo, cloth, 4s, 6d.
Eox. — The Natural History and Dis-
eases of the Human Teeth: containing the
History of the Formation and Structure of the
Teeth ; the Symptomatic Diseases incidental
to the first Deiitition ; the changes which take
place during the second Dentition ; and the
Treatment to prevent and remedy Irregulari-
ties in the arrangement of the Teeth. Also,
the History and Treatment of the Diseases of
the leetli; the Gums; and the Alveolar Pro-
cesses ; with the Operations which they re-
spectively require. To which are added, Obser-
vations on other Diseases of the Mouth, and
on the mode of fixing Artificial Teeth. By
Joseph Fox. 23 plates. 4to, £2. 5s.
G-ALT. — Treatment of Insanity. By
J. M. Gait. 8vo, 10s.
GrALT. — Practical Medicine ; illustrated
by Cases on the most important Diseases. By
J. M. Gait. 8vo, 16s.
Gaedner. — Medical Chemistry, for
the Use of Students and the Profession) ; being
a Manual of the Science, with its Applications
to Toxicology, Physiology, Therapeutics,
Hygiene, &c. By D. JP. Gardner. 12mo, 9s.
Gerhaed. — Lectures on the Diagnosis,
Pathology, and Treatment of Diseases of the
Chest. By W.W. Gerhard. New Edit. 8vo, 1 2s.
Gluge. — An Atlas of Pathological His-
tology. By Gottlieb Gluge, M D., Professor of
' Physiology and Pathological Anatomy in the
University of Brussels. Translated, with Notes
and Additions, l)y Joseph Leidy, M.D. In one
volume, very large imperial 4to, with 320
figures, plain and coloured, on 12 plates, cloth,
£1. 8s.
GoDDARD. — The Anatomy, Physiology,
and Pathology of the Human Teeth; with the
most approved methods of Treatment ; includ-
in? Operations, and the method of making and
setting Artificial Teeth. By B. T. Goddard.
30 plates. 4to, £1. 16s.
Green. — A Treatise on Diseases of the
Air Passages; comprising an Inquiry into the
History, Pathology, Causes, and Treatment of
those Affections of the Throat, called Bron-
chitis, Chronic Laryngisis, Clergyman's Sore
Throat, &c. &c. By Horace Green, A.M., M.D.
Second Edition, revised and enlarged. 8vo,
cloth. 16s.
Green. — Observations of the Patho-
logy of Croup ; with Remarki on its Treatment
by Topical Medications. By Horace Green,
A.M., M.D., &c. &c. 12rao, cloth, 4s.
Green. — Practical Compendium of
Diseases of the Skin, including a particular
Consideration of the more frequent and in-
tractable forms of these Affections, with Cases.
By J. Green. 8vo, 8s.
Griffith. — A Universal Formulary ;
containing the Methods of Preparing and
Administering Officinal and other Medicines.
The whole adapted to Physicians and Pharma-
ceutists. By R. Eglesfeld Griffith, M.D.
Second Edition. 8vo, cloth, 16s.
Gross. — Elements of Pathological
Anatomy, illustrated by numerous Engravings.
Bv S. D. Gross. New improved Edition. Royal
8vo, £1. 12s.
Gross. — Experimental and Critical
Enquiry into the Nature and Treatment of <
Wounds in the Intestines. By S. D. Gross.
Illustrated by Engravings. 8vo, 12s.
Gross. — A Practical Treatise on the
Diseases and Injuries of the Urinary Bladder,
the Prostate Gland, and the Urethra. By S.D.
Gross. With, 106 Illustrations. 8vo, £1. Is.
Handy. — A Text- Book of Anatomy
and Guide in Dissections; for the Use o"
Students in Medicine and Dental Surgery.
By Washington R. Handy, M.D., Professor of
Physiology and Anatomy in the Baltimore
College of Dental Surgery, late Professor of
Anatomy and Operative Surgery in Washing-
ton University, Baltimore. With 264 Illustra-
tions. Royal 8vo, sheep, £1. 4s.
Harris. — Principles and Practice of
Dental Surgery. By Chapin A. Harris, M.D.,
D.D.S. Fifth 'Edition, considerably enlarged
and improved, 250 Illustrations. 8vo, cl. £1. 4s.
Harris. — A Dictionary of Medical
Terminology, Dental Surgery, and the Colla-
teral Sciences. By Chapin A. Harris, M.D.,
, D. D.S. Second Edition, carefully revised and
enlarged. 8vo, pp. 800, cl. £1. 4s. Philadelphia.
Harrison. — Essay towards a correct
Theory of the Nervous System. By John Har-
rison. 8vo, 10s. 6d.
Harrison. — Elements of Materia Me-
dica and Therapeutics. By J. P. Harrison.
2 vols. 8vo, 36s.
Hasting. — Minor Surgery, the Appli-
cation of Dressings, &c.,with 143 Hlustrations.
By J. Hasting. Crown 8vo, 9s.
Hayward. — Some Account of the first
use of Sulphuric Ether by Inhalation in Sur-
gical Practice. By Jer. Ilayward. 8vo, Is.
Boston, 1847.
Hayward. — Outlines of Human Phy-
siology. By Geo. Hayward. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Henle. — A Treatise on General Patho-
logy. By Dr. J. Henle, Professor of Anatomy
and Phisiology in Heidelberg. Translated by
Henry C. Preston, A.M., M.D. 8vo, cf. 10s. 6d.
MEDICINE AND SURGERY.
19
IIORNEE. — The Medical Student's
Guide ill Extracting Teeth; with numerous
Cases in the Surgical Branch of Dentistry.
With Illustrations. By 8. S. Horner, Practical
Dentist. 3s.
HoENEE. — Treatise on Pathological
Anatomy. By W. E. Horner. 8\ o.
HoENEE. — Lessons in Practical Ana-
tomy, fo- 1 16 Use of Dissectors. By W. E.
Horner. 8vo, 12s.
HoENER. — SpeciarAnatomy and His-
tology. By W.E. Horner. Sixth Edition. 2 vols.
8vo, £1. 16s.
HuNTEE. — A Treatise on the Venereal
Disease. By John Hunter. With copious Ad-
ditions by Dr. Philip llicovd. Edited, with
JS'otes, by Ireeman J.Bumstead. With i lates.
8vo, bound, 15s.
HuBBAET. — Surgical and Mechanical
Dentistry, lllustiated. By S. C. Hubbart.
12mo, cloth, 6s.
Johns. — A Clinical Phrase-Book : in
English and Germ; n, containing the usual
Questions and Answers employed in Examin-
ing and Prescribing for Patients; Questions
in Asking for and Buying Medicines, &c. With
an English-German and German-EngUsh Pro-
nouncing Lexicon of all the Words occurring
in the Phrases, with the chief Technical Terms
of Medical Writers and Apothecaries ; Gram-
matical Appendix, Table of Idioms, &c. De-
signed to aid Physicians and Surgeons in Hos-
pitals, Alms-houses, and Private Practice ; also
Druggists and Pharmaceutists in Dispensing
their Prescriptions. By Montgomery Johns.
18mo, half bound, 6s.
JouEDAiN. — Treatise on the Diseases
and Siu'gical Operations of the Mouth and
Parts adjacent; withJNotes of interestingCases,
ancient and modern By M. Jourdain. Trans-
lated from the last French Edition. 8vo, 12s,
* KiEKBEiDE. — On the Construction,
Organization, and General Arrangements of
Hospitals for the Insane. By Thomas J. Kirk-
bride, M.D. 5 Engravings. 8vo, pp. 98, cloth.
4s. 6d.
Laeoche. — Pneumonia : its supposed
Connection, Pathological and Etiological, with
Autumnal Fevers ; including an Inquiry into
the Existence and Morbid Agency of Malaria.
By R. Laroche, M.D. 8vo, pp. 502, cloth, 18s.
LONQET. — Treatise on Physiology. By
F. A. Longet. Translated from the French,
with Notes and Additions, by Francis Gurney
Smith, M.D. With numerous Illustrations.
2 vols. 8vo.
Magendie. — Elementary Treatise on
Human Physiology. By F. Magendie. Trans-
lated, enlarged, and annotated, by J. Revere,
M.D. 8vo, with Engravings, 14s.
Mauey. — A Treatise on the Dental
Art, founded on actual experience. By Maury,
Dentist, of the Royal Polytechnic School.
Translated from the French, with Notes and
Additions, by J.B. Savier, Doctor of Dental
Surgery. In 1 vol. 8vo, illustrated by 241 Li-
thographic Figures, and 54 Woodcuts, cl. 16s.
Matgeiee. — Midwifery Illustrated.
By J. P. Maygrier. Translated, with Notes,
by Dr. P. Sidney Doane. Fourth Edition.
ISotes and Plates, 8vo. £1. lis. 6d.
Meigs. — Woman; her Diseases, and
Remedies. A Series of Letters to his Class,
By C. 1). Meigs. Second Edition, revised and
enlarged. 8vo, 18s.
Meigs. — Obstetrics, the Science and
the Art. By C. D. Meigs. With 120 lUustra-
tions. 8vo, £1. Is.
Meigs. — Observations on certain of
the Diseases of Young Children. By C. D.
Meigs. 8vo, 10s.6d.
Meigs. — On the Nature, Signs, and
Treatment of Childbed Fevei-s ; in a Series of
Letters, addressed to the Students of his Class.
By C. D. Meigs, M.D. 8vo, pp.362, cloth, 15s.
Philadelphia
Meigs. — A Practical Treatise on the
Diseases of Children. By T. Forsyth Meigs,
M.D. Second Edition, revised and enlarged.
8vo, bound, ISs.
Miller. — A Theoretical and Practical
Treatise on Human Parturition. By H. Miller
M.D. 8vo, sheep, 16s.
Mitchell. — Materia Medica and The-
rapeutics; with Ample Illustrations of Prac-
tice in all the Departments of Medical Science,
and very copious Notices of Toxicology, suited
to the wants of Medical Students and Practi-
tioners. By Thomas D. Mitchell, A.M., M.D.
Svo, bound, l8s.
MoiiEAF. — A Practical Treatise on
Midwifery; exhibiting the present advanced
State of thp Science. By K. J. Moreau, Profes-
sor of Midwii'er,y &c. Translated from the
French, by Thomas Forest Betton, M.D., and
edited by Paul B. Goddard, A.M., M.D., &c.
With 80 Plates, comprising numerous separate
Illustrations. 4to,pp.236, and a page of letter-
press to each plate; plain, £2. 23. ; coloured,
£4. 4s.
MoEEELL. — Rheumatism, Acute and
Chronic. By C. G. MorreU. Svo, 3s. 6d.
MoEEis. — Lectures on Scarlet Fever.
By Caspar Morris, M.D., late Lecturer on
Practical Medicine in the Philadelphia Medical
Institute, Fellow of the College of Physicians
of Philadelphia, Member of the American
Philosophical Society, &c. Svo, cloth, 6s.
MoetOjST. — Report to Congress respec-
ting the Discovery, by Dr. Wm. T. G. Morton,
of the anaesthetic or pain- subduing properties
of Sulphuric Ether. 8vo, sewed. Is.
MoETON. — An Illustrated System of
Human A.natomy, Special, General, and Mi-
croscopic. By Samuel G. Morton, M.D., Au-
thor of the " Crania Americana," &c. 1 vol.
Svo, calf, with 391 engravings on wood. 30s.
MouDAT. — Sterility in the Male and
Female, its Cause and Treatment. By V.
Moudat. Translated from the Fifth French
Edition. 50 Illustrations, 12mo, 6s.
Olivee. — First Lines of Physiology,
designed for the Use of Students of Medicine.
By J). Oliver. Second Edition. Svo, 18s.
Paine. — Materia Medica. By M.
Paine. Svo, 12s.
Pancoast. — A Treatise on Operative
Surgery; comprising a description of the
various Processes of the Art, including aU the
New Operations : exhibiting the State of Sur-
gical Science in its present advanced condi-
tion. By Joseph Pancoast,M.D.,&c. 4to,with
20
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
80 plates, containing 486 separate Illustra-
tions, pp. 380, £3 3s.; coloured £4 14s. 6d.
Phaemacopceia of the United States
of America. By Authority of the National
Medical Convention held at Washington, a.d.
1850. 8vo, IGs.
PiaaoT. — Chemistry and Metalhirgy
as applied to the Stu-dy and Practice of Dental
Surgery. By A. Snowden Piggot, M.D., late
Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in the
"Washington University of Baltimore, With
Illustrations. 532 pp., 8vo, cloth, 18s.
Piper. — Operative Surgery Illustra-
ted : containing more than Nineteen Hundred
Engravings, including Two Hundred Original,
and Fifty Coloured Drawings; with Explana-
tory Text. By U. U. Piper, M.D. Also, a
Chapter on the Use of Ether in Surgery. 8vo,
cloth, £1 lis. 6d.
Keese. — American Medical Formu-
lary; based upon the United States and
British Pharmacopoeias ; including also nume
rous Standard lorinulae, derived from Ameri-
can and European Authorities. Designed for
the Medical and Pharmaceutical Student. By
John J. Reese. 12mo. 8s.
Reese. — An Analysis of Physiology;
being a condensed View of its most important
Facts and Doctrines. Designed especially for
the Use of Students. By John J. Reese, M.D.,
Lecturer on Materia Medica and Therapeutics
in the Medical Institute of Philadelphia, &c.
2d Edit, revised and enlarged. 12mo, bd. 93.
EiCHAEDSON. — Elements of Human
Anatomy, General, Descriptive, and Practical.
By T. G. Richardson, M D., Demonstrator of
Anatomy in the Medical Department of the
University at Louisville, &c. With nearly
300 Illustrations. Roy. 8vo, sheep, pp. 738, 18s.
Sae&ent. — On Bandaging, and other
Operations of Minor Surgery. By F. W.
Sargent. 12nio, 9s.
Shew. — Children, their Diseases and
Management. By Dr. Joel Shew. Post 8vo,
cloth, 5s.
Shew. — Midwifery and Diseases of
Women. By Dr. Joel Shew. Post 8vo, cL, 6s,
Shew. — Hydropathy ; or, the Water-
Cure, its Principles, Processes, and Modes of
Treatment, &c. By Dr. J. Shew. 12mo, cl. 5s
Shew. — -Hydropathic Family Physi-
cian. By Dr. Joel Shew. 8vo, 12s.
SiCHEL. — Spectacles, their Uses and
Abuses in Long and Short-Sightedness, and
the Pathological Condition resulting from
their Irrational Employment. By Dr. Sichel,
of Paris. 8vo. Boston, 1850. 10s.
Smith.^ — Anatomical Atlas, illustrative
of the Structure of the Human Body, By
H. H. Smith. Under the Supervision of W.
E, Homer. Roy. 8vo. 30s.
Smith. — Minor Surgery, or Hints on
the Every Day Duties of the Surgeon. By
Henry H. Smith. Third Edition, with nume-
rous Additions. Illustrated by 247 Engrav-
ings. 12mo. 10s. Gd.
Smith. — A System of Operative Sur-
gery l)ased upon the Practices of the Surgeons
of the United States ; and comprising a Biblio-
graphical Index, and Historical Record of
many of their Operations for a period of 200
years. Illustrated by upwards of 1000 Steel
Engravings. 8vo, slip., tinted pits., £2 128. 6d.;
coloured plates, £5. 5s.
Stewart. — Practical Treatise on the
Diseases of Children. By James Stewart.
Second Edition, enlarged. 8vo. 9s.
Stille. — Elements of General Patho-
logy. By Alfred StiUe. 8vo, bd. Phil. 1848. 9s.
Stille. — Elements of Therapeutics.
By Alfred Stille. 8vo, bd. Phil
Swett. — A Treatise on the Diseases
of the Chest ; being a Course of Lectures de-
livered at the JNew York Hospital, by John M.
Swett, M.D., Physician to the New York Hos-
pital. 8vo, cloth, 15s.
Teail. — Encyclopaedia of Hydropathy.
By Dr. Trail. 2 vols., with numerous Illus-
trations. Post 8vo, cloth, 14s.
Teansactions of the American Medi-
cal Association. Instituted 1847. Vols. 1 to
7, plates, 8vo, cloth. New York, 1847-54.
Teall. — Home Treatment for Sexual
Abuses. By R. D. Trail. 12iiio, Is.
TuCKEE. — Principles and Practice of
Midwifery. ByD.H. Thicker. With numerous
Illustrations. Cr. 8vo. 9s.
Yelpeau. — A Complete Treatise on
Midwifery; or, the Theory and Practice of
Tokology: including the Diseases of Preg-
nancy, Labor, and the Puerperal State. By
Alf. A. L. M. Veipeau, M D. Translated from
the Erench, by Charles D. Meigs, M.D. Fourth
ed, by Wni. Byrd Page, M.D., Lecturer on Ob-
stetrics in the Philadel. Medical Institute, &c.
With numerous Illustrations. 8vo, bd. 21s.
Yelpeau. — Treatise on the Diseases
of the Breast. By A. L. Veipeau. Translated
by S. Parkman. 8vo. 9s.
Yelpeau. — New Elements of Opera-
tive Surgery. By Alf. A. L. M. Veipeau. Care-
fully revised, entirely remodelled, and aug-
mented with a Treatise on Minor Surgery.
Illustrated by over 200 Engravings, incorpo-
rated with the Text. Third American, from
the last Paris Edition. Translated by P. S.
Townsend, M.D. Augmented by the Addition
of sej^eral hundred pages of entirely new mat-
ter, comprising all the latest improvements
and Discoveries in Surgeiy in America and
Europe up to the present time. Under the
Supervision of, and with Notes and Observa-
tions by Valentine Mott, M.D. 3 vols. 8vo,
cloth, and an Atlas in 4to of 22 plates. £4 lOs.
YiDAL. — A Treatise on the Yenereal
Disease. By A. Vidal (de Cassis), Surgeon in
the Venereal Hospital of Paris, xiuthor of the
" Traite de Pathologic externe et de Medicine
Operatoire," &c &c. With coloured Plates.
Translated and Edited by George C. Blackman,
M.D., Eellow of the Roy. Med. Chir. Soc. of
London, &c. Roy. 8vo, cloth, pp. 500. £1. 5s.
WAEEEN.-The Preservation of Health.
With Remarks on Constipation, Old Age, Use
of Alcohol in the preparation of Medicines.
By John C. Warren, M.D. 18mo, cl. 3s,
Wabeen. — Surgical Observations on
Tumours vith Cases and Operations. By
John C. Warren. 8vo, plate. Boston,1889. 16s.
Webee. — Plates of the Muscles of the
Human Body. By M. T. Weber, M.D., Pro-
fessor of Anatomy in the University of Bonn,
Prussia. Engraved on Copper, with the name
attached to each Muscle. After B. S. Albinus.
Square folio, sewed, 12s.
MEDICINE AND SURGERY.
21
Wood. — Treatise on the Practice of
Medicine. By George B. Wood, M.D. Third
Edition. 3 vols. 8vo, bound, £1 16s.
Wood and Bache. — The Dispensa-
tory of the United States. Tenth Edition,
revised (1854). By George B. Wood and
Franklin Bache. Bvo, sheep, 32s.
HOMCEOPATHY.
Atkin. — The British and Foreign
Homoeopathic Medical Directory and Record.
Edited by Dr. Geo. Atkin. Issued July 1st,
1853. Bound. 7s. 6d.
Beckee. — Allopathy, Hahnemannism
and Rational Homoeopathy. By Dr. A. C.
Becker. 8vo. Is.
Beckee. — On Diseases of the Eye. By
Dr. A. C. Becker. Translated from the Ger-
man, 1818. 8vo, bound, 2s.
Beckee.— On Dentition. By Dr. A.
C. Becker. Translated Irom the German,
1848. 8vo, bound, 2s.
Beckee. — On Consumption. By A.
C. Becker. Translated from the German,
1848. 8vo, bound, 2s.
Beckee. — On Constij)ation. By Dr.
A. C. Becker. Translated from the German,
1848. 8vo, bound, 2s.
BcENNiNGHArsEN. — Therapeutic
Pocket-Book for Homoeopathic Physicians,, to
be used at tlie Bedside of the Patient, and in
studying: the Materia Medica Pura. By Dr.
C. von Boenninghausen. Edited by Charles
J. Hempel, M D. 8vo, bound, 10s.
BCENNINGHAIJSEN. — Essay on the Ho-
moeopathic Treatment oi Intermittent Fevers.
Translated and edited by C. J. Hempel, M.D.
1845. 8vo, bound, 2s.
BcENNiNOHAiJSEN. — The Sides of the
Body and Drug- Affinities. Homoeopathic Ex-
ercises. By Dr. C. von Boenninghausen. Trans-
lated and edited by Charles J. Hempel,*M.D.
8vo, Is. 6d.
B(Ei>rNiNaHAT:SEN. — Homoeopathic
Exercises, by Hempel. By Dr. Boenning-
hausen. Post 8vo, Is. 6d.
Boston Quaeteely Homceopathic
Journal. Edited by Drs. Joseph Birnstill
and B. de Gersdorf. Vol. L, 1849, Vol. II.,
1850. Pj'ice per vol. in numbers, 15s. bound,
per vol. 18s.
BowEES. — Reason why Homoeopathy
should receive an Impartial Investigation
from the Medical Profession and the Public.
By B. E. xowers, M.D , Is.
Beyant. — TJie Rival Schools of Medi-
cine ; or, Homoeopathy vs. Allopathy. A Lec-
ture. By Dr. J. Bryant. 8vo, Is.
Beyant. — A Pocket Manual, or Re-
pertory of Homoeopathic Medicine, alphabeti-
cally and nosologically arranged; which may
be used as the Physician'; Vade-Mecum, the
Traveller's Medical Companion, or the Family
Physician. Compiled from the best Homoeo-
pathic Authorities. By Dr. J, Bryant. 12mo,
bound, Gs. 6d.
BrLWEE and FoEBES. — On the Water
Treatment: A C» mpilation of Papers on the
Subject of Hygiene and rational Hydi-opathy.
By Bulwer and Eorbes. Edited by Dr. Roland
S. Houghton. 8vo, 2s. 6d.
Caspaei. — Homceopathic Domestic
Physician. By Caspari. Edited by E. Hart-
mann, M.D. Translated from the eighth Ger-
man Edition, and enriched by a Treatise on
Anatomy and Physiology, embellished with
30 lUustrations by W. P^ Esrey, M.D. With
Additions and a Preface by C. Hering, M.D.
8vo, bound, 7s. 6d.
Channing. — The Reformation of Me-
dical Science, demanded by inductive Philo-
sophy. A Discourse delivered before the IS' ew
York Physician's Society. By W. Channiug,
M D. 2d Edition, 8vo, Is. 6d.
Ceoseeio. — Homceopathic Manual of
Obstetrics ; or, a Treatise on the Aid the Art
of Midwifery may derive from Homoeopathy.
By Dr. C. Croserio. From the French, by M.
Cote, M.D. Ecap. 8vo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Cfetis and Lillie. — Epitome of
Homoeopathic Practice. Compiled chiefly from
Jahr, Riickert, Beauvais, Boenninghausen, &c.
By J. T. Curtis, M.D., and J. Lillie, M.D. 2d
enlarged Edition. 1850. 8vo, bound, 4s.
CuETis. — The Relations of Homoeopa-
thy to Chemistry, an Inaugural Address, de-
livered before the Hahnemann Academy of
Medicine. By J. T. Cmtis, ]\1.D. January
14th, 1852. 8vo, Is.
Douglas. — Homoeopathic Treatment
of Intermittent Fevers. By Dr. J. S. Douglas.
1853. 8vo, 2s.
Dysenteey and its Homoeopathic
Treatment. Containing also a Repertory and
numerous Cases. By F. Humphreys, AI.D.,
Professor of Homoeopathic Institutes, Patho-
logy, and the Practice of Medicine in the Ho-
moeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania.
1853. 8vo, bound, 2s. 6d.
Eseey. — Treatise on Anatomy and
Physiology. By Dr. W. P. Esrey. With '30
Illustrations. Pp. 195, 1851. 8vo,bd.,2s. 6d.
Foebes. — Homoeopathy, Allopathy,
and Young Physic. By Dr J. Forbes. 1846. ,
Paper cover, 8vo, Is.
GoLLMANN.-The Homoeopathic GTuide
in all Diseases of the Urinary and Sexual
Organs, including the Derangements caused
by Onanism and Sexual Excesses; with a
strict regard to the present demands of Medi-
cal Science and accompanied by an Appendix
on the Use of Electro-Magnetism in the Treat-
ment of these Diseases. By Wm. GoUmann,
M D. Translated, with Additions, by Chas.
J. Hempel, M.D. Phila. Pp.309, 8vo,cl. 8s. 6d.
Geay. — The Duty of the State in re-
lation to Homoeopathy ; an Inaugural Address,
dehvered before the Hahnemann Academy of
Medicine, New York, Jan. 9th, 18^0, by John
F. Gray, M.D. 8vo, Is.
Guenthee. — New Manual of Homoeo-
pathic Veterinary Medicine; or, the Homoeo-
pathic Treatment of the Horse, the Ox, the
Slieep, the Dog, and other Domestic Animals
By Dr, E. A. Guenther. 184?. 8vo, bd. 6s. 6d;
Gtjeensey. — Homoeopathic Domestic
Practice; containing also Chapters on Ana-
tomy, Physiology, Hygiene, and an abridged
Materia Medica. By Egbert Guernsey, M.D.
With Illustrations. Pp. 590, 8vo, sheep, 7s. 6d.
22
AMERICAN LITERATURF,
Hahnemann. — Organon of Homoeo-
I)atliic Medicine. By Dr. Samuel Hahnemann.
Third American Edition, with Improvements
and Additions from the last German Edition,
and Dr C. Hering's Introductory Remarks.
Bound, 5s.
Hahnema^tn. — The Chronic Diseases,
their Specific Nature and Homoeopathic Treat-
ment. By Dr, Samuel Hahnemann. Trans-
lated and edited by C. J. Hempel, M.D., with
a Preface by C. Hering, M.D., Philadelphia.
5 vols. 8vo, bound, 15s.
Hahnemann. — Materia Medica Pura.
By Dr. Samuel Hahnemann Translated by
C. J. Hempel, M D. 4 vols, bound, £1 10s.
Haetmann. — Practical Observations
on some of the chief Homoeopathic Remedies.
By Dr. F. Hartmann. Translated from the
German by A. H. Okie, M.D. Two series, 8vo,
bound, 10s.
The Second Series, containing the most im-
portant remedies Belladomia and Nux-vomica.
Bound.
Haetmann, Dr. Franz. — Diseases of
Children and their Homoeopathic Treatment.
Translated, with Notes, and prepared for the
Use of the American and English Profession.
By Charles J. Hempel, M.D., Fellow and Cor-
responding Member of the Homoeopathic Col-
lege of Pennsylvania, &c. Crown 8vo, half
bound, 528 pp., lOs.
Haetmann. — Acute and Chronic Dis-
eases, and their Homoeopathic Treatment. By
Dr. F. Hartmann. Third German edition, re-
vised and considerably enlarged by the author.
Translated, with additions, and adapted to the
Use of the American profession, by C. J.
Hempel, M.D. 4 vols. 8vo, 80s.
Hempel. — Homoeopathic Domestic
Physician. By C. J. Hempel. 1850. 8vo,
bound, 2s. 6d.
Hempel. — Organon of Specific Ho-
moeopathy ; or, an inductive Exposition of the
Principles of the Homoeopathic Healing Art,
addressed to Physicians and intelligent Lay-
men. By Charles J. Hempel, M.D. 216 pp.,
8vo, half bound, 5s.
Hempel. -On Eclecticism in Medicine;
or, a Critical Review of the leading Medical
Doctrines. An inaugural thesis, presented at
the New York University, on the 1st of March,
1845. By C. J. Hempel, M.D. 8vo, Is. 6d.
Hempel. — A Treatise on the Use of
Arnica, in Cases of Contusions, Wounds,
Sprains, Lacerations of the Solids, Concus-
sions, Paralysis, Rheumatisms, Soreness of
the Nipples, &.c. &c. with a number of cases,
illustrative of the Use of that Drug. By C.
J. Hempel. 8vo, Is.
Heeing. — Domestic Physician. By
Dr. C. Hering. Revised, with additions, from
the Author's manuscript of the Seventh Ger-
man Edition. Containing also a Tabular
Index of the Medicines and the Diseases in
which they are used. Fifth American edition.
1851. 8vo, bound, lOs.
HoEFENDAHL. — On the Homoeopathic
Treatment of Cholera. By Dr. C. F. Hoflfen-
dahl. 8vo, Is.
Holcombe. — The Scientific Basis of
Homoeopathy. By Wm. H. Holcombe, M.D.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Holt. — Views of Homoeo}a'hy with
Reasons for Examining and aduntting it as a
Principle in Medical Science. By Dr. Daniel
Holt. Is. 6d.
Homceopathic Examinee. — Vols. I
and II, new series, by Drs. Gray and Hempel,
1845-47. Bound, in 2 vols, with an inoptical
index over the.2 volumes, can be used as a
Manual. £1 15s. Reduced for a short time
to £1 5s.
Homceopathic Examinee. By A.
Gerald Hull, M.D. A few copies of the second
and third volume of this most estimated Jour-
nal are on hand. From 1841 to 1844, in 2
large volumes, royal 8vo, bound, £2 10s.
Homceopathic Cookeey. — Second
edition, with additions, by the Lady of an
American Homoeopathic Physician. Designed
chiefly for the Use of such persons as are
under Homoeopathic Treatment. 8vo, 2s. 6d.
HooKEE. — Doctrines and Evidences of
Homoeopathy. By Dr. W. Hooker. 12mo,
4s. 6d.
HrEELAND. — Enchiridion Medicum,
or the Practice of Medicine; the result of
Fifty Years' Experience, by C. W. Hufeland,
counsellor of state, physician in ordinary of
the late King of Prussia, professor in the Uni-
versity of Berlin. From the sixth German
edition; translated by G. Bruckhausen, M.D.
Second American edition. 8vo, bound, 12s. 6d.
Hull. — Life of Hahnemann. By Dr.
A. Gerald Hull. With an Engraving of
Hahnemann. 8vo, 2s.
HuMPHEEYS. — The Cholera and its
Homoeopathic Treatment. By Prof. Dr. F.
Humphreys. 8vo, bound, 2s.
HuMPHEEYS. — Dysentery and its Ho-
moeopathic Treatment; containing also a Re-
pertory and numerous Cases. By Fred.
Humphreys, M.D. 8vo, cloth, 96 pp., 2s. 6d.
HuMPHEEYS. — Homoeopathic Treat-
ment of Diseases of the Sexual System, being
a complete Repertory of all the symptoms oc-
curring in the Sexual System of the Male and
Female. Adapted to the Use of Physician
and Laymen. By Fred. Humphreys, M.D.
Translated, arranged, and edited, with addi-
tions and improvements. Second Thousand,
1854. 8vo, bound, 2s. 6d.
Hydeiatics. — A Manual of the Water
Cure, especially as practised by Vincent
Priessnitz in Grsefenburg. Compiled and
translated from the Writings of Dr. Charles
Muude, Dr. Aertel, Dr. B. Hu-schel, and other
Eye-Witnesses and Practitioners. By Fran-
cis Graeter. 8vo, bound, 2s. 6d.
Jahe's and Possaet's New Manual
of the Homoeopathic Materia Medica, arranged
with Reference to well-authenticated Obser-
vations at tlie Sick Bed, and accompanied by
an Alphabetical Repertory to facilitate and
secure the selection of a suitable Remedy in
any given Case. Fourth edition, revised and
enlarged by the Author, and Translated and
Edited by Charles J. Hempel, M.D., Fellow
and Corresponding Member of the Homoeo-
pathic College of Pennsylvania, &c. Crown
8vo, half bound, 940 pp , 18s.
Jahe and Gteunee. — New Homceo-
pathic Pharmacopoeia and Posology, or the
Mode of Preparing Homoeopathic Medicine,
MEDICINE AND SURGERY.
23
and the Administration of Doses, compiled
and translated from the German works of
Buchner, Gruner, and the French work of
Jahr, by C. J. Hempel, M.D. 1850. 8vo,
hound, iOs.
Jahe. —Diseases of the Skin ; or, Al-
phabetical Repertory of the Skin symptoms
and external alterations of substance, toge-
ther with the morbid phenomena observed in
the glandular, osseous, mucuous, and circu-
latory systems, arranged with pathological
remarks on the Diseases of the Skin. By Dr.
G. H. G. Jahr. Edited by C. J. Hempel, M.D.
1850. 8vo, bound, 5s.
Jahr. — Clinical Gruide, or Pocket-Re-
pertory for the Treatment of Acute and Chro-
nic Diseases. By Dr. G. H. G. Jahr. Trans-
lated from the German, by C. J. Hempel, M.D.
1850. 8vo, bound, 7s. 6d.
Jahe. — ]New Manual of Homoeopathic
Practice. By Dr. G. H. G. Jahr. Edited, with
Annotations, l)y A. Gerald Hull, M.D. I'rom
the last Paris edition. Complete Symptoma-
tology and Repertory. 2 vols. 8vo, bd. 30s.
Jahe. — New Manual : originally pub-
lished under the name of Symptomen-Codex.
(Digest of Symptoms.) By Dr. G. H. G. Jahr.
This work is intended to facihtate a compa-
rison of the parallel symptoms of the various
Homoeopathic agents, thereby enabling the
Practitioner to discover the characteristic
symptoms of each drug, and to determine
with ease and correctness what Remedy is
most Homoeopathic to the existing group of
symptoms. Translated, with important and
extensive additions from various soui'ces, by
Charles Juhns Hempel, M.D., assisted by
James M. Quin, M.D., with Revisions and
Clinical Kotes by John F. Gray. M.D.; con-
tributions by Drs. A. Gerald Hull, George W.
Cook, and Dr. B. F. Joslin, of iS'ew York ; and
Drs. C. Hering, J. Jeanes, C. Neidhard, W.
Williamson, and J. Kitchen, of Philadelphia j
with a Preface by Constantine Hering, M.D.
2 vols. 8vo, bound, £2 15s.
The third volume is issued as a separate
work, under the title of Complete Repertory
of the Homoeopathic Materia Medica. By
Charles J Hempel, M.D. 1224 pages. Price
30s., or all 3 volumes at £4 5s.
Joslin. — ^Law of Cure. Address before
the American Institute of Homoeopathy, held
at Philadelphia, June 13th, 1850. By Dr. B.
F. Joslin. Is.
Joslin. — Homoeopathic Treatment of
Cholera, including Repertories for this Disease
and for Summer Complaints. By Dr. B. F.
Joslin. Third edition with Additions. 1854.
8vo, bound, 2s. 6d.
Joslin. — Principles of Homoeopathia.
In a series of Lectures. By Dr. B. F. Joslin.
1850. 8vo, bound, 4s.
Keeusslee. — Pocket Therapeutics of
Acute and Chronic Diseases. By E. Kreussler.
1854. 8vo.
KEEUSSLEE.-The Homoeopathic Treat-
ment of Acute and Chronic Diseases. By E.
Kreussler. Translated from the German, with
important Additions and Revisions by Chas.
J. Hempel, M.D. Pp. 202, 12mo, cloth, 5s.
LAZAEUS.-Involuntary Seminal Losses:
their Causes, Effects, and Cure. By Dr. M,
E. Lazarus. 1852. 8vo, paper cover, Is. 6d.
Lazaetjs. — Homoeopathy, a Theoretic
Demonstration, with social A pph cations. By
Dr. M. E.Lazarus. 1861. 8\o, bound, 28.
Malan. — Family Guide to the Ad-
ministration of Homoeopathic Remedies. By
Malan. 8vo, bound. Is. 6d.
Maecy. — The Homoeopathic Theory
and Practice of Medicine. By Dr. E. E.
Marcy. Second edition. Third Thousand.
1852. 8vo, bound, 10s.
MAECY.-Homoeopathy and Allopathy :
Reply to an Examination of the Doctrines
and Evidences of Homoeopathy, by Worthing-
ton Hooker, M.D. By Dr. E. E. Marcy. 1853.
8vo, bound, 2s. 6d.
Maeinee's Physician and Surgeon ;
or, a Guide to the Homoeopathic Treatment of
those Diseases to which Seamen are liable.
By Geo. W. Cook, M.D. 1848. 8vo, bd. 2s.
Mateeia Medica of Ameeican Peot-
INGS. By C. Hering, M.D., J. Jeanes, M.D.,
C. B. Matthews, M.D., W. Williamson, M.D.,
C. Neidhard, M.D., S.R.Dubs, M.D., C.Bute,
M.D. Containing the Provings of: Acidum-
benzoicura, Acidum-fluoricum, Acidum-oxali-
cum, Elaterium, Eupatorium - perfohalum,
Kalmia-latifolia, Lobeiia-infiata, Lobelia-car-
dinalis, Podophyllum-peltatum, Sanguinaria-
canadensis, and Triosteum-perfoliatum. Col-
lected and arranged by the American Insti-
tute of Homoeopathy. With a Repertorv by
W. P. Esrey, M.D. Second Thousand. 1853.
8vo, bound, 5s.
Matthes. — Letter to Worthington
Hooker, M.D., in relation to so much of his
book, entitled, " Physician and Patient," as
has reference to Homoeopathy. By Dr. F.
Matthes. 8vo, Is.
Metcale. — Homoeopathy and its Ee-
quirements of the Physician. Address, de-
livered before the Homoeopathic Medical So-
ciety of the State of New York, at Syracuse,
June 1st, 1852. By J. W. Metcalf, M.D. Is.
Moegan. — The Homoeopathic Treat-
ment of Indigestion, Constipation, and Hae-
morrhoids. By William Morgan. Edited with
Notes and Annotations, by A. E. Small, M.D.,
Professor of Physiology and Medical Juris-
prudence in the Homoeopathic Medical Col-
lege of Pennsylvania, and one of the Consult-
ing Physicians of the Homoeopathic Hospital
in Philadelphia. 1854. 8vo, bound, 4s,
Muee. — Materia Medica ; or, Prov-
ings of the Principal Animal and Vegetable
Poisons of the Brazilian Empire, and their Ap-
plication in the Treatment of Disease. By Dr.
B. Mure. Translated from the French, and
arranged according to Hahnemann's Method,
by Charles J. Hempel, M.D. Crown 8vo, cloth,
pp.220. 6s.
NEIDHAED.-Homoeopathy in Q-ermany
and England in 1849, with a glance at Allopa-
tliic Men and Things. Being two Preliminary
Discourses, delivered in the Homoeopathic Me-
dical College of Pennsylvania. By Dr. Charles
Neidhard. 8vo. Is.
NoETH Ameeican Homceopathic
J ouRNAL. — A Quarterly Magazine of Medicine
and the Auxiliary Sciences. Conducted by
C. Hering, M.D., Philadelphia; E.E. Marcy,
M.D., and J. W. Metcalf, M.D., New York.
1851, vol. i ; 1852, vol. 2 ; 1853, vol. iii. Price
per volume of 58G pages, 8vo. 15s.
24
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Okie. — An Address, delivered before
the Rhode- Island Ilomoeopatliic Society. By
Dr. A. Howard Okie. 8vo. Is.
Petees. — Tlie Diseases of Females.
Disorders of Menstruation. Witli full Descrip-
tions of the Dose to each single case. By Dr.
John C. Peters. 8vo, bd. 4s.
Petees. — A Treatise on Apoplexy;
with an Appendix on Softening of the Brain,
and Paralysis. Based on Th. i. E-uckerts'
Clinical Experience in Homoeopathy. By John
C. Peters, M.D. 8vo, cloth, pp.170. 4s.
Petees. — A Treatise on the J3iseases
of Married Eemales. Disorders of Pregnancy,
Parturition, and Lactation. By J.C. Peters,
M.D. Svo, cloth, pp. 195. 5s.
Philadelphia Jouenal of Homceo-
PATHY. — Edited by William A. Gardiner, M.D.,
Professor of Anatomy in the Homoeopathic
Medical College of Pennsylvania, assisted by
the following contributors — Drs, B.E. Joslin,
A. H. Okie, H. C, Preston, J. P. Dake, P. P.
Wells, W. E. Payne, C. Dunham, James
Kitchen, W. S. Ileimuth, A. E. Small, S. R
Dubs, W. E, Payne. Published Monthly.
Price per volume of 12 monthly numbers, 15s.
Pulte. — Woman's Medical G-uide. —
Containing Essays on the Physical, Moral, and
Educational Development of Pemales, and the
Homoeopathic Treatment of their Diseases in
all Periods of Life ; together with Directions
for the Remedial Use of Water and Gymnastics.
By J. H. Pulte. M.D. 13mo, half-bound. 6s.
Ptjlte. — Homoeopathic Domestic Phy-
sician, containing the Treatment of Diseases ;
with popular Explanations of Anatomy, Phy-
siology, Hygiene and Hydropatliy, also an
abridged Materia Medica. By J. H. Pulte.
Bound. 7s. 6d.
QUAETEELY HOMCEOPATHIC JOUENAL,
Edited by Drs. J. Birnstill and J. A. Tarbell.
Boston. Price per year, 5s.
Eapou. — A Treatise on Typlioid Fever,
and its Homoeopathic Treatment. By Aug.
Rapou, Member of the College of Physicians
at Paris. Tratislated from the French by
Arthur A. Granville. Post Svo, pp. 96, cl. bb.
Rau. — Organon of the Specific Heal-
ing Art of Homoeopathy. By Dr. G. L. Rau.
Edited by C. J. llempel, M.D. 8vo, bnd. 6s. fid.
EiNG. — The ''Little Pills" vindicated ;
or, "Orthodox "Delusions I'^r^?^ Homoeopathy.
By Dr. Hamilton Ring. 1853. Is. 6d.
RocKYTANSKY'sPathologicalAnatomy.
By Rockytansky. Translated from the Ger-
man, with Additions on Diagnosis from Schon-
lein, Skoda, and others. By Dr. John C.
Peters. Svo. 4s.
EiiCKEET. — A Treatise on Kervous
Derangement and Mental Disorders. Based
upon Th. J. Riickevt's " Clinical Experience
in Homoeopathy." By John C. Peters, M.D.
Svo, cloth, pp. 140. New York. 5s.
Rfeckeet. — Therapeutics : or, Suc-
cessful Homoeopathic Cures; collected from
the best Homoeopathic Periodicals. Translated
and Edited by C. J. Hempel, M.D. One large
Svo volume, bound. 15s.
Eueckeet. — Nervous Diseases and
Mental Derangements. Successful Homoeo-
pathic Cures, collected from the best Homoe-
opathic Periodicals. By Dr. Th. J. Rucckert.
Translated and Edited by J. C. Peters, M.D,
With full Descriptions of the Dose to each
single case. Svo, bd. 1854. 4s.
EuECKEET. — Apoplexy and Palsy. —
Successful Homoeopathic Cures, collected from
the best Homoeopathic Periodicals. By Dr. Th.
J. Rueckort. Translated and Edited 'by J C.
Peters, M.D. With full Descriptions of the
Dose to each single case. Svo, bd. 1853. 4s.
ElJECKEET. — Diseases of the Stomach.
Successful Homa^opathic Cures, collected from
the best Homeopathic Periodicals. By Dr. Th.
J. Rucckert. Translated and Edited by J. C.
Peters, M.D. With full Descriptions of the
Dose of each single case. Svo, bd. 1854. 4s.
EuECKEET. — Diseases of tlie Eye and
Ear. Successful Homoeopathic Cures, collected
from the best Homoeopathic Periodicals. By
Dr. Th. J. Rucckert. Translated and Edited
by J.C, Peters, M D. With full Descriptions of
the Doses to each single case. Svo, bd. 1854. 4s.
ElTECKEET.-Inflammation and Dropsy
of the Brain. Successful Homoeopathic Cures,
collected from the -best Homoeopathic Periodi-
cals. By Dr.Th. J. Rucckert. Translated and
Edited by C. J. Peters, M.D. With full De-
scriptions of the Dose to each single case. Svo,
bd. 1854. 4s.
Eueckeet. — Treatise on Headaches;
including acute, chronic, nervous, gastric, dy-
speptic or sick headaches; also congestive,
rheumatic and periodical headaches. Based on
Clinical experience in Homcepathy. By Dr.Th.
J. Rucckert. With Introduction, Appendix,
Synopsis, Notes, Directions for Doses, and 50
additional cases. By C. J. Peters, M.D. Svo,
bd. 1853. 4s.
EuoFF. — Repertory of Homoeopathic
Medicine, Kosologically arranged. By Ruoff.
Translated from the German by A. H. Okie,
M.D., translator of Hartmann's Remedies.
Second American Edition, with Additions and
Improvements, by G. Humphrey, M.D. Svo,
bd. 7s. 6d.
EuSH. — The Handbook to Yeterinary
Homoeopathy, or the Homoeopathic Treatment
of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, and Svdne.
By John Rush, Veterinary Surgeon. Prom the
London Edition. With numerous additions
from the Seventh German Edition of Dr. E. E.
Guenther's Homoeopathic Veterinary ; trans-
lated by Jacob E. Scheek, M.D. Svo, bound.
1854. 2s. 6d.
SCH^FEE. — Veterinary Homoeopathy.
By Schsefer. Translated from the German, ;
and edited by W. H. Smith, Veterinary Sur- }
geon.
SoiiEERiL. — Manual of Homoeopathic i
Prescription, with an improved Ptepertory; "'-.
also an Introduction, in which the Doctrine
and IS'ature of the Homoeopathic System is ■}
explained. By Scherril. Svo. 1845. Is. 6d.
Small. — Manual of Homoeopathic
Practice, for the use of Famines and Private
Individuals. By A. E. Small, A,M., M.D. 8vo,
pp. 836, cloth. Philadelphia. 12s.
Stape. — Addition to the Materia Me-
dica Pura. By Dr. E. Stapf. Translated by
C. J. Hempel, M.D. Svo, bd. 7s. Cd.
Taebell. — Pocket Homoeopathist, and
Eamilv Guide. By Dr. J. A. Tarbell. Bound.
1819. Is. 6d.
NATURAL HISTORY AND SCIENCE.
25
Tarbell. — Sources of Health, and the
Prevention of Disease. By Dr. J. A. Tarbcll.
Bound. 1850. 2s. 6d.
Teste. — The Homoeopathic Materia
Medica, Arranged Systematically and Practi-
cally by A. Teste. Translate'd from tke French,
and edited by Charles J. Hempel. 8vo, pp. 638,
half-bound. 12s. Gd.
VANDEEBUEan. — An Appeal for Ho-
moeo])atliy ; or. Remarks on the Decision of
the late Judge Cowan, relative to the Legal
Eights of Homoeopathic Physicians. By Dr. F.
Vanderburgh. 8vo. 1814. Is.
Wakeingtox. — The Obstetric Cate-
chism, containing 23 17 Questions and Answeis
on Obstetrics Proper. By Jos. Warrington.
150 Illustrations. 12mo. Phil. 1853. 7s.
Wesselhceft and Geau, — Systematic
Reports of 392 Cases treated Ilydropathicaliy
at Brattleboro. With a Plan of the Walks iii
the Vicinity; also, Causes and Hydropathic
Treatment of the Cholera. By Wesselhoeft and
Grau. Paper cover. 8vo. 2s. Cd.
Williamson. — Diseases of Females
and Cliildren, and their Homoeopathic Treat-
ment, By Walter Williamson, M.D. Second
improved and enlarged Edition. Containing
also a full Description of the Dose of each Me-
dicine. 8vo, over 250 pages, bd. 1854. 4s.
IV.
NATURAL HISTORY & SCIENCE.
ASTRONOMY, BOTANY, CHEMISTRY, COMPARATIVE ANATOMY,
CONCHOLOGY, ETHNOLOGY, GEOLOGY, MICROSCOPY,
MINERALOGY, ORNITHOLOGY, ZOOLOGY, ETC.
Adams, Contributions to Conchology.
8vo. 1819-53. New York. 12s. 6d.
Agassiz. — Introduction to the Study
of Natural History. By Louis Agassiz. 8vo,
illustrated with numerous engravings. 2s.
Agassiz. — Twelve Lectures on Com-
parative Embryology, delivered before the
Lowell Institute. By Louis Agassiz. 8vo,
paper. 2s.
Agassiz and Gould. — Principles of
Zoology: touching the Structure, Develop-
ment, Distribution, and Natural Arrangement
of the Races of Animals, Living and Extinct'
With numerous Illustrations. Eor the use of
Schools and Colleges. Parti: Comparative
Phisiology. By Louis Agassiz and Augustus
A. Gould. Revised Edtion. 12mo, cl. 7s. 6d.
Agassiz and Gould. — Principles of
Zoology. Part II : Systematic Zoology, in
which the Principles of Classification are ap-
plied, and the principal Groups of Animals are
briefly characterized. With numerous Illus-
trations. 12mo. Iti preparation.
Agassiz. — Lake Superior ; its Physical
Character, Vegetation, and Animals, compared
with those of other and similar Regions. By
L. Agassiz. W^ith a Narrative of the Tour, by
• J.EUiot Cabot. 1 vol. 8vo, with numerous Il-
lustrations, cloth. £1. 4s.
American Ephemeris (The), and
Nautical Almanac for the Years 1855 & 1856.
l*ublished by Authority of the Secretary of
the Navy. Imperial 8vo, sewed. 9s. each.
Annals of the Lyceum of Natural
History of New York, 1824r-1837. 4 vols.
8vo. Series II. 1846.
Astronomical Journal (The). —
Edited by B. A. Gould, Cambridge, Mass. In
4to Numbers. Subscription per Volume of 24
Nos. £1. 5s.
Astronomical Observations at the
National Observatory, Washington. Vols. I-
and II, for the Years 1845-46. 4to. Washing-
ton, 1846-51. £2. 2s.
Audubon. — The Birds of America,
from Drawings made in the United States and
their Territories. By John James Audubon,
F.U.S., S.S., L. & E. Illustrated by 500 finely
col. Drawings. 4 vols folio. 1828 to 1840. £200.
The Same, with uncoloured Plates. £84.
Audubon. — The Birds of America ;
from Drawings made in the United States and
their Territories. By John James Audobon,
F.R.S., S.S., L &E. 7 vols, royal 8vo, with
500 coloured plates, each 10 inches by 7, and
numerous woodcuts, illustrative of the Ana-
tomy of the Birds. Imp. 8vo, 2204 pages of
letter-press. 1840 to 1844. New York. £26. 5s.
Audubon. — Ornithological Biography.
By J. J. Audubon. 5 vols. roy. 8vo, Boston. £8.
Audubon and Bachman. — The Quad-
rupeds of North America. By J. J. Audubon
and Rev. John Bachman. Published in 30
Parts, of 5 coloured Plates each (22 in. by 28),
forming 3 vols., each volume containing 90
Plates. The Text is in 3 vols. 8vo. Philadel-
phia, 1843 to 1849. £66.
Audubon and Bachman. — The Quad-
rupeds of North America. By J. J. Audubon,
P.R.S., &c. &c., and the llev-Vohn Bachman,
D.D., &c. &c. 3 vols, royal 8vo, pp. 1078, and
155 coloured Plates. New York, 1854. £9. 9s.
This Edition is a miniature cojjy of the
large Edition of the Classical Vv'cr.c on the
Quadrupeds of the United States (including
Texas, California, and Oregon), part of
Mexico, the British and Russian Possessions,
and Arctic Regions of the American Con-
tinent.
When a copyof the "Birds of America" was
received by the Royal Academy of Sciences
of Paris, Baron Cuvier, to whom it was re-
3
26
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
ferred, said, In his Beport, " it can be dc-
scril)ed only by calling it the most magni-
ficent monument Art has ever raised to
Ornithology."
John James Audubon was born of French
parents, near New Orleans, in 1780. At a
very early age he was sent to France, and
educated' in Art and Science, under the best
masters, among whom was David. The
love of birds, which has been the passion
ot his life, manifested itself in infancy, and
when he retui-ned from France, he betook
himself to his native woods, and began a
collection of drawings, which made the
germ of the "Birds of America." In 1834.,
Lucian Buonaparte proposed to buy his
drawings; he resolved however to publish
them himself, and as it could not be done in
America, went to England. The drawings
were lirst exhibited at Edinburgh, and en-
couraged by men like Herschel, Cuvier,
Humboldt, and Scott, Worcester, Wilson,
and Jeifery, for companions, he began the
pubhcation of his magnificent work. It was
completed in London in 14 years, and his
fame was established. 175 Subscribers, at
1000 dollars each, most of them obtained
by himself in person, and 80 of whoni were
his own countrymen, remunerated his vast
undertaking. lie was made a Fellow of the
lloyal Society of London, published a Sy-
nopsis of his great work at Edinburgh, and
finally, in 1839, returned home, bringing
with him all liis original drawings. He re-
published the work in New York, in royal
octavo, and, with Dr. Bachmann, the emi-
nent Zoologist, began another work, "The
Quadrupeds of North America," which was
completed in 1849. In speaking of these
works, particularly the last, mention should
be made of his two Sons, whose accomplish-
ments in Arts and Science, have been so
useful to their father.
Baetlett. — The Progress of Ethno-
logy.— An account of recent Archseological,
Philological and Geographical Uesearches in
various parts of the Globe, tending to eluci-
date the Phvsical History of Man. By John
Uussell Bartlett. 8vo. 6s.
Bassnett. — Outhnes of a Mechanical
Theory of Storms, containing the true Law of
Lunar Influence, Practical Instructions to
the Navigator, &C.&C. By T. Bassnett. Crown
Svo, cloth. 6s.
Beck.— Botany of the United States
of America, arrani^ed according to the Natural
Svstem. By Lewis F. Beck, M.D. 12mo, bd.
7s. 6d,
Berzelius. — The Use of the Blowpipe
in Chemistry and Mineralogy. By J.J. Berze-
lius. Translated from the Fourth enlarged
and corrected Edition, by J.D.Whitney. 13mo,
pp. 254, 4 plates, cloth. 9s.
Bonaparte. — American Ornithology.
By Charles Bonaparte. With finely coloured
Plates. 4 vols, folio, half-bd. Philadelphia. £9.
Booth. — Encyclopsedia of Chemistry,
Practical and Theoretical ; embracing its Ap-
plication to the Arts, Metallurgy, Mineralogy,
Geology, Medicine, and Pharmacy. By James
C. Booth, A.M., Melter and Refiner in the
United States Mint; assisted by Campbell
Moi-fit, author of "Applied Chemistry."
Second Edition. 8vo, cloth. £1. Is,
Booth and Moeeit. — The Recent Im-
provements in the Chemical Arts. By Profes-
sor James C. Booth and Campbeii Morfit,
Svo, cloth. 5».
Boston Journal of Natural History,
containing Papers and Communications read
to the Boston Society of ISatural History.
3 vols. Svo. Boston, 1837—1841.
Bowditch. — The Mecanique Celeste
of Peter Simon Marquis de La Place. Trans-
lated, with a Commentary, by N. Bowditch,
LL.D. With a Memoir of the Translator. In
4 vols. imp. 4to. Boston, 1829 to 1839. £8. Ss.
Only 300 copies of this work were printed,
at the author's expense, and a very few-
copies now remain for sale.
Brocklesby. — Elements of Meteoro-
logy. By John Brocklesby, 12mo, cloth. 5s.
Brocklesby. — Views of the Micro-
scopic World; designed for General Reading,
and as a lland-Book for Classes in Natural
Science. By o . Brocklesby. Sq. 12mo, cl. 68.
Browne. — Trichologia Mammalium :
or, a Treatise on the Organisation, Properties,
and Uses of Hair and \\ ool ; together with an
Essay upon the liaising and Breeding of Sheep.
By Peter A. Browne, LL D., of Philadelphia.
Published under the patronage of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania. With Illustra-
tions. 4to, pp.188. £1. 5s.
BtFRMEiSTER.^The Black Man. The
Comparative Anatomy and Psychology of the
African Negro, By Hermann Burmeister, Pro-
fessor of Zoology at the University of Halle.
Translated by J . Friedlander, Dr. Phil, of Ber-
lin, and Rob. Tomes, M.D., of New York. 8vo,
sewed. Is.
CALDWELL.-Thoughts On the Original
Unity of the Human Race. By C. Caldwell,
M.D. 2d edition, revised. 12mo, 4s. Cd.
Cassin. — Illustrations of the Birds of
California, Texas, Oregon, British and Russian
America. Forming a Supplement to Audubon's
"Birds of America." By John Cassin, Mem-
ber of the Academy of Natural Sciences of
Philadelphia, &c To be completed in 80
Monthly Parts, imp. Svo, 5 Coloured Plates
in each, price 5s. 7 Parts now ready.
Chaityenet. — New Method of Cor-
recting Lunar Distances, and improved Method
of Finding the Error and Rate of a Chrono-
meter by equal Altitudes. By William Chau-
venet, A.M., Professor of Mathematics in the
U. S. Naval Academy, &c. 86 pp., Svo, 3s. 6d.
Comstock. — An Introduction to Mi-
neralogy ; adapted to the Use of Schools and
Private Students. By John L. Comstock, M.D.
Twentieth edition. 186 woodcuts, pp. 384,
12mo, bound, 4s. 6d. ^
Comstock. — An Introduction to the
Study of Botany, including a Treatise on Ve-
getable Physiology, and Descriptions of the
most common Plants in the Middle and
Northern Stntes. By J. L. Comstock, M.D.
Thirtieth edition. 248 engravings, pp. 490,
19mo, half bound, 6s. 6d.
Comstock. — Elements of Geology ;
including Fossil Botany and Palaeontology. A
popular Treatise on the most interesting parts
of the Science. Designed for the Use of
Schools and General Readers. By J. L. Com-
stock, M.D. 126 engravings, pp. 438, 12mo,
hdlfbound, 6s. 6d.
NATURAL HISTORY AND SCIENCE.
27
CoMSTt)CK. — Elements of Chemistry;
in which the recent Discoveries in the Science
are inchided, and its Doctrines familiary ex-
plained. Desijined for the Use of Schools and
Academies. By J. L. Conistock, M.D. Re-
vised stereotype edition, 106 engravings pp.
430. 12nio, bound, 5s. 6d.
CoMSTOCK. — Outlines of Physiology,
both comparative and human ; in which are
described the Mechanical, Animal, Vital, and
Sensorial Organs and Functions; also, the
Applications of these Principles to Muscular
Exercise, and Female Fashions and Deformi-
ties. Intended for the Use of Schools and
Heads of Families. Together with a Synopsis
of Human Anatomy. By J. L. Comstock, M.D.
146 engravings, pp. 360. 13aio, bound, 4s. 6d.
t/ONRAD. — Monography of the Family
Unionidse, or Naides of Lamarck (freshwater
bivalve shells) of North America; illustrated
by figures drawn on stone, from Nature, and
finely coloured. By T. A. Conrad, Curator of
the Academy of Nat. Sciences of Pdiladelphia,
&c. Of this work Nos. 1 to 13 liave been pub-
lished ; each number contains 5 finely coloured
plates. Price per Number 6s,
CoTJLTAS. — The Principles of Botany,
as Exemplified in the Cryptogamia. For the
Use of Schools and Colleges. By Harland
Coultas. 8vo, cloth, 3s.
CozzENS. — A Greological History of
Manhattan or New York Island. 8vo, map
coloured plates. New York, 1843. 5s,
Cutter. — Human and Comparative
Anatomy, Physiology, and Hygiene. By Mrs.
Eunice P. Cutter. With 100 Engravings,
pp. 132. 12mo, boards, 2s.
ClTTTER. — A Treitise on Anatomy,
Physiology, and Hygiene : designed for Col-
leges, Academies, and Families. By Calvin
Cutter, M.D. With 150 Engravings, pp. 466.
Grown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Cutter. — First Book on Anatomy,
Physiology, and Hygiene, for Grammar Schools
and Families. With 83 Engravings. By Calvin
Cutter, M.D. , Author of "Anatomy, Physiology,
and Hygiene, for Colleges, Academies, &c."
Pp. 192. Crown 8vo, half bound, 2s. 6d.
Dana. — A System of Mineralogy,
comprising the most recent Discoveries; in-
cluding full Descriptions of Species and their
Localities, Chemical Analyses and Formulas,
Tables for the Determination of Minerals,
with a Treatise on Mathematical Crystallo-
fraphy and the Drawing of Figures of Crystals,
llustrated by 600 woodcuts. By James D.
Dana, A..M~., Memb. of the Soc. Caes. Nat. Cur.
of Moscow, the Soc. Philomatique of Paris,
&c. Fourth edition, rewritten, rearranged,
and enlarged. 2 vols, in 1, pp. 860, Svo, cloth,
£1 4s.
Dana. — A Manual of Mineralogy, for
the Use of Students. By James D. Dana. One
vol. post 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Dana. — The Zoophytes of the United
States' Exploring Expedition. By James D.
Dana. 4to, £ fc 4s. ; and folio atlas of coloured
plates, £10 10s. Phila. 18i8-49.
Dana. — Geology of the United States'
Exploring Expedition. By James D. Dana.
4to, with an atlas of plates in folio. Phila. 1819.
£5 5s.
Dana. — On Coral Reefs and Islands.
By James D. Dana. 1853. Svo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
DANA.-Crustacea of the United States'
Exploring Expedition. Described by James
D. Dana, A.M. Two parts, 4to, £6 63. New
York, 1853.
The Atlas is not published yet.
Darlington. — Flora Cestrica ; an
Herborizing Companion for the Young Bo-
tanists of Chester County, State of Pennsyl-
vania. By Wm. Darlington, M.D.,LL.D., &c.
Third edition, crown Svo, calf, 14s.
Davis. — A Manual of Magnetism. By
D. Davis, jun. With 180 Illustrations. Crown
Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Espy. — The Philosophy of Storms.
By James P. Espy. 1 vol. Svo, pp. 600, with
maps, engravings, &c., 16s. Boston, 1841.
GiRAUD.-Birds of Long Island ; their
Habits, Plumage, Mode of Catching, Ssc. By
J. P. Giraud. 1 vol. Svo, cloth, 12s. 6d.
GtLIDDOn's Types of Mankind ; or,
Ethnological Researches based upon the An-
cient Monuments, Paintings, Sculptures, and
Crania of Races, and upon their Natural, Geo-
graphical, Philological, and Biblical History.
By J. C. Nott, M.D., Mobile, Alabama; and
Geo. R. GUddon, formerly U. S. Consul at
Cairo. Second edition. Royal 8vo, cloth,
plates, £1 5s,
GrOULD. — MoUusca and Shells. By*
Augustus A. Gould, M.D., Fellow of the
American Philosophical Society, and Boston
Society of Natural History, &c., forming Vol.
XII of the " United States' Exploring Expe-
dition." Imp.4to, cloth, £1 10s. Boston, 1853.
The Atlas is not published yet.
GrRAT. — Elements of Geology. By
Alonzo Gray, A.M., and.C. B. Adams, A.M.
Post Svo, bound, 6s.
GrRAY. — A Manual of the Botany of
the Northern United States, from New Eng-
land to Winconsin, and south to Ohio from
Pennsylvania, inclusive (the Mosses and Liver-
worts, by Wm. S. Sullivant). By Asa Gray,
M.D. 12mo, cloth, 12s.
GrRAY. — The Botanical Text-Book, for
Colleges, Schools, and Private Students, com-
prising: Part 1— An Introduction to Struc-
tural and Physiological Botany. Part 2— The
Principles of* Systematic Botany — with an Ac-
count of the Chief Natural Families of the
Vegetable Kingdom, and Notices of the prin-
cipal Useful Plants. By Asa Gray, M.D,,
Professor of Natural History in Harvard Uni-
versity. Second edition. Enlarged and Im-
proved, and Illustrated by more than a thou-
sand engravings on wood. 1 thick vol, 12mo,
beautifully printed, cloth, 10s.
GrRAY. — Botany. Phanerogamia. By
Asa Gray, M.D. With a folio atlas of 100 plates.
Vol. 1, being Vol. 14 of United States' Ex-
ploring Expedition. New York, 1854. 4to,
cloth, £3 3s.
Atlas not published yet.
GI-RAY. — The Genera of the Plants of
the United States, illustrated by Figures and
Analyses from Nature, by Isaac Sprague,with
Descriptions by Asa Gray, M,D. Svo, Vols. 1
and 2, each 31s. 6d.
GuMMERE. — An Elementary Treatise
on Astronomy. By John Gummere. Svo, ISs.
28
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
GrYOT.-A Collection of Meteorological
Tables, with other Tables Useful in Practical
Meteorology. Prepared by order of the Smitli-
sonian Institution. By Arnold Guyot. Royal
8vo, sewed, 8s. 6d.
Haldeman. — A Monograph of the
Limniades, or Freshwater Univalve Sbells of
North America. By S. S. Ilaldeman, Member
of the Academy of Natural Sciences. Nos 1,
2, and 3, are published, each containing five
splendidly coloured plates, price 6s. each, to
be completed in about eight numbers. Phila.
Hall. — Palaeontology of New York.
Vols. 1 and 2. Containing Descriptions of the
Organic Remains of the Lower Middle Divi-
sions of the New York System. By James
Hall. 4to, cloth, £1 16s. each volume.
Hareis. — A Treatise on the Insects
of New England M'hich are injurioiis to Vege-
tation. By T. W. Harris, M.D , Cambr., N. E.
1842. 8vo, 16s.
Haryey. — Nereis -Boreali- Americana,
or Contributions to a History of the Marine
Algae of North America. By W. H. Harvey. 4to,
2 vols, with 36 coloui-ed plates. Washington,
1852-53. £2.
Hitchcock. — Elementary Geology.
By Edward Hitchcock, D.D. With an Intro-
ductory Notice by John Pye Smith, D.D.
Eighth edition. Post 8vo, 7s.
Hitchcock. — Outline of the G-eology
of the Glo])e, and of the United States in
jjarticular; with two Geological Maps, and
Sketches of characteristic American Fossils.
By Edward Hitchcock, D.D. lvol.8vo,cl.7s.6d.
Hitchcock. — Final Report on the
Geology of Massachusetts. (By Order of the
State.) Containing — I. Economical Geology ;
II. Scenographical Geology; 111. Scientific
Geology; IV. Elementary Geology. With a
Catalogue of Specimens in the State Collection.
By Edward Hitchcock, LL.D., Geologist to the
State, &c. In 2 vols, royal 4to, with a map
and numerous illustrations, £3 3s. Northamp-
ton, Massachusetts, 1841.
Hitchcock. — Address before the Ame-
rican Association of Geologists, 1841. 8vo,
sewed, 3s. New York, 1842.
Hitchcock. — First Report on Geo-
logy, Botany, Zoology, &c. of Massachusetts.
8vo, with plates 4to, 30s. Amherst, 1831.
Hitchcock. — Final Report on the
Geology of Massachusetts. By E. Hitchcock.
4to, 2 vols, map, 55 plates and 275 figs. Am-
herst, 1841. £2 10s.
Hitchcock. — Religion of Geology.
By Edward Hitchcock. D.D. With Diagrau'is.
8vo. 7s. 6d.
HOLBROOK. — North American Herpe-
tology; or a Description of the Reptiles in-
habiting the United States. By John Edwards
Holbrook, M.D., &c.,with very numerous and
splendidly coloured plates 5 vols, royal 4to.
Philadelphia, 1843. £12 12s.
Holbrook. — Scientific tracts ; edited
by J. Holbrook, &c. 3 vols. 12mo, 18s. Bos-
ton, 1831-3.
HoYEY. — The -Fruits of America, con-
taining richly-coloured Eignres, and full Des-
criptions of ail the choicest varieties cultivated
in the United States. By C. M. Hovey. With
48 richly-coloured plates and portrait of Au-
thor, roy. 8vo, moi'occo, gilt edges, £3 3s.
Jackson. — First Annual Report on the
Geology of New Hampshire. By C. T. Jackson,
M.D., State Geologist. 8vo,2s. Concord, 1841.
Jay. — Catalogue of Shells, in the Col-
lection of John C. Jay, New York, with figures.
Second edition, 4to,'l8s. plain, 248. coloured.
New York, I8:i9.
Journal of the Academy of Natural
Sciences of Philadelphia, from 1817 to 1842.
vols 8vo. Philadelphia. 1817-42
JOTJRNAL of the Academy of Natural
Sciences of Phiudelphia. 27 vols. 8vo. Phila-
delphia, 1818-1843.
Lawson. — Meteorological Register for
Twelve Years, from 1831-1842 inclusive, com-
piled from Observations made by the Oflicers
of the Medical Department of the Army at the
Military Post of the United States. 8vo,
Washington, 1851. 6s.
Lea. — A Synopsis of the Family of
Naiades. By Isaac Lea, Member of the Ameri-
can Philosophical Society, &c. Third edition,
greatly enlarged and improved. 4to, pp. 92,
boards. Philadelphia, 1852. 18s.
Le Conte. — General Remarks upon
the Coleoptera of Lake Superior. 8vo. New
York, 1852. 2s.
Le Conte. — Descriptions of some New
and Interesting Insects inhabiting the United
States. 8vo, plate. New York, 1844. Is.
Le Conte.— On the Pselaphidse of the
United States. 8vo. New York, 1848. 2s.
Le Conte. — Synopsis of the Species of
Donacia (Fabr.) inhabiting the United States.
8vo. New York, 1852. 2s.
Le Conte. — Descriptions of New Spe-
cies of Coleoptera from California. 8vo. New
York, 1851. 3s. 6d.
Leidy. — Flora and Fauna within
Living Animals By Joseph Leidy, M.D. 4to,
68 pp. and 10 plates, sewed, 7s. 6d.
,LoEWiG. — Principles of Organic and
Physiological Chemistry. By Dr. Carl Loewig.
Trans, by D. Breed. M.D. 1 vol. 8vo, cl. 15s.
LooMis. — The Progress of Astronomy,
especially in the United States. By EUas
Loomis- 12mo, cloth, 7s.
LooMis. — The Elements of Geology;
adapted to Schools and Colleges, with nume-
rous illustrations. By J. B. Loomis, late Pro-
fessor of Chemistry and Geology in Waterville
College. 12mo, cloth, 5.^.
Marcoij. — A Geological Map of the
United States, and the British Provinces of
North ximerica; with an Explanatory Text,
Geological Sections, and Plates of the Fossils
which characterise the Formations. By Jules
Marcou, United States' Geologist, Member of
the Geological Society of France, &;c. 8vo,
cloth, 18s.
Memoirs of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences. 4 vols. 4to. Boston,
1785-93.
Memoirs of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences of Cambridge. New
Series, vol. 1, 4to. Cambridge, 1833.
MiCHAUX.-The North American Sylva;
or, a Description of the Forest Trees of the
United States, Canada, and N ovii, So- itia , lUus-
NATURAL HISTORY AND SCIENCE.
29
trated by 156 finely- coloured copper-plate en-
graviugs by Redoute, &c. In 3 vols. Trans-
lated from the French of F. Andrew Michaux,
'Member of tlie American Philosophical Society,
&c. With Notes by J. Jay Smith, Member of
the Academy of Natural Sciences. 3 vols.
imp. 8vo. Philadelphia. £7 7s.
MiCHAiJX. — North American Sylva ;
or, a Description of the Forest Trees of
the United States, Canada, and Nova Scotia,
not described in the work of F. Andi-ew
Michaux, containing all the Forest Trees dis-
covered in the Rocky Mountains, the Territory
of Oregon, down to the shores of the Pacific,
and into the Confines of California, as well as
in various parts of the United States. Illus-
trated by 1;21 finely-coloured plates. In 3 vols,
royal 8vo. By Thomas Nuttall, F.L.S. £6 6s.
The whole work complete in 6 vols, royal
8vo, with 277 plates, gilt edges, and gold
stamped cloth, £13 13s.
MiTCHEL. — Planetary and Stellar
Worlds; a Popular Exposition of the great
Discoveries and Theories of Modern Astro-
nomy. In a Series of Ten Lectures. By 0.
M. Mitchel, A.M. 12mo, cloth, 8s.
MoEFiT. — Chemical and Pharmaceu-
tical Manipulations: a Manual of the Me-
chanical and Chemico-Mechauical Operations
of the Laboratory ; containing a complete De-
scription of the most approved Apparatus, with
Instructions as to their Application and Ma-
nagement, both in ManuJactuving Processes
and in the more exact details of Analysis and
Research. For the Use of Chemists, Druggists,
Teachers, and Students. By Campbell Morfit.
1 vol. 8vo, with 4.23 Illustrations, 14s.
MoRTOX. — Crania Americana ; or,
Compa.iative View of the Skulls of various
Aboriginal Nations of North and South
America, with an Essay on the Varieties of
the Human Species. By Dr. S. G. Morton.
Imp. folio, with 78 beautiful plates and co-
loured map, cloth, £6 6s.
Morton. — Crania Egyptiaca : or, Ob-
servations on Egyptian Ethnography, derived
from Anatomy, History, aud the Monuments.
By Dr. S. G. Morton. 4to, numerous fine
plates, cloth, £2 23.
Murphy. — E-eview of Chemistry, for
Students, adapted to the principal Medical
Schools in the United States. By Murphy.
I2mo, 6s.
Nash. — Scientific Treatise on Agricul-
tural Chemistry. ByT. A. Nash. Pest 8vo,4s.
Natural History of New York State.
18 vols. 4to, a fine coloured copy.
Contents.
Part 1. Zoology. Mammaha. By James E. de
Kay. 4to, cloLh, 33 coloured plates.— Orni-
thology. By James E. de Kay. 4lo, cloth, 141
coloured plates. — Reptiles and Amphibia. By
James E. de Kay. 2 vols. 4to, cloth, 79 co-
loured nlates.— Mollusca. By James E. de
Kay. 4^:0, cloth, 53 coloured plates.
Part 2. Botany. Flora. ByJohnTorrey,M.D.,
F.L.S. 2 vols. 4to, cloth, 158 coloured plates.
Part 3. MiNKKALOGY. By Lewis C. Beck. 4to,
cloth, with above 500 figures and 10 plates.
Part 4. Geology. By W, W. Mather. Com-
prising the Geology of the First Geological
District. 4to. cloth, 146 plates, some coloured.
— Comprising the Survey of the Second Geo-
logical District. By Ebenezer Emmons, M.D.,
4to, cloth, 15 plates. — Comprising the Survey
of the Thii'd Geological District. By Lardner
Vanuxem. 4to, cloth, woodcuts. — Comprising
a Survey of the Fourth Geological District
By James Hall. 4to, cloth, with nearly 200
illustrations, maps, views, sections, &c.
Part 5. Agriculture. By Ebenezer Emmons
4to, cloth, 24 plates, maps, and views.
Part 6. Palaeontology. By James Hall. Vols.
1 and 2, 4to, cloth, upwards of 100 plates.
Newman. — Natural History of Man.
By J. B. Newman. 12mo, sewed, 2s. 6d.
Norton. — An Elementary Treatise on
Astroiiomy; in 4 parts. Containing % SySf,
tematic and Comprehensive Exposition of the.
Theory, and the more important Practical Pro-
blems, with Solar, Lunar, and other Astrononii-
cal Tables. Designed for Use as a Text-book in
Colleges and the higher Academies. By Wm.
A. Norton, A.M. Third edition, corrected,
improved, and enlarged, 8vo, 12s.
NoTT. -Chronology, Ancient and Scrip-
tural; being a Reply to an Article in the
Southern Presbyterian Review, reviewing his
Lectures on the Cennection between the Bib-
lical and Physical History of Man. By J. C.
Nott. 8vo. Charleston, 1850. 2s.
NoTT.-Two Lectures on the Connection
between the Biblical and Physical History of
Man. By J. C. Nott. 8vo, cmious map. New
York, 1849. 5s.
NoTT. — The Physical History of the
Jewish Race. By J. C. Nott. 8vo. New York,
1850. Is. 6d.
NuTTALL. — Manual of the Ornithology
of the United States and Canada, Land Birds •
Post 8vo, 16s.— Water Birds. Post 8vo, 16s
By Thomas NuttaU, F.L.S., &c. Boston, 1834
Olmsted. — Compendium of Astro-
nomy for Students in Academies. By D. Olm-
sted. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Olmsted. — Letters on Astronomy, ad-
dressed to a Lady: in which the Elements of
the Science are familiarly explained, in con-
nection with Literary History. By D. Olmsted,
A.M. Cr. 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Owen. — Report of a Greological Explo-
ration of part of Iowa, Wisconsin, and Illinois,
made under Instructions from the Secretary
of the Treasury of the United States, in the
Autumn of the year 1839. With Charts and
Illustrations. By David Dale Owen, M.D.
8vo, sewed, 53,
Owen. — Report of a Geological Survey
of Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, ^and inciden-
tally of the Nebraska Territory ; made under,
instructions from the United States' Treasury
Department. By Robert Dale Owen, United
States' Geologist. With 45 woodcuts, 3 geolo-
gical maps, 20 steel plates of organic remains,
and numerous plates of sections. 1 vol. royal
4to. £3.
Peirce. — Tables of the Moon. By
Prof. Benj. Peirce. 4to, sewed, 15s.
Peirce. — Examination of Drugs, ^Me-
dicines, Chemicals, &c., as to their Purity and
Adulteration. By C. H. Peirce, M.D. Crown
8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Pelouze and Eremy. — G-eneral No-
tions of Chemistry. By J. Pelouze and E.
Fremy. Translated from the French by Ed-
mund C. Evans, M.D, Pp. 446, cr. 8vo, cl. lOs,
3§
30
AMERICAN LITERATtTRE.
PlCKEBiNG.— The Eaces of Men and
their Distribution. By Charles Pickering,
M.D. 4to, coloured plates and map, cloth.
Boston, 1848.
PiCKERiNa.— The Geographical Dis-
tribution of Animuls and Man, By Charles
Pickering, M.D. Pp. 214, cl. Boston, 1854. 24s
Pkoceedin&s of the American Asso-
sociation for the Advancement of Science.
Fu-st to Sixth Meeting. 6 vols. Bvo, 18i7-51.
Proceedings of the American Philo-
sophical Society. 8vo. Philad. 1838.
I'koceedtngs of the Boston Society of
•Natural History. Vol. 1, 1841 to 1844. Vol. 2,
1845 to 1848. 2 vols. 8vo, cl. Boston. 30».
R avenel. — Fungi Caroliniani Exsic-
cati.— lungi of Carolina, illustrated by Nntu-
ral Specimens of the Species. By H. W.
Uavenel, Member of Amer. Assoc, for the
Advancement of Science. Ease. I and II, each
containing a century of Species, one-half of
which is peculiarly American. 4to, price
£1 10s. each fasc. '
Redeield. — Outlines of Comparative
Physiognomy ; or, ilesemblances between Men
and Animals. By F. W. Redficld, M.D. With
numerous illustrations. 8vo, 12s.
Eegis^ault.— Elements of Chemistry,
for the Use of Colleges, Academies, and Schools.
By M. V. Regnault. Illustrated bv nearly
700 woodcuts. Translated from the' French
by Thomas R. Betton, M.D., and edited, with
Kotes, by James C. Booth and William L.
Faber, Metallurgist and Mining Engineer.
2 vols. 8vo, bound, £1 16s.
Reports on the Fishes, Reptiles, and
Birds of Massachusets. Published agreeablv
to an order of the Legislature, by the Coni-
missioners on the Zoological and Botanical
Survey of the State. 8vo, pp. 442, and 4 plates.
Boston, 1839. 18s.
Rpschenberger.-A Lexicon of Tenns
used in Natural History j prepared for Schools,
Colleges, and Families. By W. S. W. Ilus-
chenberger, M.D. 12mo, half bound, 2s. 6d.
Say. — American Entomology ; or, De-
scriptions of Korth American Insects, with
Figures accurately coloured from Nature, 3
vols. 8vo, very scarce, £5 5&.
SEEMANN.-ihe Popular Nomenclature
of the American Flora. By Berthold Seemann.
8vo, 3s. 6d
SiEBOLD and Stannitts. — Comparative
Anatomy. By C. Th. v. Siebold and II. Stan-
nius. Translated from the German, and Edited,
with Notes and Additions, recording the recent
Progress of the Science, by Waldo J. Burnett,
M.D. Volume 1, containing Anatomv of the
Invertebrata. Royal 8vo, cloth, pp. 470. 16s.
Smithsonian Contributions to Know-
ledge. Vols. 1 to 5, with plates. Washington,
1848-53. £10.
Sprague. — The Genera of the Plants
of the United States, illustrated by Figures
and Analyses from Nature. By Isaac Spiague,
Member of the Boston Natural History So-
ciety. Superintended, and with Descriptions,
&c., by Asa Gray, M.D., Fisher Professor of
Natural History in Harvard University, Cor-
responding Member of the Royal Bavarian
Academy, Member of the Imperial Academy,
Naturae Curiosorura, of the Botanical Society
of Riitisbon, &c. 2 vols. 8vo, sew. £1. lis. 6d,
Stimpson. — Shells of New England.
A Revision of the Testaceous Molluska of New
England, with Notes on their Structure and
their Geographical and Bathymetrical Distri-
bution. 8vo, 2 plates. Boston, 1851. 8s. 6d.
Stockhardt, — The Principles of Che-
mistiy Illustrated by Simpi« Experiments,
By Dr. Julius Adolphus Stockhardt, Professor,
&c. Translated by C. II. Peirce, M.D. 8vo
pp, 682.
Stockhardt. — Chemical Field Lec-
tures for Agriculturists. By Dr. Julius Adol-
phus Siockhardt, Professor in the Royal Aca-
demy of Agriculture at Tharaud. Translated
from the German. Edited, with Notes, by
James E. Teschemacher. 12m(>, cloth. 4s. 6(1.
Torre Y and Gray. — Flora of North
America ; comprising an Account of all the
Indigenous and Naturalized Plants growing
North of Mexico. By John Torrey and Asa
Gray. In 3 vols. 8vo Vol. 1 is now ready, com-
prising Parts 1 to IV, £1. 10s. Also, Parts V
and VI, 7s. 6d. each. Part VII, 5s. New York,
1838-42.
This is the only authentic and complete
American Flora. The object of the work is to
give a scientific account of all the Indigen-
ous and Naturalized Plants of North Ame-
rica, at present known It is, we believe, the
most extensive local Flora that has ever been
undertaken. The latest Flora of this coun-
try, that of Pursh, was published forty
years ago, at which period extensive re-
gions, even within the United States pro-
per, had never been visited by the Botiiuist.
Since that time, the number of known
plants has vastly increa^-ed ; and the science
itself has made such rapid advancement,
that this M'ork will present the Botany of
this country in an entirely new aspect.
Transactions of the American Eth-
nological Society. Vols. 1 to 3, Part I. 8vo,
sewed, 37s.
Transactions of the American Aca-
demy of Arts and Sciences. 4 vols. 4to. Boston,
1780-1818.
Transactions of the American Geo-
logists' ajid Naturalists' Association. 8vo.
New York, 1840-1842.
Transactions of the American Philo-
sophical Society of Philadelphia. Philadel-
phia: 1771-1818, 6 vols. 4to.— New Series,
1818-1846, 9 vols. 4to.
Transactions of the American Philo-
sophical Society, held at Philadelphia, for
Promoting Useful Knowledge. Vol. 10, Parts
I, II, III, 4to, plates. Phil. 1847-53. £2. 2s.
Transactions of the Geological So-
ciety of Pennsylvania. 8vo. Phil. 1334-35.
Transactions of the Literary and Phi-
losophical Society of Quebec. 3 vols. 8vo.
Quebec, 1829- 1833.
Tuckerman. — A Synopsis of the Lich-
enes of New England, the other Northern
States, and British America. By Dr.E. Tucker-
man. 8vo, cloth, 5s.
TuoMEY and Holmes. — Fossils of the
Kiawah ; or, Palaeontology of South Carolina.
By M. Tuomey, Prolessor of Geology and
Mineralogy, University of Alabama \ and F. S.
PHILOSOPHY AND MATHEMATICS.
31
Holmes, Professor of Geology and Palaeonto-
logy, Collcire of Charleston. Will be published
in Numbers, 4to, Plates and Text, lOs, 6d. each.
Tyson. — Geology and Industrial Re-
sources of California. By Philip T. Tysou.
Maps. 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Van Amringe. — -An Investigation of
the Theories of the Natural History of Man.
By Lawrence, Pritchard, and others, founded
upon Animal Analogies, and an Outline of a
new History of Man, founded upon History,
Anatomy, Physiology, and Human Analogies,
By William b'. Van Amringe. 8vo. £1. Is.
Wakd. — New Lunar Tables, for Cor-
recting the Apparent Distance of the Moon from
the Sun, fixed Star or Planet, for the effects of
Reflexion, Refraction, and Parallax. Illustra-
ted by appropriate Rules and Examples, with
Plan, and easy Directions for taking a Lunar
Observation, and some useful Remarks on the
Sextant. By E.C. Ward, Prof. Math., &c., U.
S.N.S., Brooklyn, N.E. Royal 8vo, boards, 9s.
Whitney.— The Metallic Wealth of
the United States, Described and Compared
with that of other Countri s. By J.D.Whitney.
Bro, cloth, pp.510, 16s.
Wilson. — American Ornithology, bj
Wilson, with Notes, by Jardine ; to which is
added, aSynop.^is of American Birds; includ-
ing those described by Bonaparte, Audubon,
Nuttall, and Richardson. By J. M. Brewer.
With several hundred engravings. 8vo, bd. 153.
Wilson— 'American Ornithology. By
Alex. AVilson. 4 vols. 4to, with finely coloured
Plates from x\ature. Philadelphia. £13.
Wilson's American Ornitholog\ ; to
which is added, a Synopsis of American Birds,
including those described by Bonaparte, Au-
dubon, and Richardson. Illustrated with 3S
^ pages of Steel Plates, of nearly 400 Birds.
Crown 8vo, pp. 746. Boston, 1840. £2. 8s.
WoEHLEE. — -The Analytical Chemist's
Assistant ; a Manual of Chemical Analysis,
both Quantitative and Qualitative, or Natural
and Artificial Inorganic Compounds, to which
are appended the llules for Detecting Arsenic
in a Case of Poisoning. By Friedrich Woehier,
Professor of Chemistry in the University of
Goettingen. Translated from the Germah, with
an Introduction, Illustrative and Copious Ad-
ditions, by Oscar M. Lieber. 13mo, cl. 6s. 6d.
WyTHES.— The Microscopist ; or, a
Complete Manual on the Use of the Micro-
scope, for Physicians, Students, and all Lovers
of Natural Science; witli Illustrations. By
Rev. Jos. H. Wythes, M.D. New Edition, en-
larged and improved. 13m , cloth, 6s.
Wythes. — Curiosities of the Micro-
scope; or. Illustrations of the Minute Parts
of Creation, adapted to the Capacity of the
Young; with coloured Illustrations. By Rev.
Jos. H. Wythes, M.D 16mo,cl.gt. edges, 6s 6d.
YouMANS. — A Class- Book of Che-
mistry, in which tlie Principles of the Science
are Familiarly Explained and .Ipplied to the
Arts, Agriculture, Physiology, Dietetics, Ven-
tilation, and the most important Phenomena
of Nature. Designed for the Us..' of Academies
and Schools, and for Popular Lleadiug. By
Edward L. Yournans. 37 Engravings. 13mu,
half-bound, pp. 344, 5s.
V.
PHILOSOPHY & mathp:matics.
Alexander. — Oatlines of Moral Sci-
ence. By x\rclul)ald Alexander, D.D., late Pro-
fessor in the Theological College at Princeton,
N.J. 13mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Chafvenet. — Treatise on Plane and
Spherical Trigonometry. By William Chauve-
net, A.M. Third Edition. With numerous
woodcuts, 8vo, cloth, pp. 356, Ss.
Comte. — The Philosophy of Mathe-
matics. Translated from the " Cours de Phi-
losophic Positive " of Auguste Comte. By
W. M. Gillespie. 8vo, cloth. 7s.
Cousin. — Course of the History of
Modern Philosophy. By M. Victor Cousin,
Translated by D.W.Wight. 2 vols. 8vo,cl. 16s.
Cousin. — Elements of Psychology ;
included in a Critical Examination of Locke's
" Essay on the Human Understanding." By
Victor Cousin. Translated from the French,
with an Introduction and Notes, by C. S.
Henry, D.D., Professor of Philosophy in the
University of New York. 13mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
De Wette — Clarke. — Theodore ; or
the Sceptre s Conversion. History of the Cul-
ture of a Protestant Clergyman. Translated
from the German of De Wette. Bv J. F. Clarke.
[Specimens Foreign Literature, X and XI.]
3 vols, post 8vo. Boston, 1841. I6s.
De Wette— Osgood.— Human Life ;
or. Practical Ethics. From the German. By
Samuel Osgood. [Specimens Foreign Litera-
ture, XII and XIII.] 3 vols, post 8vo. Boston.
18i3. 16s.
Edwaeds. — An Inquiry into the Mo-
dern prevaihng Notions respecting that Free-
dom of Will, which is supposed to be essential
to Moral Agency, Virtue and Vice, Rewards
and Punishment, Praise and Blame. By Jona-
than Edwards, A.M. With an Index.* 13mo,
cloth, 53.
Henky. — Epitome of the History of
Philosophy. By C.S. Henry. 3 vols. 13mo, 8s.
HiCKOK. — Rational Psychology ; or,
the Subjective Idea and the Objective Law of
all Intelligence. By Laurens P. Ilickok, D.D ,
Union College. 8vo, cloth, 16s.
HiCKOK.— System of Moral Science.
By L. P. Ilickok. Royal 8vo, 10s. 6d.
HiCKOCK. — Empirical Psychology ; or,
the Human 3.1ind, as given ia Consciousness-
By Laurens P. Hickock, D.D., Union College.
8vo, cloth, pp. 413. Schenectady, 1854. 7s 6d .
32
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
JOTJFFEOY.-An Introduction to Etliics,
from the French of Jouffroy. By W. H. Chan-
ning. 2 vols. 8vo, 14s.
Mathematical Miscellany. — Con-
ducted hy C. Gill, Professor of Mathematics
in the Institute at Flushing, Long Island.
Published at the Institute. Nos. 1 to 8, pp. 572,
Svo, sewed. New York, 1836-9.
MrEDOCK.-Sketches of Modern Philo-
sophy. By Jas. Murdock. 18mo.
Newton. — The Mathematical Princi-
ples of Natural Philosophy. By Sir Isaac
Newton. Translated into English hy Andrew
Motte. To which is added Newton's " System
of the World ; " with a portrait taken from the
Bust, Observatory at Greenwich. First Ameri-
can Edition, carefully revised and corrected,
with a Life of the Author, by N. W. Chitten-
den, MA., &c. Svo, sheep, 21s.
Plato's Phsedo ; or, Immortality of
the Soul. Translated by C. S. Stanford. New
edit.,with"renelon's Life of Plato." Svo, 8s Gd.
Batjch. — Psychology ; or, a View of
the Human Soul: including Anthropology.
Adapted for the Use of Colle|!;es. By Rev.
Frederick A. Rauch, D.P., late President of
Marshall College, Penn. Fourth edition, revi-
sed and improved. 12mo, cloth.
Richards. — Lectures on Mental Phi-
losophy and Theology. By James Richards,
D.D., late Professor of Christian Theology in
the Theological Seminary at Auburn, New
York. With a Sketch of his Life, by Samuel
H. Gridley, Pastor of the Presbyterian Con-
gregation, Waterloo, New York. Svo, cloth.
BoBiNSON. — Religion of Manhood ;
.or. Age of Thought. By J. H. Robinson. Post
8\o, 58,
Sawyee. — Mental Philosophy; or, a
Practical Exposition of the Phenomena and
Powers of the Human Mind. Designed for the
Use of Colleges and High Schools. By Leices-
ter A. Sawyer. Pp. 432, 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Tappan. — A Review of Edwards's
" Inquiry into the Freedom of the Will,*' By
H. P. Tappan. 3 vols. 12mo, 18s.
Uniyerse (The) no Desert, the Earth
no Monopoly ; preceded by a Scientific Expo-
sition of the Unity of Plan in Creation. 2 vols,
in 1, pp. 384, cr. Svo, cloth Gs.
Upham. — A Philosophical and Prac-
tical Treatise on the Will. Forming the
Thii'd Volume of a System of Mental Philoso-
phy. By Thomas C. Upham, Professor of
Moral and Mental Philosophy in Bowdoin
College. 12mo, sheep, 7s
Watla]!?^d. — The Elements of Intellec-
tual Philosophy. By Francis Wayland. Pp. 432,
13mo, cloth. Boston. 8s. 6d.
Wayland. — Elements of Moral Sci-
ence. By Francis Wayland, D.D., President
of Brown University, a"nd Professor of Moral
Philosophy. 12mo, cl. 7s. 6d.
Wayland. — The Same, abridged, by
the Author, and adapted to the Use of Schools
and Academies. ISmo, half cloth, 3s. 6d.
Weayee. — Lectures on Mental Sci-
ence, according to Philosophy of Phrenology.
By G. S. AVeaver. Post 8vo, 3s. 6d.
WiNSLOW. — Cosmography ; or. Philo-
sophical Views of the Universe. By C. F.
Winslow, M.D. 18mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
YI.
EDUCATION.
1. Science of Education.
Baenard, Hon. Henry, Works.
History of the System of Coinnion Schools in
Connecticut, from 1G38 to 1838, with a His-
tory of Yale College from 1700 to 1800.
62 pp., 2s.
First Annual Report, as Secretary of tlie Board
of Commissioners of Common Schools in
Connecticut, submitted to the Legislature,
May, 1839. 62 pp., 2s.
Second ditto, 1840. 56 pp , 2s,
Third ditto, 1841. 40 pp., 2s.
Fourth ditto, 1842. 58 pp., 2s.
Legal Provision respecting the Education and
Employment of Children in Factories and
Manufacturing Establishments in England,
I'rance, Prussia, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
and Massachusetts, 1842. 84 pp., 4s.
Lsgislation respecting Common Schools in
Connecticut, from 1842 to 1850. 104 pp., 2s.
Fifth Annual Report of the Superintendent of
Common Schools in Connecticut, submitted
to the Legislature in May, 1850, 160 pp., 39.
Sixth ditto, 1851. 168 pp., 3s.
Seventh ditto, 1852. 52 pp., 2s.
Eighth ditto, 1853. 288 pp., 2s.
The Connecticut Common School Journal.
Second Series, commenced in 1849. Vols.
5, 6, 7, 8. 79- 6d. per volume.
Reports and Documents on the Con\nion
School System of Connecticut, from 1839 to
1842 (being Selections from the Connecticut
Common School Journal). 400 pp., 6s.
Report on the Public Schools of Rhode Island,
1845. 254 pp., 4s,
Documents relating to the Public Schools of
Rhode Island, 1818. 560 pp., 7s. 6d.
Documentary History of the Public Schools of
Providence, from 1800 to 1S49. 96 up., 3s.
Journal of the Rhode Island Institute of In-
struction, commenced in 1845 and discon-
tinued in 1819. 3 vols., bd. in sheep, £1 7s.
Triljute to Gallaudet, with a History of Deaf
EDUCATION.
33
Mute Instruction and Institutions inEurope
and tlie United States, and particularly of
the American Asylum at Hartford, 1853.
268 pp., 6s.
School District, Town and Village Libraries :
Hints for the Organization, and Manage-
ment, and Selection of Books for Popular
Libraries, 1854!. 150 pp., 6s.
Education in its Kelations to Health, Insanity,
Labour, Pauperism, and Crime. 16 pp., 6s.
per dozen copies.
Hints on Reading, being Selections from va-
rious Authors on the Selection and Right
Use of Books. 16 pp., 6s per dozen.
Reports on Education and Schools in Connec-
ticut, 1853. 463 pp., 6s.
Barnaed. — National Education in
Europe, being an Account of the Organization,
Administration, Instruction, and Statistics of
Public Schools of different Grades in the prin-
cipal States. By Henry Barnard, Lij.D.,
Superintendent of Common Schools in Con-
necticut. 890 pp., 8vo, cloth, 16s.
Bahnard. — IS ormal Schools, and other
Institutions, Agencies, and Means, designed
for the Professional Education of Teacliers.
By Henry Barnard, Superintendent of Com-
mon Schools iu Connecticut. Part I. United
States and British Provinces. Part 11. Europe.
8vo, sheep, 660 pp., 13s.
Barnaed. — Practical Illnstrations of
the Principles of School Architecture. By
Henry Barnard, Superintendent of Common
Schools in Connecticut. Second Edition. 8vo,
sewed, pp. 176, with 163 woodcuts, 3s. 6d.
Baenaed. — School Architecture; or,
Contributions to the Improvement of School
Houses in the United States. By Henry Bar-
nard, Superintendent of Common Schools in
Connecticut. 8vo, pp. 464, 300 woodcuts, 13s.
Baenaed. — Report on the Condition
and Improvement of the PubUc Schools of
Rhode Island, submitted Is'ov. 1, 1 845. By
H. Barnard, Commissioner of Public Schools.
8vo, sewed, pp. 355, 4s.
JoiJENAL of the Rhode Island Institute
of Instruction. Edited by Henry Barnard,
Commissioner of Public Schools, 1845 to 1848.
3 vols, 8vo, half-bound, £1. 7s.
Blackwell. — Laws of Life, as to Edu-
cation of Girls. By Dr. E. Blackwell. 13rao, 3s.
BuTLEE. — Incentives to Mental Cul-
ture among Teachers. By James Davie Butler.
13mo, sewed.
Catalogue of Approved School Pub-
lications; with a few of the many Testimo-
nials from Practical Teachers and Educators,
who have tested these works by Use in the
School Room, or given them a rigid Examina-
tion. 13mo, sewed.
Connecticut Common School Journal,
published under the direction of the Board of
Commissioners of Common Schools, from 1838
to 181-2. Vols. 1, 3, 3, 4. Edited by Henry
Barnard, Second Secretary of tne Board. 4to,
half bound, £1 4s.
Connecticut Common School Journal.
Second Series. Commenced 1 849. Vols. 5 to
8. 7s. 6d. per volume.
Davies. — The Logic and Utility of
Mathematics, with the best Method of In-
struction, explained and ilhistrated. By
Charles Davies^ LLU. 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Education. — Proceedings of the Ses-
sions of the American Association for the Ad-
vancement of Education. 8vo, sewed.
Educational Teacts. Nos. 1 to 7.
EowLEE. — Analysis of Dramatic and
Oratorical Expression. By J. A. Fowler. Pest
8vo, 5s.
Johnson. — Memoria Technica ; or,
the Art of abbreviating those Studies which
give the greatest Labour to the Memory ; in-
cluding Numbers in Historical Dates, Geo-
graphy, Astronomy, Gravities, &c. ; also Rules
for Memorizing Technicalities, Nomenclatures,
Proper Names, Prose, Poetry, &c.,to which is
added a Perpetual Almanac for Two Thousand
Years of Past Time and Time to Come. Adap-
ted to Use of Schools. By Lorenzo D. John-
son. Third edition, revised and improved.
8vo, boards, 3s. 6d.
KiNGSBUEY. — Lecture on Failures in
Teaching, delivered before the American In-
stitute of Instruction, at Bangor, Maine,
August, 18 18. By John Kingsbury, Providence
R. I. 13mo, sewed.
LiEBEE. — Constitution and Plan of
Education for Girard College for Orphans.
By Francis Lieber. Pliilad. 1834. 8vo, os.
Lowell. — Thoughts on tlie Education
of Girls. By Mrs. A. C. LoweU. 13mo, Is. 6d.
MACQUEEN.*-The Orator's Touchstone ;
Eloquence Simplified : embracing a Compre-
hensive System of Instruction "for the Im-
provement of the Voice, and for Advancement
m the General Art of Public Speaking. By
Hugh Macqueen. 13mo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
Mann. — A Lecture on Education. By
Horace Mann, Secretary of the Massaclmsett's
Board of Education. 13mo, sewed.
Mansfield. — American Education,
its Principles and Elements. Dedicated to the
Teachers of the United States. By Edward
D. Mansfield. 13mo, cloth,- 7s.
Manual of the System of Discipline
and Instruction for the Schools of the Public
School Societv of New York, instituted in the
Year 1805. 134 pp., 8vo, half bound, 3s.
Massachusett's System of Common
Schools •, being an enlarged and revised edition
of the Tenth Annual Report of the First Se-
cretary of the Massachusett's Board of Edu-
cation. 8vo, sewed, 7s.
New York Teacher. Published
Monthly, under the Direction of the New
York State Teachers' Association. Vol. 1 in
la Nos., 8s
NoETHEND. — Teacher and the Parent;
a Treatise upon Common School Education.
Containing Practical Suggestions to Teachers
and Parents. By Charles Northend, A.M,
Fourtli edition. 8vo, cloth, 5s.
NoETHEND. — Obstacles to the Greater
Success of Common Schools. An Address de-
livered before the American Institute of In-
struction, at Portland, Me., August 30, 1844.
By Charles Northend, Principal of the Aborn
Street School, Salem. 12mo, sewed.
Page. — Tlieory and Practice of Teach-
ing; or, the Motives and Methods of Good
School-Keeping. By David P. Page, A.M.,
34
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
late Principal of the State Normal School,
Albany, New York. Fifteenth edition. 12mo,
cloth, 7s.
Potter. — The Scliool and School-
master. A manual for the use of teachers,
employers, trustees, inspectors, &c., of com-
mon schools. Parti. By Alonzo Potter, D.U.
of New York. Part II. By George B. Emer-
son, A.M., of Massachasetts. 550 pp. 12mo,
half cloth. 7s.
8000 copies of this work were presented
by one benevolent farmer of the State of
New York to the Schools of that State.
Rais^dall. — The Common School Sys-
tem of the State of New York, with a Histo-
rical Sketch of the Origin, Pi-ogress, and
Present Outline of the System. By S. S. Ran-
dall. 8vo, 7s. Cd.
Eeport. — Fifteenth Annual Report of
the Board of Education, together with the
Eifteenth Annual Report of the Secretary of
of the Board. Bvo, sewed.
Report on the System of Popular
Education in the City of New York ; presented
to the Board of Education, May 28, 1851.
8vo, sewed.
Report of the Superintendant of Com-
mon Schools, of Connecticiit, to the General
Assembly, May Session, 1817- 8vo, sewed.
Report. — First Annual Report of the
Superintendant of Common Schools of Con-
necticut, to the General Assembly, May Ses-
sion, 1816.
Report.— Third ditto, May, 1848.
Report.— Fourth ditto, May, 1849.
Report on tlie Condition and Improve-
ment of the Public Schools of Rhode Island,
January, 1853. By Elisha R. Potter. 8vo, sd.
Report of t^ie Commissioners of Pub-
lic Schools of the State of Rhode Tslnnd ; made
at the January Session of the General Assem-
bly, 1853. 8vo, sewed.
Report upon Public Schools and Edu-
cation in the State of Rhode Island; made to
the Legislature, Jan., 1854. 143 pp., 8vo, sd.
Rush. — The Philosophy of the Human
Voice: embracing its Physiological History;
together with a System of Principles by which
Criticism in the Art of Elocution may be ren-
dered intelligible, and Instruction delinite and
comprehensive, to wliich is added a Brief
Analysis of Song and Recitative. By James
Rush, M.D. 3d edit, enlarged. 8vo,shp. £1 Is.
School Laws of Rhode Island.—
Acts relating to the Pubhc Schools of Rhode
Island, with Remarks and Eorms. 8vo, sd. _
Siljestrom. — The Educational Insti-
tutions of the United States ; their character
and organization. Translated from the Swe-
dish of P. A. Siljestrom, M.A., by Frederica
Rowan. Post 8vo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Stowe. — The Religious Element in
Education. An Address delivered before the
American Institute of Instruction, at Portland,
Me., Aug. 30, 1844. By Calvin E. Stowe, D.D.,
Professor of Bibhcal Literature. 13mo, sd.
Sunday School (The) Its Influence
and Advantages. 18mo, 2s. 6d.
Tappan. — University Education. By
Henry Tappan, D.D. Post 8vo, cloth, 4s.
2. College and School Books.
^schines. — The Oration of .^schines
against Ctesiphon, in Greek. With Notes by
J. T. Champhn. Ecap. 8vo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
tEschylus. — The Agamemnon of iEs-
chylus. Translated from the Greek by "Wil-
liam Peter, A.M., of Christ Church, Oxford.
13mo, cloth, 4s.
Anthon, Dr. Charles, Works and Edi-
tions of Classics, 12mo, bound.
The Anabasis of Xenophon, with English
Notes, critical and explanatory. A Map,
arranged according to the latest and bett
authorities, and a Plan of the Battle of
Cunaza. 6s.
A System of Ancient and Medi8e\'al Geogra^
phy, for the Use of Schools and Colleges,
Bvo, 7s,
De Senectute, de Amicitia, and Paradoxa of
Cicero, and the Life of Atticus, by Cornelius
Kepos ; with critical and explanatory Notes.
4s. 6d.
Cicero's Tusculan Disputations, with English
Notes, critical and explanatory. 5s.
Cicero's Select Orations, with English Notes,
critical and explanatory, and Historical,
Geographical, and Legal Indexes, An im-
proved edition, with portrait, 5s. 6d.
A Manual of Grecian Antiquities, from the
best and most recent sources. 12mo, bd., 5s.
New Greek Grammar, from the German of
Kuhner, Matthias, Bullmaun, Ross, and
Thiersch ; to which are appended Remarks
on Pronunciation, and Chronological Tables. ]
4s. 6d. '
First Greek Lessons. 4s 6d,
Grammar of the Greek Language, for the Use
of Schools and Colleges, 4s. Gd.
Introduction to Greek Prose Composition,
with a complete Course of Exercises, iUus- \
trative of all the important principles of '''
Greek Syntax. 4s. 6d, ;
Greek Reader ; selected principally from the
work of Frederic Jacobs, with critical and
explanatory Notes, and a Metrical Index to
Homer and Anacreon, and a copious Lexi-
con. 5s.
The Works of Horace, with English and ex-
planatory Notes; with a Life. 5s, 6d,
An Introduction to Latin Prose Composition,
with a complete Course of Exercises, illus-
trative of all the important principles of
Latin Syntax. 4s.
Key to Latin Prose Composition. 12mo, bd. 3s.
System of Latin Versification, in a Series of
Progressive Exercises. 12mo, bound, 4s.
Key to Latin Versification, 12mo, bound, 3s. s
System of Latin Prosody and Metre. 12mo, i
bound, 4s. *
A Manual of Roman Antiquities, with a De-
scription of the City of Rome. I2mo, bd. 6s. .
Sallust's Jugui thine War and Conspiracy of
Catiline. With portrait, 12mo, bound, 4s.
Eclogues and Georgics of Virgil. 12mo,
bound, 6s. 6d.
The JEneid of Virgil, with English Notes, cri-
tical and explanatory. 12mo, bound, 6s. 6d.
Xenophon' s Memorabilia, 12mo, bd., 5s. 6d.
Aeistophanes, Aves, Greek, with
Notes. By C. Felton. Post 8vo, 5s,
Aristophanes, Nubes, Grreek, with
Notes. By C. Felton. Post 8vo, 5s.
EDUCATION.
35
BAEElNaTOi^. — A Treatise of Physical
Geography, comprising Hydrology, Geognosy,
Geology, Metereology, Botany, Zoology, and
Anthropology. By A. Barrington. Edited by
Charles Burdett. 12mo, cloth.
Beown. — First Lines of English Gram-
mar. By Goold Brown, 13mo, 2s.
Beown. — Institutes of Enghsh Grram-
mar. By Goold Brown. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Beown. — The Grammar of English
Grammars; with an Introduction, Historical
and Critical: the whole methodically arranged
and amply illustrated; with Forms of Correc-
ting and of Parsing, Improprieties for Correc-
tion, Examples for Parsing, Questions for Ex-
amination, Exercises for Writing, Observations
for the Advanced Student, Decisions and
Proofs for the Settlement of Disputed Points,
Occasional Strictures and Defences, and Ex-
hibition of the several Methods of Analysis,
and a Key to the Oral Exercises : to which
ai*e added Four Appendixes, pertaining sepa-
rately to the Four Parts of Grammar, &c.
By Goold Brown. Ivol.Svo, pp. 1028, cl, £1 Is.
Btjeleigh. — The Thinker, a Moral
Reader; Selections from the Gems of Lan-
guage. By J, B. Burleigh. 12mo, Is. Cd.
Callicot. — Handbook of Universal
Geography. By T. C. Callicot. 8vo, 14s.
CiCEEO's Tusculan Disputations, with
Notes by Anthon, Post 8vo, 4s. 6d.
CoYELL. — Digest of English Grammar.
By L. T. Covell Post 8vo, 4s. 6d.
Day. — Elements of the Art of Rhetoric.
By H. N. Day. 2d edit., post 8v-o, 4s. 6d.
Deapee. — Text-Book on Natural Phi-
losophy, for the Use of Schools and Colleges.
By John William Draper, With 400 illustra-
tions. 12rao, 5s.
Deapee. — Text-Book on Chemistry,
for the Use of Schools and Colleges. By John
William Draper. 300 illustrations. 12mo, 5s.
D WIGHT. — Grecian and Eoman My-
thology. By M. A, Dwight. An Introduction,
by Taylor Lewis. With a Series of illustrative
outhnes. 8vo, cloth. 14s.
EMEESON.-The North American Arith-
metic. Part First. For Young Learners. By
Frederick Emerson, late Principal in the De-
partment of Arithmetic, Boylston School, Bos-
ton. 12mo, boards, 8d.
EMEESON.-The North American Arith-
metic. Part Second. Uniting oral and written
Exercises, in Corresponding Chapters. By
Emerson, late Principal in the Depai-tmeiit of
Arithmetic, Boylston School, Boston. ]2mo,
boards, 2s.
EMEESON.-Tlie North American Arith-
metic. Part Third. For advanced Scholars. By
Frederick Emerson, late Principal in the De-
partment of Arithmetic, Boylston School, Bos-
ton. 12mo, sheep, 4s. 6d,
EscHENBUEG and EiSKE. — Manual of
Classical Literature, From the German of J. J.
Eschenburg, Pruiessor in the Carolinum at
Brunswick. With Additions, by N. W, Fiske,
Professor in Amherst College. Fourth Edition.
Royal 8vo, pp.753. Philadelphia, 1851. 18s.
"We know of no ^ ork which can be com-
pared with it in the amount and value of the
classical information it communicates
This edition is enriched by most valuable
original matter." — Biblical Repository.
Eelton. — Selections from the Greek
Historians. By C. C. Felton. Post 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Haeeison. — Exposition of the Laws of
Latin Grammar. By Dr. G. Hamson. Post
8vo, 5s. 6d.
Homee. — The Iliad of Homer ; accord-
ing to the Text of Wolf, with Notes, for tlie
Use of Schools and Colleges. By John J. Owen,
D. D. Crown 8vo, cloth, 9s.
Kendeick. — Greek Ollendorff; being
a progressive Exhibition of the Principles of
the Greek Grammar, designed for Beginners
in Greek, and as a Book of Exercises for Aca-
demies and Colleges. By A. C, Kendrick, Pro-
fessor of the Greek Language and Literature
in the University of Rochester. One volume,
12mo, bound, 6s,
KiEKHAM. — English Grammar, in Fa-
miliar Lectures, accompanied by a Compen-
dium, embracing a new Systematic order of
Parsing, a new System of Punctuation, Exer-
cises in false Syntax, and a System of Philo-
sophical Grammar, in Notes ; to which are
added, an Appendix, and a Key to the Exer-
cises. Designed for the Use of Schools and
Private Learners. By Samuel Kirkham.
Stereotype Edition. 12mo, bound, 3s. 6d.
KiiuNEE. — An Elementary Grammar
of the Greek Language ; containing a Series
of Greek and English Exercises for Transla-
tion, with the requisite Vocabularies, and an
Appendix on the Homeric Verse and Dialect.
From the German of Kiihner. By Samuel H.
Taylor, Post 8vo, cloth, Os.
KiiHNEE.-Grammar of the Greek Lan-
guage, for the Use of High Schools and Col-
leges. By Dr. Raphael kiihner. Translated
from the German, by B. B. Edwards and S. H.
Taylor. New Edition. Cr. 8vo, hf. bd, 10s. 6d.
Lee. — Human Physiology, for the Use
ot Elementary Schools. By C.A.Lee. 12mo.
4s. Gd,
LooMis.-Table of Logarithms of Num-
bers and of Sines and Tangents for every Ten
Seconds of the Quadrant, &c, Bv Elias Loomis
A. M. 8vo, 5s. Gd,
LooMis.-Elements of Plain and Spheri-
cal Trigonometry ; with their Applications to
Mensuration, Surveying, and 'Navigation. By
Elias Loomis, A.M. 8vo, 6s,
Loomis. — Elements of Geometry and
Conic Sections. By Elias Loomis. 12mo, 5s. Gd.
Loomis. — Elements of Analytical Geo-
metry, and of the Differential and Integral
Calculus. By Elias Loomis, A.M. 8vo, 7s.
Loomis. — Algebra, a Treatise on. By
Elias Loomis, 12mo, 7s.
M'Clintock and Ceooks. — A First
Book in Latin, containing Grammar, Exercises,
and Vocabularies, on the Method of constant
imitation and repetition. By John M'Clintock
and George Crooks. Seventh Edition. 12nio,
bound, 4s, Gd.
M'Intiee. — Astronomy, and the Use
of the Globes, in Two Parts. Designed for the
Use of Schools. By James M'Intire, M.D.,
Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy in
the Centra' High School of Baltimore, 1 2mo,
cloth, 4s. 6d,
36
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Mtjlltgan. — Exposition of the Grram-
matical Structure of the Englisli Language ;
being an Attempt to furnisli an improved
Method of Teaching Grammar. ¥or the Use
of Schools and Colleges. By John Mulligan,
A.M. 8vo, half bound, 3s.
MuNK. — Qreek and Roman Metres, a
Manual for Schools and private Study. Trans-
lated from the German of Edward Munk, by
Charles Beck and C. C. i'elton. l-2n\o, bds. 6s,
Owen. — A Greek Koader ; containing
Selections from various Authors, adapted to
Sophocles' and Kuhners' Grammars; with
Notes and a Lexicon. For the Use of Schools
and Academies. By John J. Owen, J). D.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 7s.
OwEN^. — The Anabasis of Xenophon ;
chiefly according to the Text of L. Dindorf ;
with Notes. ¥or the Use of Schools and Col-
leges. By John J. Owen, D.U. Eleventh Edi-
tion. 12mo, hf. bd. 9s.
Owen. — The History of the Pelopo-
nessianWar, by Thucydides; according to the
Text of L. Dindorf ; with iSotes. For the Use
of Colleges. By John J. Owen, D.D 12mo,
half bound, 12s.
Owen. — The Ihad of Homer ; accord-
ing to the Text of Wolf; with Notes. For the
Use of Schools and College^. By John J. Owen,
D.D- 12mo, half bound, 9s.
Owen. — The Odyssey of Homer ; ac-
cording to the Text of Wolf; with Notes. For
the Use of Schools and Colleges. By John J.
Owen. D.D. 12mo, hf. bd. 9s.
Pakkee. — Progressive Exercises in
Enghsh Composition. By R. G. Parker, A.M.,
Principal of the Franklin Grammar School,
Boston. 12mo, boards, 2s. 6d.
Parker. — Aids to Enghsh Composi-
tion. Prepared for the Use of Students of all
grades. By Richard Green Parker, A M. 12nio,
cloth, 5s.
Peirce. — An Elementary Treatise on
Sound. Being the Second Volume of a Course
of Natural Philosophy. Designed for the Use
ot High Schools and Colleges. By Benjamin
Peirce, A.M. 8vo, cloth, lUs.
Peterson. — Famihar Science ; or, Ex-
planation of Common Things. By R. E. Peter-
son. 12mo, 5s. 6d,
Quackenbos on Enghsh Composition.
12mo, bound, 3s.
Russell. — University Speaker, for
College Exercise in Declamation and Recita-
tion. By W. Russell. 8vo, 8s.
Sears. — Essays on Ancient Literature
and Art, with the Biography and Correspond-
ence of eminent Philologists. By Barnas Sears,
President of Newton Theological Institution;
B.B.Edwards, Professor in Andover Theolo-
gical Seminary ; and C. C. Felton, Professor of
Harvard University. 2nd 1000. 12mo, cl, s6.
Sophocles' Antigone, with Notes. For
the Use of Colleges in the United States. By
Theodore D.Wolsey, President of Yale College.
New Edition, revis'ed. 12mo, cloth, 4s
Sophocles' Ajax, with Notes. By J. B.
Gray, Oxford. Post 8vo, 4s. 6d.
Sophocles. — A Greek Grammar. For
the Use of Schools and Colleges. By E. A,
Sophocles, -A-.M. A New Edition. 12mo, sp. 7s.
Yandenhoef. — Art of Elocution, from
the simple Articulation of the Elemental Sounds
of Language, up to the highest Tone of Expr(;s-
sion in Speech attained by the Hiinian Voice.
By George Vaudeuhoff, Professor of Elocution.
12mo, cloth, 4s. fid."
YiRGiLius, with Enghsh Notes. By
F. Bowen. 8vo, 15s.
3. Juvenile Books.
Abbott, Jacob, Histories for Youth.
In cloth, with illuminated titles, plates, maps,
&c. 12 vols. 3s. fid. per volume.
Abbott's (J.) Franconian Series. Il-
lustrated bv engravings. Vol. I. Malleville —
Vol. 2. Wa'llace-Vol. 3. Mary Bell— Vol. 4.
Mary Erskiue — Vol. 5. Beechnut. 8vo, cloth,
3s. each.
Abbott's (J.) Jonas' Stories. 1. Jonas'
Stories— 2. Jonas on a Farm; Summer—
3. Jonas on a Farm; Winter — 4. Jonas a
Judge. With illustiations,18mo, cloth, 3s. each.
Abbott's (J.) Marco Paul's Yoyages
and Travels. 1. Forests of Maine — 2. Adven-
tures in New York — 3. Adventures in Vermont
— 4. Erie Canal. AVith illustrations, foolscap
Bvo, cloth, 3s. each.
Abbott's (J.) Young Christian Seri* s.
Illustrations, 8vo, clotn. Vol. 1. The Young
Christian— Vol. 2. The W^ay to do Good—
Vol. 3. The Corner Stone, os. each.
Abbott's Lucy Books. Lucy at Study.
Lucy's Stories. On the Mountains. 12nio,
2s. each.
Aethuh. — Little One's Library. By
T. S. Arthur. 12 vols., i8nio,cloth, with many
engravings, in a case, 18s.
Arthur. — True Riches ; a Tale. By
T. S. Arthur. 12mo, 3s. fid.
Aethub. — string of Pearls for Boys
and Gills. By T. S. Arthur. 12mo, 4s. fid.
Banvakd. — The American Statesman ;
or. Illustrations of the Life and Character hi
Daniel Webster. Designed for American Yoiilli.
By Rev. Joseph Banvaid. 12mo, 5s.
Carl Krin ken. -His Christmas Stock-
ing. By Author of the " Wide, Wide World."
l2mo, 5s.
Cart. — Clovernook Children. By Alice
Cary. With Engrav^ings by Baker, from De-
signs by Barry. 12mo, cloth, pp. 292, 5s.
GiLMAN. — Oracles for Youth, a Home
Pastime. By Car. Gilman. Post 8vo, 3s. fid,
GrOULDiNa. — Robert and Harold ; or,
the Young Maroonors on the Florida Coast.
By F. R. Goulding. ]8mo, 5s. fid.
CrRACE GrREENWOOD. — History of my
Pets; By Grace Greenwood (Sarah T. Clarkej.
1 vol. 12mo, 3s.
GrRACE GrREENWOOD. — RcCollectionS of
mv Childliood. By Grace Greenwood (Sarah
T.' Clarke).. 1 vol. 12mo, 3s.
HoEEMANN. — Nutcracker and Mouse-
King. By Fr. Hoffmann. Translated by ]\Irs.
Simon. Ifimo. 3s.
Hawthorne. — A Wonder-Book for
Girls and Boys. By Nathaniel Hawthorne.
W^ith 7 tine engravings. Ifimo, 3s.
EDUCATION.
37
.IlAWTnoRKE. — Tanglevvood Tales; an-
other "Wonder-Book." By iN'atlianiel Haw-
tliorne. AVith Engravings, 63.
Linden. — CMldren's Trials ; or, tlie
i. it tie Eope-dancers, and other Tales. Trans-
lated from the German of Auguste Linden,
]»v Trauer-Mantel. Pp. 238, 12mo, cloth.
Is. Gd.
Little Ferns for Fanny's Little
iricnds. 12mo, 4s.
MclxTOSH. — Juvenile Tales for All
Seasons. By Maria J. Mcintosh. 12mo,
cloth, 2s. 6d.
McIntosh. — Praise and Principle. By
I^Iaria J. Mcintosh. 12mo, cloth, 2s.
McTntosh. — Evening at Donaldson
jManor. By Maria J. Mcintosh. 12mo,
cloth, 2s.
U!cIntosh. — Conquest and Self-Con-
quest. By Maria J. Mcintosh. 12mo, cl. 2s.
IkfANNEES. — Pleasure and Profit ; or,
Lessons on the Lord's Prayer ; in a Series of
J[ Stories. By Mrs. Manners. Crown 8voJ
cloth, pp. 136, 33.
May. — Sunshine of Greystone ; a Story
for Girls. By E. J. May. Post 8vo, 4s. 6d.
M[y Play is Study ; a Book for Chil-
dren, Translated from the German, by L.
Lermont, Post 8vo, Ss.
JTewcomb. — Young Lady's Guide to
the Harmonic Development of Christian
Character. By Harvey Newcomb. Post
8vo, 6s. 6d.
i^rTCRACKEES AND SuaARDOLLY ; a
Tale. Translated from the German, by C.
A. Dana. 16mo, 2s. Gd.
Parley. — A Winter Wreath of Sum-
rxier Flowers. By Peter Parley (S. G-. Good-
rich). With 12 Chromo-lithographic Illus-
trations, by Champagne. Svo, cloth, 123.
AELEY. — Adventures of Dick Boldero.
By Peter Parley (S. G. Goodrich). 18mo,
2s. 6d.
Parley. — Cheerful Cherry. By Peter
Parley (S. G. Goodrich). 18mo, 2s. 6d.
PART.rrr. — Tales about America and
Australia. By Peter Parley (S. G. Good-
rich). 16mo, 2s. 6d.
Parley. — Tales about England, Ire-
land, and Scotland. By Peter Parley (S. G.
Goodrich), 16mo, 7s. 6d.
Pet Bird (The), and other Stories. By
Cousin Alice. Square Svo, 3s.
Roberts. — My Childhood,* or, the
Good Grandmother. By Sarah Koberts.
18mo, 2s,
3chlimpert. — The Wind-Spirit and
the Rain-Goddess, Translated from the
German of M. Schlimpert, by Trauer-Man-
tel. With Woodcuts, designed by G. Sen-
guin. Square 12mo, pp. 138, cloth, 38. 6d.
ScHTTBERT. — Mirror of Nature ; a Book
of Instruction and Entertainment. Trans-
lated from the German of G. H. Schubert.
12mo, cloth, OS.
Sedgwick. — Poor Eich Man, and Eick
Poor Man. By Miss C. M. Sedgwick. 18mo,
3s.
Sedgwick. — The Linwoods. By Miss
C. M. Sedgwick. 2 vols. Svo, 93,
Sedgwick. — Hope Leslie. By Miss
C. M. Sedgwick. 2 vols. Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
SiMONDS. — Clinton ; a Book for Boys.
By W^illiam Simonds, Author of " Boys*
Own Guide," i&c. With Illustrations. 12mo,
cloth, pp. 276, 33.
Simple Hans, and other Pleasing
Stories. 4to, 2s. 6d.
Slovenly Kate ; Stories and Pictures
from the German of Hosemann. 4to, 2s. 6d.
Slovenly Peter ; Stories and Pictures
from the German. 4to, 23. 6d.
Songs for the Little Ones at
Home. 18mo, 3s.
Stoddard. — Adventures in Fairy Land.
By E. H. Stoddard. 12mo, 53.
Stories and Poems, first published in
the "Child's Friend." Edited by Mrs.
FoUen. 3 vols, post Svo, 15s.
Studley. — What do I Want Most ? a
story for Children of the Church. By Mrs.
Studley. Post Svo, 3s.
Siis. — Cockel and Scratchfoot ; or, His-
tory of Two Little Chickens ; a Tale. By G,
Siis. Small 4to, 6s.
Toliver.— Our Folks at Home; or.
Life at the Old Manor House. By Edward
Toliver. Illustrated by Engravings. 12mo,
cloth, 5s.
Treasures in Song and Story, from
Aunt Mary's Portfolio. 12mo, 5s.
TuTHiLL.— Queer Bonnets ; or, Truth-
fulness and Generosity; a Book for Girls.
By Mrs. L. C. Tuthill. 12mo, cloth, 4s.
TiJTHiLL. — Braggadocio ; a Book for
Boys and Girls. By Mrs. L. C. TuthilL
With 6 Tinted Illustrations. 1 vol. 16mo,
cloth, 4s.
Uncle Sam's Library, for Little Boys
and Girls. 6 vols. 16mo, 18s.
YiNCENT.— The Pretty Plate. By J.
Vincent. Illustrations. 12mo, 4s.
Weaver. — Hopes and Helps for Young
of both Sexes. By G. F. Weaver. Post
Svo, 4s. 6d.
Winter Evening Story Book. By
Uncle Tom. 16mo, 53.
Young Americans Abroad ; or, Va-
cations in Europe. ISmo, cloth, 53.
Zoological G-arden: Hlustrations of
Animated Nature. 4to, 153.
k
38
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
VII.
PHILOLOGY, LINGUISTICS,
ANTIQUITIES.
AMERICAN INDIAN LANGUAGES.
Dayis (Rey. Solomon). — A Prayer
Book in the Language of the six Nations of
Indians, containing the Morning and Even-
ing Service, the Litany, Catechism, some of
the Collects, and the Prayers and Thanks-
givings, upon several Occasions, in the Book
of Common Prayer of the Protestant Epis-
copal Church ; together with Forms of Fa-
mily and Private Devotion. By Rev. Solo-
mon Davis. 8vo, cloth, 5s. Nevr York, 1837.
DlJPONCEAiT. — Eeport on the Languages
of the American Indians, made to the
American Philosophical Society, Svo. Phi-
ladelphia.
Gallatin. — Indian Yocabiilary. By
Albert Gallatin. Svo. Thiladelphia.
PiCKEEiNa. — Essay on a Uniform Or-
thography for the Indian Languages of
North America. By J. Pickering. 4ito.
Cambridge, 1829.
PiCKERiNa. — Eemarks on the Indian
Languages of North America. By J. Pick-
ering. Svo. Philadelphia, 1836.
Aeatjcanian. — An Essay on the Araii-
canian or Chilian Language. By Abbe Don
I. Ignatius Molina. Svo, 9s.
Aerawack. — The Acts of the Apostles.
Translated into the Arrawack Tongue, by
the Rev. Theodore Schultz, in 1802. 12mo,
cloth, Is. 6d.
AzTEK. — Tiber die aztekischen Ortsna-
men. Erste Abtheilung. Von Joh. Carl.
Edw. Buschmann. 2 vols. 4to, sewed, 63.
Berlin, 1853—1854.
Caraib. — Yocabulaire Caraibe. His-
toireNatureUedes lies Antilles. 4to, 16s. 6d.
Rotterdam, 1658.
Choctaw. — The Kew Testament of our
Lord and Saviour. Translated into the
Choctaw Language. 12mo, sheep, 4s.
Choctaw. — An English and Choctaw
Definer for the Choctaw Academies and
Schools. By Cyrus Byington, 18mo, half-
bound, 5s.
Ceee. — Grammar of the Cree Lan-
guage. By T. Howse. Svo, 93, 6d.
Dakota. — G-rammar and Dictionary of
the Dakota Language. Collected by the
Members of the Dakota Mission. Edited by
Rev. S. R. Riggs, A.M. 1 vol. 4to, cloth,
£1 16s.
Dakota. — Grammar of the Dakota
Language. 4to, sewed, 3s. 6d.
Dakota. — Atwater, C. Eudiments of
the Sioux (Dacota) Grammar. In Atwater's
Remarks made on a Tour to Prairie du
Chien. Pp. 24, Ss. Columbus, 1831.
AMEniCAif Indian LANGrAGES— cowfmMei»
Delawaee. — The Three Epistles of the
Apostle John. Translated into Delaware-
Indian, by C. F. Dencke. 18mo, sewed, Is.
Kechua. — Tschudi, J. J. von. Die
Kechua-Sprache. 3 parts in 2 vols. Parts
I. and II., Sprachlehre and Sprachproben;
Part III., Worterbuch, Svo, sewed, 18s»
Vienna, 1853.
Mohawk. — The Book of the Prophe-
cies of Isaiah. Translated into Mohawk-
Indian. 18mo, bound, 2s. 6d.
MoxA. — A-rte de la Lengna Moxa, con
su Vocabulario, y Catechismo. Compuesto
por el Padre Pedro Marban. Svo. Printed
at Lima, in 1701. Very scarce. j6'4.
Ojibwa. — The New Testament of our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Translated
into Ojibwa-Indian. 12mo, sheep, 43.
Ojibwa. — A Yocabulary of the Chip-
peway Language ; also, a List of Words in
the Iroquois, Mohegan, Shawanee, and
Esquimaux Ton^iueg. By J. Long. 4to,
bound, 10s. 6d.
OiiEao^^^. — ^Yocabulary of the Jargon
or Trade Langu^age of Oregon. Svo, pp.
22, Is. Washington.
Andrews. — A Grrammar of the Hawaian
Language. By Judge Andrews. Svo. Hono-
lulu, 1854.
Andrews. — Discoveries in Chinese ; or,
the Symbolism of the Primitive Characters
of the Chinese System of Writing, as a Con-
tribution to Philology and Ethnology, and a
Practical Aid in the Acquisition of the
Chinese Language. By Stephen Pearl
Andrews. Pp. 133, crown Svo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Baetlett. — Dictionary of Ameri-
canisms. A Glossary of Words and Phrases
colloquially used in the United States. By
J. E. Bartlett. Svo, cloth, 73. 6d. New
York, 1848.
Barnard. — A Polyglot Grammar of
the Hebrew, Chaldee,'syriac, Greek, Latin,
English, French, ItaHan, Spanish, and
German Languages. By Samuel Barnard.
Svo. Philadelphia, 1825.
Bttrmese Bible. — The Bible. Trans-
lated into the Burmese Language. By A.
Judson. 5 vols. Svo, £2 12s. Moulmein,
1835—1837.
De Sacy — FosDiCE. — Principles of
General Grammar ; an Introduction to the
Study of Languages. By A J. De Sacy,
Member of the Institute, &c. Translated by
D. Eosdick. Second Edition. 12mo, 4s.
Andover, 1837.
PHILOLOGY, LINGUISTICS, ANTIQUITIES.
39
DiJPONCEAU. — Dissertation on the
Kature and Character of the Chinese System
of Writing. With a Vocabulary, &c. By
P, S. Duponceau, LL.D., President of the
: American Philosophical Society, &e. Pub-
lished by the Society. Svo, pp. 407, 16s.
Philadelphia, 1838.
" One of the most remarkable publications
of the present day. The able author — the
veteran philologist of America, &c. — Noeth
I; American Keview.
<i Peeund. — Latin-English Lexicon, Co-
pious and Critical, founded on the larger
German-Latin Lexicon of Dr. William
Preund ; with Additions and Corrections
from the Lexicons of Gesner, Facciolati,
Scheller, Georges, ^c. Py E. A. Andrews,
LL.D., &o. In 1 vol. royal 8vo, cloth, 2l3.
Pp. 1663. New Edition.
Gesenius. — A Hebrew and English
Lexicon of the Old Testament, including
the Biblical Chaldee, from the Latin of
William Gesenius, late Professor of Theo-
logy in the University of Halle-Wittenberg.
By Edward Kobinson, Professor in the Union
Theolo^cal Seminary, at New York. With
Corrections and large Additions, partly fur-
nished by the Author's manuscript, and
partly condensed from his large Thesaurus,
as completed by Eoediger. Fifth Edition,
revised. Svo, pp. 1072, bound, 283. Bos-
ton, 1855.
Obeppo. — The Hieroglyphic System of
ChampoUion. Translated by Stuart. 12mo,
7s. 6d. Boston.
Hale. — Ethnography and Philology of
the United States Exploring Expedition.
By H. Hale. Vol I., containing the Lan-
guages of the Pacific Islands and the
Western Coast of Ameriea. Imp. 4;to,
£3 3s.
Handbook or Anglo-Saxon Oetho-
graphy. In 2 parts : Part I., Anglo-Saxon
Orthography and its Materials ; Part II.,
Studies in Anglo-Saxon Orthography. By
a Literary Association. Svo, boards, 3s. 6d.
Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Deriva-
tives, on the Basis of the Handbook of
Anglo-Saxon Eoot- words. In 3 Parts. Part
I., Materials of Anglo-Saxon Derivatives ;
Part II., Studies in Anglo-Saxon Derivatives ;
Part III., The Beginning of Words. By a
Literary Association. Pp. 286, 12mo, half-
bound, 53., New York.
Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Root-
words. In 3 Parts. Part I., Instructions
about Anglo-Saxon Eoot- words; Part II.,
Studies in Anglo-Saxon Root-words ; Part
III., The Beginnings of the Eoot-words. By
a Literary Association. Pp. 160, 12mo, half-
bound, 3s. 6d. New York.
Handbook of the Engrafted Words
of the English Language ; embracing for
Choice Gothic, Celtic, French, Latin, and
Greek Words ; on the Basis of the Hand-
book of the Anglo-Saxon Root- words. In
3 Parts. Part I., The Materials of the
Orthography ; Part II., Studies in the Ortho-
f-aphy; Part III., English Etymology,
y a Literary Association. Pp, 356, 12mo,
half-bound, 6s. 6d. New York.
Hernisz. — A Guide to Conversation in
the English and Chinese Language, for the
Use of Americans and Chinese in California
and elsewhere. By Stanislas Hernisz, M.D.,
Attache to the U. S. Legation at Paris ; late
Attache to the U. S. Legation in China;
Member of the American Oriental Society,
&c. &c. &c. Pp. 274, s. Svo, sewed, 18s.
*^* The Chinese characters contained in
this work are from the collection of Chinese
groups, engraved on steel, and cast into
moveable types, by Mr. Marcellin Legrand,
Engraver of the Imperial Printing Office at
Paris. They are used by most of the
Missions in China.
Johnson. — The Meaning of Words ;
analysed into words and unverbal things, and
unverbal things classified into intellections,
sensations, and emotions. By A. B. John-
son. Pp. 256, 12mo, cloth, 63.
JorENAL OF THE AMERICAN OEIENTAL
Society. Vols. 1 to 4. Svo, £2 lfs« New
York, 1850—1854.
Contents of Vol. I.
Art. 1. — Memoir on the History of Buddhism,
read before the Society, May 24, 1844.
By Edward E. Salisbury, Professor in Yale
College.
2. The History of Paper Money in China,
Translated from the Journal Asiatiquo
for November, 1822. By J. P.
3. China : its Population and Trade ; and
the Prospect of a Treaty. By W. W. Q,
4. Peter S. Du Ponceau, LL.D. By J. P,
5. A Treatise on Arab Music, chiefly from a
work by Mikhail Meshakah of Damascus,
Translated from the Arabic, by Eli Smith,
With 2 Plates.
6. Notes on Arakan. By the late Kev. Gf-,
S. Comstock, American Baptist Missionary
in that country, from 1833—1844. With
a Map, by Eev. C. StUson.
7. Three Chapters of Genesis Translated into
the Sooahelee Language. By Eev. Dr.
Krapf. With an Introduction, by W. W,
Greenough.
8. M. Burnouf on the History of Buddhism
in India. By Edward E. Salisbury.
9. Professor Lassen's Antiquities of India,
By E. E. S.
10. Miscellaneous Notices relative to the
recent progress of Oriental Eesearches.
ByE. E. S. With 2 Plates.
11. Comparative Vocabularies of some of the
Principal Negro Dialects of Africa. By
Rev. John Leighton Wilson, Missionary of
the American Board on the Gabun.
12. The Zulu Language. By Eev. James C.
Bryant, Missionary of the American Board
among the Zulus.
13. The Zulu and other Dialects of Southern
Africa. By Eev. Lewis Grout, Missionary
of the American Board among the Zulus.
14. EtTabary's Conquest of Persia, by the
Arabs. Translated from the Turkish. By
John P. Brown, Esq., Dragoman of the
United States Legation at Constantinople,
15. Translation of an Imperial Berat, issued
by Sultan SeHm III., A. H. 1215, ap-
pointing the monk Hohannes, Patriarch of
all the Armenians of Turkey ; with Notes.
By Eev. H. G. O. Dwight, Missionary of
the American Board in Turkey.
16. On the Identification of the Signs of the
Persian Cuneiform Alphabet. By Edward
E. Salisbury. With a Plate.
17. On the Present Condition of the Medical
Profession in Syria.; By Eev. C. V. A,
40
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Van Dyclc, M,D., Missionary of the
American Board in Syria.
Contents of Vol. II.
Art. 1 — Shabbathai Levi and his Followers.
By Rev. Will, S. ScliaufHer, Missionary of
thg American Board in Turkey.
2. Account of a Japanese Romance ; with an
Introduction. By Will. W. Turner.
3. Contribution to the Geography of Central
Koordistan, in a letter to the Corresponding
Secretary; with a Map. By Azariah
Smith, M.D., Missionary of the American
Board in Turkey.
4. Journal of a Tour from Oroomiah to
Mosul, through the Koordish Mountains ;
and a Vi^it to the Ruins of Nineveh, lij
Rev. Justin Perkins, D.D., Missionary of
the American Board in Bersia.
5. Characteristics of the Beshito-Syriac
Version of the New Testament. By I'ro-
fessor Josiah W. Gibbs.
6. Syllabus of the Siva-Guana-Fotham, one
of the Sacred Books of the Hindoos. By
Rev. Henry R. Hoisington, Missionary of
the American Board in Ceylon.
7. Specimens of the Naya Language of
Asam. By Rev. Nathan Brown, Missionary
of the American Baptist Union in Asam.
8. Cliinesa Culture ; or, Remarks on the
Causes of the Peculiarities of the Chinese.
By Rev. Samuel R. Brown, late Principal
of the Morrison School at Hong Kong,
China.
9. Et-Tabary's Conquest of Persia by the
Arabs ; continued from vol. 1. ; and JDeath
and Character of Omar, translated from the
Turkish. By John P. Brown, Dragoman
of the United States Legation at Constan-
tinople.
10. Notes of a Tour in Mount Lebanon, and
to the Eastern Side of Lake Huleh ; in a
Letter to a Relation. By Henry A. De
Eorest, M.D. , Missionary to the American
Board in Syria.
11. The Form3 of the Greek Substantive
Verb. By Professor Ja,mes Hadley.
12. Translation of two Unpublished Arabic
Documents, relating to the Doctrines of the
Islamites and other Batmian Sects ; with
an Introduction and Notes. By Edward
E. Salisbury.
13. Miscellaneous.
CoNTEifTS OP Vol. III.
Art. 1. — Life of Gaudama ; a Translation
from the Burmese Book, entitled Ma-la-
lon-ga-ra AVottoo. By Rev. Cephas
Bennett, Missionary of the American iiap-
tist Union in Burma.
2. Translation of an Unpublished Arabic
Risaleh. By Khaiid Jbn Zeid El-Ju'fy.
With Notes. By Edward E. Salisbury.
3. Remarks on the Mode of Applying the
Electric Telegraph in connection with the
Chinese Language. By Will. A. Macy,
4. Catalogue of all Works known to exist
. in the Armenian Language, of a date
earlier than the 17th century. By Rev.
H. Gr. O. Dwight, Missionary of the Ameri-
can Board in Turkey.
5. On the Main Results of the later Vedic
Researches in Germany. By Will. D.
Whitney.
6. On the Morality of th^ Veda. By Professor
Rud. Roth, of Tiibingen. Translated from
the Author's manuscript. By WiU. D,
Whitney.
7. Notes on Ruins in the Buka'a and in thfl
Belad Ba'albek. By Rev. Henry A. De
Forest, M.D., Missionary of the American
Board in Syria.
S. On the Relations of the Maratba to the
Sanskrit. By Rev. Henry Ballantine,
Missionary of the American Board in
India.
9. Brief Notes on the Tamil Language. Hy
Rev. Henry R. Hoisington, Missionary of •
fhe American Board in Ceylon.
10. On the Genuineness of the so-called
Nestorian Monument of Singan-Fu. By'
Edward E . Salisbury.
11. An Essay on the Phonology and Ortho- '
graphy of the Zulu and Kindred Dialects ia.
Southern Africa. By Rev. Lewis Grout,
Missionary of the American Board in
Southern Africa.
12. Miscellanies.
Contents of Vol. IV.
Art 1. — Tattuva-Kattalei. Law of the Tattu-
vam. A Synopsis of the Mystical Philo-
sophy of the Hindus. Translated from the
Tamil. Vv''ith Notes. By Rev. Henry R.
Hoisington, Missionary of the American
Board in Ceylon.
2. Siva-Gnana-.Potham, Instruction in the
Knowledge of God. A Metaphysical and
Theological Treatise. Translated from the
Tamil. With an Introduction and Notes,
By Rev. Henry R. Hoisington, Missionary,
of the Missionary Board in Ceylon,
3. Mulamuli, or the Buddhist Genesis of
Eastern India from the Shan, through the
Talaing and Burman. By Rev. Francis
Mason, M.D., Missionary of the American
Baptist Union in Burma.
4. Siva-Pirakasam ; Light of Sivan. A Meta-
physical and Theological Treatise. Trans-
lated from the Tamil. With Notes. By
Rev. Henry R. Hoisington, Missionary of
the American Board in Ceylon,
5. On the History of the Vedic Texts. By
"Will. D.Whitney.
6. The State and Prospects of the English
Language in India. By Rev. David O.
Allen, l3.D., Missionary of the American
Board in India.
7. The Talaing Language. By Rev. Fran-
cis Mason, M.D., Missionary of the
American Baptist Missionary Union iu
Burma.
8. On the Karens, By Rev. E, B. Cross, Mis-
sionary of the American Baptist Missionary
Union in Burma.
9. Comparative Vocabulary of the Sgan and
Pwo Karen Dialects. By Rev. Nathan
Brown, Missionary of the American
Baptist Missionary Union in Asam.
10. Chinese Local Dialects reduced to
Writing. By Rev. Moses C. White,
Mi-ssionary of the Methodist Ej)iscopal
Missionary Society at Fuhchau ; to which
is appended an Outline of the System
adopted for Romanizing the Dialect of
Amoy. By Hon. Charles W. Bradley,
late Consul of the United States at Amoy,
11. Treaty between the United States of
America, and the Sultan of Maskat. The
Arabic Text accompanied with a Transla-
tion and Introduction. By Alexander I,
Cotheal.
12. Notice of a Life of Alexander the Great,
Translated from the Syriac. By Rev. Dr.
Justin Perkins, Missionary of the American
i
PHILOLOGY, LINGUISTICS, ANTIQUITIES.
41
Board among the ISTestorians. With extracts
from the same. By Theodore D. Woolsey,
President of Yale College.
13. Miscellanies,
JuDSON. — A Dictionary, English and
Burmese. By A. Jadson. 4to, 24s. Moul-
mein, 1849.
Karen New Testament. 12mo, 10s. 6d.
Moulmein, 1815.
Klipstein. — A G-rammar of tlie Anglo-
Saxon Language. By Louis F. Klipstein,
AA.LL.JM. and Ph.D., of the University of
Giessen. 16mo, 73. 6d. New York, 1849.
Klipstein. — AnalectaAnglo-Saxonica;
with an Introductory Ethnographical Essay,
copious Notes, Critical and Explanatory,
and a Glossary, in which are shown the Indo
Germanic and other Affinities of the
Language. By Louis F. Klipstein, A A.
LL.M. and Ph. D., of the University of
Giessen. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, 21s. New York,
1845.
Klipstein. — Natale Sancti Gregorii
Papoe. — ^Ifric's Homily on the Birth-day of
St. Gregory, and Collateral Extracts from
King Alfred's Version of Bede's Ecclesias-
tical History and the Saxon Chronicle ; with
a full Rendering into English, Notes Critical
and Explanatory, and an Index of Words.
By Louis F. Klipstein, AA. LL. M. and
Ph. D., of the University of Giessen. 12mo,
cloth, 33. 6d. New York, 1849.
Klipstein. — Study of Modern Lan-
guages. — Part I. French, Italian, Spanish,
Portuguese, German, and English, By
L. F. Klipstein, AA. LL. M. and Ph.D.
I vol. Imperial 8vo, cloth, 63. New York,
1838.
Knight. — An English and Tamil
Dictionary ; or. Manual Lexicon for Schools.
Giving in Tamil all important English Words,
and the use of many in phrases. By the
Rev. T. Knight, and the Rev. L. Spaulding,
M.A., Ceylon. Revised in great part by the
Rev. S. Hutchings, M.A., Madras. Svo,
bound, 18s.
Kraitsir — Grlossology ; being a Trea-
tise on the Nature of Language, and on the
Language of Nature. By Charles Kraitsir,
M.I), Pp. 240. 12mo, bound, 6s.
Kraitsir.— Significance of the Alpha-
bet. By C. Kraitsir, M.D. 12mo, 3s.
X/Everett. — A New and Copious
Lexicon of the Latin Language ; compiled
from the Lexicons of Facciolati and Forcel-
lini, Scheller, Luenemann, and Freund. By
E. P. Leverett. Imp. Svo, sheep, £1 16s,
Mason. — Synopsis of a Grammar of
the Karen Language, embracing both dia-
lects, Sgau and Pgho, or Sho. By F.
Mason. 4to, 153. Tavoy.
Mpongwe. — Grammar of the Mpongwe
Language, with Vocabularies. By the
Missionaries of the A B C F M. Gaboon
Mission, Western Africa. New York, 1847.
Svo, 6a.
iNoRDHEiMER. — Critical Grammar of
the Hebrew Language and Hebrew Chres-
tomathy, to accompany the Grammar. By
Professor Isaac Nordheimer. Svo, cloth,
18 s.
IfORDHEiMER. — Chrcstomathy ; or, a
Grammatical Analysis of Selections from
the Hebrew Scriptures, with an Exercise iu
Hebrew Composition. By Professor Isaac
Nordheimer. Svo, half-bound, 73. 6d.
Pickering. — A Yocabulary or Collec-
tion of Words and Phrases, which have been
supposed to be Peculiar to the United
States of America ; to which is prefixed an
Essay on the present state of the English
Language in the United States, By F.
Pickering. Svo. Boston, 1816.
Khenius. — A Grammar of the Tamil
Language ; with an Appendix. By C. T. E,
Rhenius, Missionary, Tinevelly. Second
Edition. Svo, 93. Madras, 1846.
RiGGS. — A Brief Grammar of the
Modern Armenian Language, as spoken in
Constantinople and Asia Minor. By Elias
Riggs. Svo, 23. Smyrna, 1847.
RiGGS. — Manual of the Chaldee Lan-
guage; comprising a Grammar, Chresto-
maihy, &c. By Elias Riggs, A.M. Svo,
93.
RiGGS. — Notes on the Grammar of the
Bulgarian Language. By Elias Riggs.
12mo, sewed. Is. Smyrna, 1847.
Schele de Vere. — Outlines of Com-
parative Philology; with a Sketch of the
Languages of Europe, arranged upon Philo-
logical Principles, and a Brief History of the
Art of Writing. By Professor Scheie de
Vere, of the University of Virginia. 12mo,
cloth, 6s.
Siamese New Testament. Trans-
lated from Greek into Siamese, by J. T,
Jones. Svo, 15s. Bangkok, 1850.
Sophocles. — A Romaic Grammar, ac-
companied by a Chrcstomathy, with a Vo-
cabulary. By E. A. Sophocles, A.M.
12mo, sheep, 7s. 6d.
Talvi.— Historical View of the Lan-
guages and Literature of the Slave Nations.
By Mrs. Edward Robinson (Talvi). Svo.
7s. 6d. New York.
Tamil. — Manual Dictionary of the
Tamil Language. Published by the Jaffna
Society. Svo, bound, 30s.
Transactions of the American
Ethnologicat, Society. — Vols, I. to III.
Part I. Svo, 393. 6d. New York, 1850—1853.
Contents of Vol. I.
j^ff;^ 1. — Notes on the Semi-civilized Nations
of Mexico, Yucatan, and Central America,
By Albert Gallatin.
2. An Account of Ancient Remains in
Tennessee. By Gerard Troost, M. D.,
Professor of Chemistry, Geology, etc.,
in the University of Tennessee.
3. Observations respecting the Grave Creek
Mound in Western Virginia. By Henry
R. Schoolcraft.
4. On the Recent Discoveries of Himyaritic
Inscriptions, and the Attempts made to
Decipher them. By William W. Turner.
5. Account of the Punico-Libyan Monu-
ment at Dugga, and the Remains of an
Ancient Structure at Bless, near the site
of Ancient Carthage. By Frederick
Catherwood.
Contents of Vol. II.
Art. 1. Hale's Indians of North-west
America, and Vocabularies of Nortli.
42
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
America; with an Introduction. By
Albert Gallatin.
2. Observations on the Aboriginal Monu-
ments of the Mississippi Valley. With
Maps and Illustrations. By E. G. Squier.
3. View of the Ancient Geography of the
Arctic Regions of America, from accounts
contained in old Northern MSS. By
Professor Charles C. Rafn, of Copenhagen.
4. Account of a Craniological Collection;
with Remarks on the Classification of
some Families of the Human Race. By
Samuel G. Morton, M.D.
6. Sketch of the Polynesian Language,
drawn up from Hale's Ethnology and
Philology. By Theodore D wight.
6. Grammatical Sketch of the Language
spoken by the Indians of the Mosquito
Shore. By Alexander I. Cotheal.
7. Present Position of the Chinese Empire,
in respect to the Extension of Trade and
Intercourse with other Nations. By S.
Wells Williams.
8. Sketch of the Mpongwes, and their
Language. From information fui'nished
by Rev. John Leighton Wilson, Missionary
of the American Board. By Theodore
Dwight.
Contents op Vol. III., Part 1.
Art. 1. The Creek and Cherokee Indians.
By W. Bartram.
2. Archaeology and Ethnology of Nicaragua.
By E. G. Squier.
3. Rio Wanks and the Mosco Indians. By
Juan Francisco Jrias.
4. A Choctaw Tradition. By J. G-. Copeland.
5. The Aborigines of the Isthmus of
Panama. By IJerthold Seemann.
6. Antiquities of Cuba. By Andres Poey.
Webster. — A Dictionary of the Eng-
lish Language, containing three times the
Matter found in any other English Dictionary,
a Geographical Table of 12,000 Names, lllus-
trativa Quotations, &c., &c. By Noah
Webster, LL.D. 4to, cloth, 31s. 6d.
Williams.— English and Chinese Yo-
cabulary. By Wells Williams. 4to. Macao.
Williams.— Easy Lessons in Chinese.
By S. Wells Williams. 8vo. Macao.
Winer. — Grrammar of the Chaldee
Language, as contained in the Bible and
Targums. By Dr. George B. Winer. Trans-
lated by H. B. Hackett. Bvo, 7s.
Worcester. — A Universal and Criti-
cal Dictionary of the English Language ; to
which are added. Walker's Key to the Pro-
nunciation of Classical aud Scripture Proper
Names, much enlarged and improved, and a
Pronouncing Vocabulary of Modern Geo-
graphical Names. By E. J. Worcester.
Imp. Bvo, sheep, 21s.
Bradpord. — American Antiquities,
with Researches into the Origin and His-
tory of the lied Kace. By A. W. Bradford.
8vo, I2s.
Delaeield. — American Antiquities.
By J. Delafield, jun. With numerous Illus-
trations. Royal Ito, £1 lis. 6d. Cincinnati-
1837.
G-liddox. — Ancient Egypt : her
Monuments, Hieroglyphics, History, and
Archaeology. By G. K. Gliddon. 4to, nume-
rous illustrations, sewed. 2s. ; cloth, 3s.
PiDGEOX. — Antiquarian Kesearches —
Traditions of Dee-Coo-Dah. Comprising
extensive Explorations, Surveys, and Ex-
cavations of the Wonderful and Mysterious
Earthen Remains of the Mound-Builders la
America ; Traditions of the Last Prophet of
the Elk Nation relative to their Origin and
Use; and the Evidences of an Ancient
Population more numerous than the Present
Aborigines. By William Pidgeon. Seventy
Engravings. 1 vol. Bvo, cloth, 12s.
Priest. — American Antiquities and
Discoveries in the West. Bj Josiah Priest.
Bvo, 8s. 6d.
Rivero and Tschudi. — Peruvian
Antiquities. By Mariano Edward Rivero,
Director of the Museum of Lima ; and John
James von Tschudi, Doctor in Philosophy,
Medicine, &c., &c. Translated into Eng-
lish, from the original Spanish, by Francis,
L. Hawks, D.D., LL.D. Bvo, cloth, 12s.
Squier.— Antiquities of the State of
New York ; being the results of extensive
Original Surveys and Explorations. With
a Supplement on the Antiquities of the
West. By E. G. Squier, M.A. Bvo, with
numerous Illustrations, cloth, 14s.
Squier. — The Ancient Monuments of
the Mississippi Valley, comprising tho
Results of extensive Original Surveys ard
Expl©rations. By E. G. Squier and E. H.
Davis. 4 to, many Plates and Illustrations,
£3 13s. Gd.
Squier. — The Serpent Symbol, and the
Worship of the Reciprocal Principles in
Nature in America. By E. G. Squier,
Bvo, 12s. 6d. cloth.
Squier. — Travels in Central America,
particularly in Nicaragua, with a Descrip-
tion of its Aboriginal Monuments, Scenery,
and People, their Languages, Institutions,
Religion, &c. Illustrated by numerous
Maps and Coloured Illustrations. By E. G-.
Squier, late Charge d' Affaires of the United
States, to the Republics of Central America.
2 vols. Bvo, cloth, 12s.
VIII.
MODEEN LANGUAGES.
BADOTS.-arammaire Anglaise d'apres le I BadoiS.— Key to ditto. 3s. 6d.
Systemed'OUendortf, a.r usage desFrancais. Butler's (Francis) Spanish Teacher
Tar Charles Badois. Crown Bvo, half-bd."63. I and Colloquial Phrase-Book; an Easy and
MODERN LANGUAGES.
43
Agreeable Method of Acquiring a Speeking
Knowledge of the Spanish Language. 18mo,
bound, 3s.
CoLLOT. — Chefs-d'CEuvres Dramatiques
de la Langue Franqaise. By A. G, Callot.
Post 8vo, 6s.
FoRESTl. — Crestomazia Italiana : a
Collection of Selected Pieces in Italian
Prose, designed as a Class Eeading Book
for Beginners in the Study of the Italian
Language. By E. Felix Foresti, LL.D.,
Professor of the Italian Language and
ijit ;rature in Columbia College and in the
University of the City of New York. 1 vol.
12rao, bound, 5s. 6d.
Laporte. — French Grraramar, contain-
ing all the Eules of the Language, upon a
new and i^nproved plan. By Count de
Laporte. 12mo, bound, 8s. 6d.
Laporte.— A New and Complete Guide
to the Pronunciation and Eeading of the
I • French T.anguage, illustrated witli analogous
English Sounds. By Norman W. Camp, B.D.
12mo, sewed, 2s.
Xaporte.— Self- teaching Eeader for tlie
Pronunciation of the French Language.
By Count de Laporte. 12mo, bound, 8s. 6d.
Laporte. — French Exercises ; Speaking
Exercises for the Illustration of the Eules
and Idioms of the French Language. By
Count de Laporte. 12mo, half-bd. 5s. 6d.
Mezzofanti's System of Learning
L nguages applied to the Study of French.
With a Treatise on French Versification,
and a Dictionary of Idioms, Peculiar Expres-
sions, &c. By J. Eoemer, Professor of the
French Language and Literature in the New
York Free Academy. 1 vol. 12mo, bound, 6s.
Oehlschlager. — Grerman and English
German Pocket Dictionary, with a Pronun-
ciation of the G-erman part in English Cha-
racters and English Sounds. By T. C.
Oehlschlager. 24!mo, half-bd., pp. 884, 5s.
OLLENDORFF.-OllendoriF's New Method
of Learning to Eead, Write, and Speak the
Spanish Language ; with an Appendix, con-
taining a brief, but comprehensive recapitu-
latioa of the Eules, &c. &c. &c. The whole
designed for young Learners, and Persons
who are their own Instructors. By M.
Velazquez and T. Simonne, Professors of the
Spanish and French Languages. 12mo,
half-bound, 10s. 6d.
Ollendorff — Key to ditto. 6s.
Ollendorff. — Metodo para Aprender
a Leer, Escribir y Hablar el Ingles, segun el
Sistema de Ollendorff; con un Tratado de
pronunciacion al principo, y un apendice
importante al fin, quesirve de complementoa
la Obra. Por Eamon Palenzuela y Juan de
la C. Carreno, Professores de Idiomas en
Nueva York. 12mo, half-bound, 12s.
Ollendorff. — Key to ditto. 63.
Ollendorff. — Metodo para Aprender
a Leer, Escribir y Hablar el Frances, segun
el verdadero sistema de Ollendorff : ordenado
en lecciones progresivas, consistiendo de
ejercicios orales y escritos ; enriguedido de la
pronunciacion figurada como se estila en la
^onversacion ; y de un apendice, abrazando
las reglas de la sintaxis, la formacion de los
verbos regulares, y la conjugacion de los
irregulares. Por Teodoro Simonne, Professor
de Lenguas. Pp. 342. 12mo, half-bound,
10s. 6d.
Ollendorff. — Key to ditto. 4s. 6d.
Ollendorff's New Method of Learn-
ing to Eead, Write, and Speak the ItaHau
Language ; adapted for the use of Schools and
Private Teachers. AVith additions and cor-
rections ; by Felix Foresti, LL.D. Pp.
536. 12mo, half-bound, 8s. 6d.
Ollendorff. Key to ditto. 4s. 6d.
Ollendorff's Method. — Primary-
Lessons in Italian. By G. W. Greene, A.M.
Pp. 240, 18mo, half-bound, 33.
Ollendorff' rj New Method of Learn-
ing to Eead, Write, and Speak the French
Language; or. First Lessons in French (In-
troductory to Ollendorff's larger Grammar).
By G. W. Greene. Third edition, enlarged
and rewritten. Pp. 248, ISmo, half-bound,
3s.
Ollendorff's New Method of Learn-
ing to Eead, Write, and Speak the German
Language ; to which is added a Systematic
Outline of German Grammar, by G. J. Adler,
A.M. Pp. 510, 12mo, half-bound, 6s.
Ollendorff. — Key to ditto. 4s. 6d.
New Grammar for Germans to Learn.
the English Language. — Ollendorff's neue
Methode die Englische Sprache lesen,
schreiben und sprechen zu lernen. Fiir den
deutschen Schul-und Privat-Unterricht einge-
richtet, von P. Gands. Pp. 600, 12mo, half-
bound, 6s.
Ollendorff. — Key to ditto. 4s. 6d.
ScHELE DE Yere. — Grammar of the
Spanish Language, with a Histoxy of the
Language, and Practical Exercises. By M.
Scheie de Vere, of the University of Vir-
ginia. Post Svo, cloth, 6s.
Talbot. — Philosophy of French Pro-
nunciation. By G. H. Talbot. 12mo, 5s.
ToLON. — The Elementary Spanish
Eeader and Translator. By Miguel T.
Tolon. Crown Svo, boards, 3s. 6d.
Velazquez. — An Easy Introduction
to Spanish Conversation ; containing all that
is necessary to make a rapid progress in it.
Particularly designed for those who have
liltle time to study or are their own instruc-
tors. By Mariano Velazquez de la Cadena.
1 vol. 18mo, pp. 100, 2s.
Yelazqc-^ez de la Cadena. — A New
Spanish Eeader ; consisting of passages from,
the most approved Authors, in Prose and
Verse, arranged in progressive order, for the
use of those who wish to obtain easily a
Practical Knowledge of the Castilian.
Language ; with plain Eules for its Pronun-
ciation ; Notes Explanatory of the Idioraa
and difficult Constructions, and a copious
Vocabulary. Being a Sequel to Ollendorff's
New Method of Learning to Eead, Write,
and Speak the Spanish Language. By
Mariano Velazquez de la Cadena, Professor
of the Spanish Language and Literature ia
Columbia College, &c. &c. 12mo, cloth,
7s, 6d,
44
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Velazquez de la Cadeis-a. — A Dic-
tionary of the Spanish and English Languages,
abridged from the Author's larger work. By-
Mariano Velazque25 de la Cadena. 2 vols.
in 1, bound, 12s.
WoODBUEY. — A New Metliod of Learn-
ing the German Language, embracing both
the Analytic and Synthetic Modes of In-
struction ; being a plain and practical way of
acquiring the art of reading, speaking, and
composing German. By W. II. Woodbury,
Third Edition, revised and enlarged. 12mo,
half-bound, 9s,
IX.
HISTOEY.
BIOaEAPHY, COEEESPONDENCE, HISTOEICAL MEMOIES, &c.,
CHIEFLY OE THE UNITED STATES.
Abbot. — G-enealogical Register of the
Descendants of George Abbot, of Ando-
ver ; George Abbot of Rowley ; Thomas
Abbot, of Andover; Arthur Abbot, of
Ipswich; Robt. Abbot, of Brandford; Chas,
and Geo. Abbot, of Norwalk Court. Com-
piled by Rev Abiel Abbot and Rev. Ephraim
Abbot. 8vo, cloth, lOs.
Adams. — Life and Public Services of
John Quincy Adams, Sixth President of the
United States. With the Eulogy delivered
before the Legislature of New xork. By
Wniiam H. Seward. 12mo, cloth.
Adams. — Life and Works of Joliu
Adams, Second President of the United
States. Edited by his Grandson, Charles
Erancis Adams. In 10 vols. (Vols. 2 to 9
now ready.) 8vo. cloth 14s, per vol. Boston.
Adams. — Annals of Portsmouth, N. H.
during 200 years. By A. Adams. 8vo,
Portsmouth, 1825.
Alleys". — Autocracy of Poland and
Russia; or, a Description of Russian Misrule
in Poland, andan Account of the Surveillance
of Russian Spies at Home and Abroad, in-
I eluding the Experience of an Exile. By
Julian Allen. Pp. 212, 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Allen.— American Biographical Dic-
tionary. By Rev. Wm. Allen, D.D, 8vo,
18s. Boston, 1833.
American Annual Eegistee, 1825 —
1832. 5vols. 8vo. New York.
American Archives. — Collected and
Edited by Peter Force. 3 vols., folio,
Washington.
American Biography. — The Library
of American Biography. Edited by Jared
Sparks, assisted by several of the most dis-
tinguished American writers. First Series,
10 vols. 12mo. Portraits. Price 5s. each,
cloth. New York.
Vol. 1 contains General Stark, C. B.
Brown (the Novelist), General Montgo-
mery, and Ethan Allen.
Vol. 2 "Wilson (the Ornithologist), Cap-
tain John Smith, the " Father of
Virginia."
Vol. 3. General Arnold (the Traitor).
Vol. 4. General Wayne, and Sir Henry
Vane.
Vol. 5. John Elliott, "The Apostle to the
Indians."
Vol. 6. General Pinckney, William El-
lery, Cotton Mather.
Vol. 7. Sir William Phipps, L. M. David-
son, General Putnam, &c.
Vol. 8. Baron Steuben, Sebastian Cabot,
General Eaton.
Vol. 9. Jonathan Edwards, David
Brainerd.
Vol. 10. Fulton, General Warren, Hudson,
and Marquette.
American Biography. — Second Series ;
complete, with a general index of the whole.
Plates, 15 vols. l2mo, cloth, 5s. per volume.
Boston, 1844 to 1847.
Containing, viz.
Vol. 1. La Salle, and Patrick Henry.
Vol.2. James Otis, and James Oglethorpe.
Vol. 3. John Sullivan, Jacob Leislcr,
Nathaniel Boon, and John Mason.
Vol. 4. Roger Williams, Timothy Dwighfc,
and Count Pulasky.
Vol. 5. Count Rumford, Zebulon Montgo-
mery Tike, Samuel Jorton.
Vol. 6. Ezra Stiles, John Fitch, and Anne
Hutchinson.
Vol. 7. John Ribault Sebastian Rale, and
William Palfrey.
Vol. 8. Gen. Charles Lee, and Joseph Reed.
Vol. 9. Leonard Calvert, Samuel Ward,
Thomas Posey. »
Vol. 10. Nathaniel Greene. i
Vol. 11. Commodore Stephen Decatur. i
Vol. 12. Edward Treble, and Wm. Penn. '
Vol. 13. Daniel Boone, Benjamin Lincoln.
Vol. 14. John Ledyard.
Vol. 15. Wm. R. Davie, Samuel Kirkland.
American Historical and Literary
Curiosities.— Consisting of Original Docu-
ments relative to the Events of the Revolu-
tion, with a variety of Reliques, Antiquities,
and Modern Autographs. Collected and
edited by J. Jay Smith and John F. Watson.
Royal 4to, half-morocco, 35s.
American National Portrait G-al-
LERY. — A Series of Portraits of Distinguished
Americans, engraved on steel, in the best
manner. With Memoirs, &c. 4 vols, royal
8vo, containing 144 portraits, 36s. each.
New York.
American State Papers. — Published
by Order of Congress. Price about £45,
In folio volumes. Washington.
Baldwin. — Party Leaders ; Sketclies
of Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton,
Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, John Ran-
dolph of Roanoke, including notices of many
other distinguished American Statesmen,
HISTORY.
45
Ey Jo. Q. Baldwin. Pp. 370, 8vo, cloth,
OS. 6d.
jALLou. — History of Cuba ; or, Notes
oi' a Traveller in the Tropics. Being a Poli-
tical, Historical, and Statistical Account of
tlie Island, from its First Discovery to the
Present Time. By Maturin M. Ballou. Six
Plates. Pp. 230, 12mo, cloth, 5s.
;3ancroet. — History of the United
States, from the Discovery of the American
Continent. By George Bancroft. 3 vols.
Svo, with Portraits, Maps, and Plates. 9th
edition. 42s. Boston, 1834—1842.
ljAncroft. — History of the American
Ecvolution. By George Bancroft. Vols. 1
to 3, Svo, 14s. each.
Banvard. — Adventures and Discoveries
of the First Explorers of North America.
Ey Joseph Banvard. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
Banvard. — Novelties of the World ;
or, the Adventures and Discoveries of the
First Explorers of North America. By
J<jseph Banvard. IBmo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Banvard. — Plymouth and the Pil-
^j^rims ; or, Incidents of Adventure in the
History of the First Settlers. By j. Joseph
Eanvard. 18mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Banvard. — Romance of American His-
tory, as illustrated in the Early Events con-
nected with the French Settlement at Port
Carolina, the Spanish Colony at St. Augus-
tine, and the English Plantation at James-
town. By Joseph Banvard. With Illustra-
tions. 18mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
|3arber. — Connecticut Historical Col-
lections, containing a General Description of
Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical
Sketches, Anecdotes relating to the History
and Antiquities of every Town in Connecticut.
By John Warner Barber. With 200 En-
gravings. 8vo, sheep. 21s.
Barnard. —Tribute to Gallaudet- A
Discourse in Commemoration of the Life,
Character, and Services of the Eev, Thomas
Gallaudet, LL.D , delivered before the Citi-
zens of Hartford, Jan. 7, 1852 ; with an Ap-
pendix, containing History of Deaf- Mute In-
struction and Institutions, and other docu-
ments. By Henry Barnard. Svo, cloth, 6s.
Barnum. — Autobiography of P. T.
Barnum, in which the Author narrates his
Early History as Clerk, Merchint, and
Editor : together with every particular of
his various Enterprises ; with Kules for
Business and making a Fortune. 1 thick
volume, fcap. Svo, 2s. 6d.
Bayles. — History of the Plymouth
Colony. 2 vols. Svo. Boston, 1820.
Belknap. — History of New Hamp-
shire. 3 vols. Svo. Scarce. Boston, 1813.
Belknap. — American Biography. By
Jeremiah Belknap, D.D, With Additions
and Notes, by F. M. Hubbard. 3 vols. ISmo,
12s.
Vol. 1. Lives of Biron. — Madoc. — Zeno. —
Christopher Columbus. — James Cartier. —
Ferdinando de Soto. — Humphrey Gil-
bert. — Walter Raleigh, and Richard Gren-
ville.
Vol. 2. Lives of John^ de Fuca. — De Monts,
Poutrincourt, and Champlain. — Ferdi-
nando Gorges, and John Mason. — Sir
k
Thomas Smith. — Thomas Lord Delaware,
Sir Thomas Gates, Sir George Somers,
Captain Christopher Newport, Sir Thomas
Dale, Sir Ferdinando Wainman,— Sir
Samuel Argal. — Sir George Yeardley. —
Sir Francis Wyat. — Bartholom'^w Gosnold,
Martin Pring, Bartholomew Gilbert, George
Weymouth. — John Robinson. — Jolm.
Vol. 3. Lives of William Bradford.— William
Brewster. — Robert Cushraan. — Edward
Winslow. — Miles Standish. — John Win-
throp. — John Winthrop, jun. — George Cal-
vert, Cecilius Calvert (Lord Baltimore),
Leonard Calvert. — William Penn. New
York, 1842.
Benton. — Thirty Years' View ; or, a
Histoiy of the Working of the American
Government for Thirty Years. From 1820
to 1850. Chiefly taken from the Congress
Debates, the Private Papers of General
Jackson, and the Speeches of Ex- Senator
Benson, with his actual View of Men and
Affairs ; with Historical Notes and Illustra-
tions, and some Notices of Eminent deceased
Contemporaries. By a Senator of Thirty
Years (Benton). In 2 vols, royal Svo, cloth.
Vol. 1. Pp. 750,15s.
Biography of the Signers of the De-
claration of Independence. 12 vols. Svo.
Scarce. Philadelphia, 1825.
BozMAN. — History of Maryland, 1633
—1660. 2 vols. Svo, 24s. Baltimore, 1837.
Bradford. — A History of the Federal
Government for Fifty Years. 1789—1839.
By Alden Bradford. Svo, 12s. Boston, 1840.
BRECKENRiDaE. — History of the Wair
of 1812. 12mo, 6s. Philadelphia, 1836.
Brodhead. — History of the State of
New Y"ork. By John Romeyn Brodhead.
First Period, 1609—1664. Illustrated with a
Map of New Netherlands, according to the
charters granted by the States-General, on
the 11th of October, 1614, and the 3rd of
June, 1621. Svo, cloth, 16s.
Brownell. — Discoverers, Pioneers,
and Settlers of North and South America,
from the EarKest Period (982) to the Pressnt
Time. By Henry Howard Brownell, A.M.
With numerous Illustrations. Bound, 14s.
Brownell. — The Indian Races of
North and South America. By Chas. de
Wolf BroA\Tiell. With numerous Illustra-
tions. Svo, bound, 14s.
Burr. — Memoirs of Aaron Burr, late
Vice-President United States. By M. L.
Davis. 2 vols. Svo, 28s. New York, 1839.
BiJRSTOW. — History of New Hamp-
shire. By George Burstow. Svo, 14s. Con-
cord, 1843.
Calhotj'N. — The Works of John 0.
Calhoun. In 4 vols. Volume 1, A Disquisi-
tion on Government, and a Discourse on the
Constitution and Government of the United
States. Vols. 2, 3, & 4, Speeches. Svo,
cloth, 14s. per vol.
Capron. — History of California, from
its Discovery to the Present Time ; com-
prising also a full Description of its CMmate,
Surface, Soil, Rivers, Towns, Beasts, Birds,
Fishes, State of its Society, Agriculture,
Commerce, Mines, Mining, &c. With a
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Journal of the Voyage from New York, via
Nicaragua, to San Francisco, and back, via
Panama. With a new Map of California.
8vo, pp. 367, cloth, 6s. 6d. Boston 1854.
Cheistie. — A History of the late Pro-
vince of Lower Canada, Parliamentary and
Political, from the Commencement to the
Close of its Existence as a separate Province.
By Robert Christie. In 5 vols. 12mo, cloth,
£1 16s.
Chronicles oe Pineville. — Em-
bracing Sketches of Georgia Scenes, &c.
12mo, 33.
Chtjech. — The Hislory of Philip's
War, commonly called the Great Indian War,
of 1675 and 1676. By Thomas Church, Esq.
With numerous Notes, &c. By Samuel G.
Drake. Second edit. Plates, half-bd. 12s.
Clay. — Life of Henry Clay, the States-
man and the Patriot ; containing numerous
Anecdotes. With Illustrations. Post 8vo,
cloth, 33. 6d.
Clay (Henry) The Life and Public
Services of, down to 1848. By Epes Sar-
gent. Edited and completed at Mr. Clay's
death, by Horace Greeley. Post 8vo,
cloth, 7s.
Clement. — Noble Deeds of American
Women ; with Biographical Sketches of some
of the more prominent. Edited by J Cle-
ment. With an Introduction, by Mrs. L. H.
Sigourney. Post 8vo, cloth, 6s.
C OLLECTIONS of the Massachusetts His-
torical Society. 27 vols. Svo, 8s. per vol.
Boston, V. y.
Collections of the New York His-
torical Society. First Series. 5 vols. v. y.
New Series. Vol. 1. Svo, 18s. New York,
1841.
Collections of the G-eorgia Historical
Society. 2 vols. Svo.
Collections of the New Hampshire
Historical Society, 1824—1827. 2 vols. 8vo.
Concord, 1827.
Collections of the Ehode Island His-
torical Society. 2 vols. 8vo. Providence.
Collections of the Maine Historical
Society. Svo, 21s. 1832.
Conrad. — Sanderson's Biography of
the Signers to the Declaration of Independ-
ence. Revised and edited by Robert T.
Conrad. Imperial Svo, cloth, gilt, 31s. 6d. ;
morocco, gilt, 35s. 6d.
Cooper. — History of the Navy of the
United States. Abridged in one volume.
By J. Fenimore Cooper. Illustrated with
numerous Engravings. Svo, roan, gilt,
marble edges, 9s. 6d.
Davis. — War of Ormuzd and Ahriman
in the 19th Century. By H. W. Davis. Svo,
9s.
Davis.— The Half Century ; or, a His-
tory of Changes that have taken place, and
Events that have transpired, chiefly in the
United States, between 1800 and 1850. With
an Introduction, by Mark Hopkins, D.D.
By Emerson Davis, D.D. 12mo, cl., 7s. 6d.
Day. — Historical Collections of the
State of Pennsylvania, containing a copious
Selection of the most Interesting Facts, Tra-
ditions, Biographical Sketches, and Anec-
dotes. By Sherman Day. 1 vol. Svo, with
165 Wood Engravings. Bound, 21s.
De Puy. — Ethan Allen, and the Green
Mountain Heroes of '76. Bv H. De Puy.
Post Svo, 6s.
Diplomatic Correspondence of the
American Revolution. Edited by Jared
Sparks. 12 vols. Svo. Boston, 1829.
Diplomatic Correspondence of tha
United States, 1783—1789. 7 vols. Svo.
Washington, 1833.
Drake. — Indian Captivities ; or, Life in
the Wigwam. By Samuel G. Drake. Crown
Svo, cloth, Ss.
Drake. — Biography and History of the
Indians of North America, from its First
Discovery to the Present Day. By Samuel
Gr. Drake. Seventh edition, with Engrav«
ings. Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
D WIGHT.— The Congress of 1776. —
Lives of the Signers of the Declaration oi
Independence. By N. Dwight. 12mo, 93,
New York, 1839.
Dwight. — Lives of the Signers of the
Declaration of Independence. By W,
Dwight, Esq, 12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Eliot. — History of Liberty. Part T,
The Ancient Eomans, By Samuel Eliot,
2 vols. Svo, cloth, 20s.
Ellet.— A Domestic History of the
Revolution. By Mrs. E. F. Ellet. 1 vol
12mo, cloth, 6s.
Ellet. — The Women of the American
Revolution. By Elizabeth P. EUet. 3 vols,
12mo, cloth.
Ellet. — Pioneer' Women of the West,
By Mrs. E. F. Ellet. 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Efropean Settlement in America.
Correspondence between Edmund Burke and
Dr. French Lawrence. Svo, cloth, 12s.
Everett. — An Address deUvered be-
fore the New York Historical Society. By
the Hon. Edward Everett. With an Intro-
duction, by the Hon. Joseph K. Ingersoll
Svo, sewed. Is. 6d.
Flagg. — Venice, the City of the Sea —
from the Invasion by Napoleon, in 1797, to
the Capitulation to Eadetzky, in 1849 ; witi
a Contemporaneous View of the Peninsula,
By Edmund Flagg, late U.S. Consul at
Venice. 2 vols, post Svo, cloth, 16s.
Flint. — Indian Wars of the West \
containing Biographical Sketches of those
Pioneers who headed the Western Settlers
repressing the attacks of the Savages. Bj
Timothy Flint. 12mo, half-bound, 5s.
FoLSOM. — The Letters or Despatches oi
Hernando Cortes, the Conqueror of Mexico,
written during the Conquest, and addressed
to the Emperor Charles V. Translated from
the original Spanish, with Notes and Illus-
trations, by George Folsom. Svo, 9s. Ne\^
York, 184^3.
The first of these Letters or Despatches
was written by Cortes soon after landing in
Mexico, and published at Seville (Spain),
1522. The others appeared at subsequeni
dates. They contain a full account of th€
events of the conquest, and are written in s
style of great simplicity and elegance.
HISTORY.
4,7
PoRREST. — History of Norfolk and its
Vicinity. By W. S. Forrest. 8vo, 18s.
JFeanklin. — The Life of Benjamin
Franklin, written by himself ; to which is
added his Miscellaneous Essays. 12mo,
cloth, 5s.
TiiANKLiK. — The Select Works of
Benjamin Franklin, including his Autobio-
graphy; with l^Totes and a Memoir. By
., Epes Sargent. With a Portrait and
■({ Vignette. Post Svo, cloth, 6s.
iFeanklin. — An Autobiography; with
a Narrative of his Public Life and Services.
By the Eev. Hastings Weld. With many
Illustrations. Eoyal Svo, 14s.
!Fj;anklin. — The Works of Benjamin
Franklin, containing several Political and
Historical Tracts not included in any former
edition, and many Letters, Official and
Private, not hitherto published. With Notes,
and a Life of the Author, by Jared
Sparks. 10 vols. Svo, handsomely printed,
^vith Portraits, etc., £4 43. Boston, 1840.
riLVNKLiN. — Memoirs of Benjamin
Franklin, written by himself; with his
most interesting Essays, Letters, and Miscel-
Lmeous Writings — Familiar, Moral, Politi-
cal, Economical, and Philosophical. Por-
trait. 2 vols. 18mo, 7s.
Fjiexch. — Historical Collections of
Louisiana ; embracing Translations of many
rare and valuable Documents relating to the
Natural, Civil, and Political History of that
State. Compiled, with Historical and Bio-
graphical Notes, with an Introduction, by
B. F. French. Svo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Teost. — Pictorial History of Mexico
and the Mexican War ; comprising an ac-
count of the ancient Aztec Empire ; the
Conquest by Cortes; Mexico under the
Spaniards; the Mexican Eevolution ; the
I^epublic ; the Texan War ; and the recent
^Var with the United States. By John
Frost, LL.D. 500 Engravings, from designs
of W. Croom, and others. Svo. 12s. 6d.
TiioST. — Examples of Heroic Women
of the West. By Dr. J. Frost. Svo, 8s. 6d.
Tjiost. — History of the State of Cali-
lornia, from the Period of the Conquest by
S}:)ain, to her Occupation by the United
States of America. By John Frost, LL.D.
Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
FiiOST. — Indian Wars of the United
States; from the earliest period to the pre-
sent time. By John Frost, LL.D. With
numerous Engravings, from original Designs
by B. W. Croome, and others. Svo, bound.
jFeost.— Border Wars of the West.
By J. Frost. Svo, 10s. 6d.
Ftjrniss. — Land of the Caesar and
Doge. By W. Furniss. Post Svo, 7s.
GrALLERY OF iLLTJSTRIOrS AMERICANS :
containing the Portraits and Biographical
Hketches of twelve of the most Eminent
Citizens of the American Eepublic, since
the death of Washington ;. from Daguerreo-
types by Brady, engraved by D' Avignon.
C. Edward Lester, Editor. Largest folio,
elegantly bound, cloth, gilt edges, £4 43.
Gayarre.— Louisiana; its History as
a French Colony. Third series of Lectures.
By Charles Gayarre. Svo, cloth, lOs.
Goodrich. — A History of all Nations
from the Earliest Periods to the Present
Time ; or. Universal History ; in which the
History of every Nation, ancient and
modern, is separately given. lUustrated by
70 Stylographic Maps, and 700 Engravings.
By S. G. Goodrich. 2 vols, royal Svo, bound,
GrOUGE. — The Fiscal History of Texas,
from 1834 to 1851— 52 ; with Kemarks on
American Debts. By W. M. Gouge. Svo,
cloth, 8s. 6d.
Gbeenough (H.), Memorial op. By
T. Tuckerman. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Griffin. — Junius Discovered. By
Frederick Griffin. Pp. 312, post Svo,
cloth, 6s.
GuROWSKi. — Eussia as It is. By Carl
A. de Gurowski. 12mo, cloth, pp. 328, 7s.
Hale. — Woman's Eecord ; or, Sketches
of all Distinguished Women, from the
Beginning till a.b. 1850. By Mrs. Hale,
Author of " Northwcod." Arranged in
Four Eras. With selections from Female
Writers of every Age. With 230 Portraits,
forming a magnificent Ladies* Gift Book*
Eoyal Svo, cloth, gilt, 2l3.
Hamilton. — History of the National
Flag of the United States of America. By
Schuyler Hamilton, Capt. Brevet, U.S.A.
Crown Svo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Hart. — History of the Valley of the
Mississippi. By Adolphus M. Hart. Crown
Svo, cloth, 5s.
Headley. — Life of Oliver Cromwell.
By J. T. Headley. With Portrait. 1 vol.
12mo, cloth, gilt, 7s. 6d.
Headley. — Napoleon and his Mar-
shals. By J. T. Headley. Illustrated with
12 Portraits. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, gilt.
15s.
Headley. — The Imperial Guard of
Napoleon. From Marengo to Waterloo.
By J. T. Headley. 1 vol. 12mo, with Illus-
trations, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Headley. —The Old Guard. By J. T.
Headley. 1 vol. 12mo, with 12 Engravings.
Headley, — Life of the Empress Jose-
phine, First Wife of Napoleon. By P. C.
Headley, Author of " Women of the Bible,'*
&c. Post Svo, cloth, 6s.
Headley. — The Second War with
England. By J. T. Headley. 2 vols, post
Svo, cloth, 14s.
Headley. — Washington and his
Generals. By J. T. Headley. Illustrated
with 16 Portraits. 2 vols. 12mo, 15s.
Henningsen. — Past and Future of
Hungary. By C. T. Henningsen. Svo,,
Is. 6d.
Herbert. — The Captains of the 01(J
World ; their Campaigns, Character, and
Conduct, as compared with the great Modem
Strategists, from the Persian Wars to the
end of the Eoman Republic. By Eenry W.
Herbert. 1 vol. 12mo, with Illustrations,
cloth, 73. 6d.
Herbert. — The Captains of the
Eoman Eepublic, as compared with tho
great Modern Strategists ; their Campaigns,
Character, and Conduct, from the Punic
Wars to the Death of Caesar. By William-
48
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Henry Herbert. With Frontispiece. Crown
8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Herbert. — The Chevaliers of France,
from the Crusaders to the Marshals of Louis
XIV. By Henry William Herbert. Crown
8vo, cloth, 9a.
Herbert. — Persons and Pictures from
French and English History. By H. W.
Herbert. Post 8vo, Ss.
HiLDRETH. — The History of the
United States of America, from the Adop-
tion of the Federal Constitution to the E id
of the Sixteenth Congress . By Richard Hil-
dreth. In 6 vols. Svo, cloth, £3 123.
History oe the Royal Dauphiis",
Louis XVII. of France. 12mo, 3s. 6d.
HoLGATE. — American Gi-enealogy, being
a History of some of the Early Settlers of
North America and their Descendants, from
heir first emigration to the present time,
with their intermarriages and collateral
branches ; including notices of prominent
families and distinguished individuals, with
anecdotes, traditions, sketches of the found-
ing of cities, villages, manors, and progres-
sive improvements of the country from its
wilderness state to the present era. Illus-
trated by geneological tables. By Jerome
B. Holgate. 1 vol. Ito, half-Turkey morocco,
303.
Holmes. — Annals of America ; or,
Chronol<")gical History of America from
1492 to 1826. By A. Holmes, D.D. 2 vols.
8vo, 30s. Second Edition. Cambridge
(N. E.), 1833.
Homes oe American Statesmen;
with Anecdotal, Personal, and Descriptive
Sketches by various Writers. Illustrated in
a very superior style of art, with Engravings
on wood, from Drawings by Dohler, and
Daguerreotypes and Fac-similes of auto-
graph letters. Square 8vo, cloth extra, 25s.
Hopper. — A True Life of Isaac T.
Hopper. By Maria Child. Post 8vo, with
Portrait, cloth, 9s.
Hunter. — Manners and Customs of
several Indian Tribes, located West of the
Mississippi. By J. D. Hunter. 8vo, half-
bound, 12s.
In&ersoll.— Historical Sketch of the
Second "War between the United States of
America and Great Britain. Declared by
Act of Congress the 18th of June, 1812, anfi
concluded by Peace of 15th February, 1815.
By Charles J. Ingersoll. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth,
2is.
Jackson. — Life and Public Services of
General Andrew Jackson, Seventh Presi-
dent of the United States, including the
most important of his State Papers. Edited
by J. S. Jenkins, M.A. With the Eulogy
delivered at Washington City, June 21st,
1845, by Hon. George Bancroft. Post 8vo,
cloth, 53.
Jackson. — Life of Andrew Jackson.
12mo, cloth, 6s.
Jackson. — Memoirs of General Jack-
son. 12mo, cloth, 9s.
Jaryes.- 'History of the Hawaiian or
Sandwich Islands. By James J. Jarves.
Svo, cloth, 143.
Jefferson. — Memoirs, Correspond'
ence, and Miscellanies, from the Papers oi
Thomes Jefferson. Second Edition, 4 vols
8vo, £3. Boston 1830.
Jefferson. — The Writings of Thomas
Jefferson. Being his Autobiography, Cor-
respondence, Keports, Messages, Addresses,
and other writings. Official and Private!
published by order of the Joint Committee
of Congress on the Library, from the
Original MSS. deposited in the Depart-
ments of State ; with Explanatory Notes,
Tables of Contents, and a Copious Index to
each Volume, as well as a General Index tc
the whole. Vols. 1 and 2, 8vo, cloth, 12s,
each.
Jenkins. — Lives of Distinguished
American Generals in the last War with
Great Britain. By John S. Jenkins, A.M,
Post Svo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Jenkins. — Lives of the Governors oi
the State of New York. By John S. Jenkins.
8vo, cloth.
Jenkins. — History of the War be-
tween the United States and Mexico, from
the Commencement of Hostilities to the Ka-
tification of the Treaty of Peace. By J. S.
Jenkins. 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Johnson. — Sights in the Grold Eegion,
and Scenes by the Way. By Theodore T.
Johnson. With Illustrations. Second
Edition, 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
JoMiNi. — The Political and Military
History of the Campaign of Waterloo.
Translated from the French of General
Baron de Jomini, by S. V. Benet, U.S.
Ordnance. Post 8vo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Kendall. — The War between the
United States and Mexico, illustrated ; em-
bracing Pictorial Drawings of all the Prin-
cipal Conflicts. By Carl Nebel. With a
Description of each Battle, by George
Wilkins Kendall, Author of "The Santa Fe
Expedition," &c. Twelve beautifully -
coloured Plates, large folio, with Descrip-
tive letter-press, £Q 8s.
KoEPPEN. — The World in the Middle
Ages ; an Historical Geography, with Ac-
counts of the Origin and Development, the
Institutions and Literature, the Manners
and Customs of the Nations in Europe,
Western Asia, and Northern Africa, from
the Close of the Fourth to the Middle of
the Fifteenth Century. By Adolphus Louis
Koeppen, Professor of History and German
Literature in Franklin and Marshall College,
Pennyslvania. Accompanied by complete
Historical and Geographical Indexes, and
six coloured Maps. Pp. 232, printed in
double columns. Foolscap folio, half-
morocco, 25s.
Kossuth in New England; with a
detailed account of his Visit to Massa-
chusetts ; with the Speeches and Addresses
in full, carefully revised. 8vo, cloth, 93.
KosSFTH. — Life of Kossuth. By T.
C. Headley. 12mo, cloth, 8s.
Kossuth and his Gteneeals. By
H. W. Do Puy. With Portraits and Map»
Post Svo, cloth, 8s.
Le Normand. — Historical and Secret
Memoirs of the Empress Josephine, First
HISTORY.
49
Wife of IJ'apoleon Buonaparte. By Mile.
M. A. Le Korraand. Translated from the
French, by J. M. Howard, Esq. 2 vols. 12rao,
cloth, 10s.
Lee. — The Huguenots in France and
America. By Mrs. Lee. 2 vols. 12mo,
10s. 6d.
Lee. — Memoir of Pierre Toussaint,
born a slave in St. Domingo. By H. F. Lee.
12mo, 103.
Leibnitz. — Life of Godfrey William
von Leibnitz, On the basis of the German
Work of Dr. G. E. Guhrauer. By John M.
Mackie. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Lippincott's Cabinet Histories. —
The Histories of New York, Virginia, Ken-
tucky, and Georgia, from the Earliest Set-
tlement to the Present Time. By W. H.
Carpenter and T. S. Arthur. 12mo, cloth,
each vol. 4s.
LoEiNG. — The Hundred Boston Ora-
tors, appointed by the Municipal Authorities
and other Public Bodies, from 1770 to 1852 ;
comprising Historical Gleanings illustrating
the Principles and Progress of the Eepub-
lican Institutions. By James Spear Loring.
) Second Edition, enlarged, 8yo, cloth, IGs.
LossiNa. — The Pictorial Field-Book of
the American Kevolution ; or. Illustrations,
by Pen and Pencil, of the History, Bio-
gfraphy. Scenery, and Traditions of the War
of Independence. By Benson J. Lossing.
With several hundred Engravings on Wood,
from original Sketches by the Author. 2
vols, royal Svo, 45s. ; or, the 2 vols, separate,
vol. 1, 21s., vol 2, 253. ; 2 vols, half calf,
extra, 583.
Louis Napoleon, and his Times : with
Notices of his Writings ; a Memoir of the
Buonaparte Family ; and a Sketch of French
History. By Henry W. De Puy. With
Portrait. Crown Svo, cloth, 6s.
Mabison Papers. — The Papers of
James Madison (Fourth President United
States), comprising his Debates in the Con-
gress of the Federation of 1732—83, and
1787, with Letters and other Extracts ; also
his Debates in the Federal Convention of
1787. Illustrated by Fac-similes of the ori-
g'nal Manuscripts, including that of the
eclaration of Independence. Printed under
the authority of Congress. 3 large Svo vols.
£2 lis. New York, 1S42.
Magoon. — Living Orators in America.
By E. L. Magoon. 12mo, cloth.
Magoon. — Orators of the American
Revolution. By E. L. Magoon. Fourth
Edition. 12mo, cloth.
Hansfield. — The Mexican War. A
History of its Origin, and a detailed Account
of the Victories, which terminated in the
Surrender of the Capital ; with tlxe official
Dispatches of the Generals. By Edward D.
Mansfield. Tenth Edition. 12mo, cloth,
78. 6d.
Mapleson. — A Handbook of He-
raldry. By T. W. C. Mapleson. With Illu-
minated Illustrations and Illuminated Pages
of Arms of distinguished American Fami-
, lies. 8vo, 183.
Marvel. — The Battle Summer ; being
Tran3crij)ts from Personal Observations in
Paris during the Year 1848. By Ik. Marvel.
12mo, cloth.
Mayee. — Mexico. Aztec : Spanish
and Eepublican : a Historical, Geographical,
PoUtical, Statistical, and Social Account of
that County, from the Period of the Invasion
by the Spaniards to the Present Time ; with
a View of Ancient Aztec Empire and Civili-
zation, an Historical Sketch of the late War,
and Notices of New Mexico and California.
By Brantz Mayer, formerly Secretary of
the Legation to Mexico. With numerous
valuable Illustrations of Cities, Scenery,
Public Buildings, Costumes, Antiquities, &c.
New Edition. 2 vols, Svo, cloth, £1 Is.
Monette. — History of the Discovery
and Settlement of the Valley of the Missis-
sippi, by the then great European Powers,
Spain, France, and Great Britain, and the
subsequent Occupation, Settlement, and Ex-
tension of Civil Government by the United
States until the year 1846. By John Mo-
nette. With Maps. 2 vols. Svo, cloth,
£1 123.
MoEGAN. — League of the Ho-de-no-
Saunee, or Iroquois. By Lewis H. Morgan.
Svo, cloth, lOs. 6d.
Munsell.— Typographical Miscellany
(Historical and Practical) . By J. Munsell.
1 vol. Svo, cloth, 63.
Munsell. — Annals of Albany, By
Joel Munsell. 4 vols. 12mo, cloth, £1 5s. (oth
volume in press.)
Napoleox Bonaparte and Sir Hud-
sou Lowe at St. Helena. From the " South
ern Quarterly Review," July, 1854. Pp. 26,
Svo, sewed. Is.
Napoleon Dynasty ; or, the History
of the Bonaparte Family. An entirely New
Work. By the Berkeley Men. With 20
authentic Portraits. Pp. 624, royal Svo, cloth,
163.
O'Callaghan. — The Documentary
History of the State of New York, arranged
under the direction of the Hon. Charles
Morgan. By E. B. O'Callaghan, M.D. With
Plates and Maps. 4 vols. Svo, cloth.
Peabody.— Crimes of the House of
Austria against Mankind. Proved by Ex-
tracts from the Histories of Coxe, Schiller,
Robertson, Grattan, and Sismondi. With
Mrs. M. L. Putnam's History of the Consti-
tution of Hungary, and its Relations with
Austria. Published in May, 1250. Edited
by E. P. Peabody. Second Edition, 12mo,
cloth, 33.
Pickett. — History of Alabama. By
A. J. Pickett. 2 vols, crown Svo, plates, £1.
Pierce. — A History of the Harvard
University, from its Foundation in the year
1636, to the period of the American Revolu-
tion. By the late Benjamin Pierce. Svo,
cloth, 12s.
PiEECE. — The Life of Franklin Pierce.
By Nathaniel Hawthorne. Containing a Fine
Portrait, engraved on Steel, by Andrews.
1 vol. 16mo, 33.
Pierce. — The Life of General Frank-
lin Pierce, of New Hampshire. President of
the United States. By D. H. Bartlett.
12mo, cloth, 53.
50
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Pkescott. — History of the Conquest
of Mexico, With the Life of the Conqueror,
Hernando Cortez, and a View of the An-
cient Mexican Civilization. By William II.
Prescott. With Portraits and Maps. 3
vols. 8vo, £1 lOs.
Peescott. — History of the Eeign of
Ferdinand and Isabella, the Catholic. By
William H. Prescott. With Portraits, Maps,
&c. 3 vols. 8vo, £1 16s.
Prescott. — History of the Conquest
of Peru ; with a Preliminary View of the
Civilization of the Incas. By William H.
Prescott. 2 vols. 8vo, £1 43.
Peescott. — Biographical and Critical
Miscellanies. Containing Notices of Charles
Brockden Brown, the American I^ovelist. —
Asylum for the Blind. — Irving's Conquest of
Grenada. — Cervantes. — Sir Walter Wcott. —
Chateaubriand's English Literature. — Ban-
croft's United States — Madame Calderon's
Life in Mexico, — Moliere. — Italian Narra-
tive Poetry. — Poetry and Romance of the
Italians. — Scottish Sang. Da Ponte's Ob-
servations. — Ticknor's Spanish Literature.
By William H. Prescott. Porti-ait, 8vo, 123.
EiAMSEY. — The Annals of Tennessee to
the End of the Eighteenth Century. Com-
prising its Settlement as the Watanga As-
sociation, from 1769 to 1777 ; a part of
North Carolina, from 1777 to 1784 ; the State
of Franklin, from 1784 to 1788 : a part of
North Carolina, from 1788 to 1790 ; the Ter-
ritory of the United States south of the
Ohio, from 1790 to 1796; the State of Ten-
nessee, from 1796 to 1800. By J. G. M. Ram-
sey, A.M., M.D. With Map. 8vo, cloth, 18s.
BAMSA.Y. — The Other Side ; or. Notes
for the History of the War between Mexico
and the United States. Written in Mexico,
Translated from the Spanish, and Edited
with Notes. By Col. Albert C. Kamsay.
Maps, Plans, &c. 1 vol. small 8vo, 8s.
Reed.— Reprint of the Original Letters
from Washington to Joseph Reed, during
the American Revolution, Referred to in
the Pamphlets of Lord Mahon and Mr.
Sparks. 8vo, sewed, 23. 6d.
Republican Couet ; or, American
Society in the Days of Washington. With
21 Portraits of Distinguished Women. En-
graved from Original Pictures by Woolaston,
Copley, Gainsborough, Stuart, Trumbull,
Malbone, and other contemporary Painters.
1 vol. 4to, superbly bound in calf, £2 12s. 6d. ;
antique morocco, £3 133. 6d.
One of the noblest x^roductions of the Ame-
rican press.
Richtee. — Life of Jean Paul Frederic
Eichter. Compiled from various sources.
Together with his Autobiography. Translated
by Eliza Buckminster Lee, translator of
«' Walt and Vult." 12mo, cloth, 63. 6d.
Ripley. — The War with Mexico. By
E. S. Ripley. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth, £1 4s.
RoLLiN. — The Ancient History of the
Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Baby-
lonians, &c. By Charles RoUin, late Prin-
cipal of the University of Paris, &c. Trans-
lated from the French. In 4 vols., pp. 2406.
8vo, cloth, £1 123.
Roy.— History of Canada. By Jennet-
Roy. Pp. 234, 12mo, cloth, 2s. 6d.
Roy. — Histoire du Canada, a rTTsage-
des Ecoles et des Families. Par J. Roy..
Pp. 300 12mo, cloth, 33.
Sabine's (Lorenzo) American Loyal-
ists ; or. Biographical Sketches of Adhe-
rents to the British Crown in the War of the-
Revolution. Large 8vo, cloth, 12s.
Saxton.— The Fall of Poland ; con^
taining an Analytical and Philosophical Ac-
count of the Causes which conspired in the-
Ruin of that I^ation, together with a History
of the Country from its Origin. By L. C-
Saxton. With a Map and Illustrations. 2 vols^
12mo, cloth, £1.
Schimmelpennig. — The War between
Turkey and Russia. A iMilitary Sketch. By
A Schimmelfennig. Im]p. 8vo, sewed, pp. 68.-
2s.
Schoolcraft. — Information respect-
ing the History, Condition, and Prospects or
the Indian Tribes of the United States ^
collected and prepared under the direction
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, per Act or
Congress of March 3, 1817. By Henry R.
Schoolcraft, LL.D, Illustrated by S. East-
man, Captain, U.S.A. Published by Au-
thority of Congress. Parts 1 to 4, 4to, cl.,.
£4 4s. each. Complete sets at reduced prices..
Schoolceaet. — Notes on the Iroquois ;.
or. Contributions to American History, An*
tiquities, and General Ethnology. By H. K^
Schoolcraft. Bvo, 18s.
ScHOOLCBAET. — Personal Memoirs of
a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian
Tribes on the American Frontiers ; with brief
Notices of Passing Events, Facts, and Opi*
nions. A.D. 1812 to 1842. By Henry R.
Schoolcraft. Bvo, cloth, £1 Is.
ScHOOLCRAET. — American Indians t
their History, Condition, and Prospects^
from Original Is'otes and Manuscripts. By
H. R. Schoolcraft. 1 vol. 8vo, 14s.
Scott (G-eneral), and his Staff; com-
prising Memoirs of General Scott, Twiggs,
Smith, Quitman, Shields, Pillow, Lane, Cad-
walader, &c. With Portraits, and beautiful
Illustrations. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Sidney. — Life of Algernon Sidney j.
with Sketches of some of his Contempora-
ries, and Extracts from his Correspondence-
and Political Writings. By G. Van Sant-
voord. 1 vol. 12mo, 63.
SiMMS. — The Lily and the Totem ; or,
the Huguenots in Florida. A series of
Sketches, Picturesque and Historical, of the
Colonies of Cobgni, in North America. By
Gilmore Simms, 1562—1570. Second edi-
tion, 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Sketches of the Campaign in Northern
Mexico in 1846 and 1847. By an Officer of
the First Regiment of Ohio Volunteers.
Pp. 336, 8vo, cloth, lOs.
Smith. — The G-eneral History of Yir*
ginia, New England, and the Summer Isles,
with the Names of the Adventurers, Plant-
ers, &c., from 1584 to 1626. By Captain
John Smith. 2 vols. Bvo, Map and Plates,.
£1 4s.
Sparks.— A Reply to the Strictures of
HISTORY.
51
Lord Mahon and others, on the Mode of
Editing the Writings of Washington. By
Jared Sparks. Also, a Review of Lord Ma-
hon's History of the American Revolution,
from the " iN^orth American Review" for July,
1853. 8vo, sewed, 2s.
'rSPABKS. — Letter to Lord Malion : being
an Answer to his Letter, addressed to the
Editor of Washington's Writings. By Jared
Sparks. Pp. 4S, 8vo, sewed. Is.
VjStiles. — Austria in 1848 — 1849 : being
a History of the late Political Movements in
Vienna, Milan, Venice, and Prague; with
Details of the Campaigns of Lombardy and
Novara ; a Full Account of the Revolution
In Hungary ; and Historical Sketches of the
Austrian Government, and the Provinces of
the Empire. By William H. Stiles, late
■Charge d' Affaires of the United States at
the Court of Vienna. With Portraits of
the Emperor, Metternich, Radetzky, Jel-
lacig and Kossuth. 2 vols. Svo, £1 4s.
3Stoey (Josepli) Life and Letters of,
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of
the United States. By his Son, William W.
Story. 2 vols. Svo. cloth, £1 10s.
Tap PAN. — Illustrious Personages of the
Nineteenth Century. By H. P. Tappan.
Royal Svo, £1 5s.
Taylor (Major- General Zacbary) The
Life of, Twelfth President of the United
States. With Illustrations. By H. Mont-
gomery. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
'Tefft. — Kossuth (L.) and Hungary ;
Exposition of the Hungarian Revolution.
By B. F. Tefft. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
'Thomas. — An Historical and Geogra-
phical Account of the Province and Country
of Pennsylvania; and of New Jersey, in
America. With a Map of both. By Gabriel
Thomas, who resided here about fifteen
years. 12mo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Thomas. — History of th^ American
Wars, comprising the War of the Revolu-
tion, the War of 1812, and the War with
Mexico. By R. Thomas, A.M. Illustrated
>vith 150 Engravings. Pp. 542 and xii. Svo,
bound, 10s.
Thompson. — Memoir of David Hale,
late Editor of the Journal of Commerce.
With Selections from his Miscellaneous
Writings. By Joseph P. Thomnson, Pastor
of the Broadway Tabernacle Church, New
York. Second JEditioh. Svo, cloth, 93.
Thomson". — History of the Wars of
the United States, from the earliest Colonial
Times to the Close of the Mexican War.
By John Lewis Thomson. With Additions
and Corrections. Illustrated with numerous
Engravings from Designs b}'- W. Croome and
other Artists. Royal Svo. cloth, elegantly
gilt. Pp. 656, 143.
Trescot. — Diplomacy of the Kevolu-
tion. By W.H. Trescot. 12mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
1852.
Van Santvoord. — The Lives of the
Chief Justices of the United States. By
Geo. Van Santvoord. 1 vol. Svo, cloth, with
Portrait, 14s.
Wallis.— The Institutions, Politics,
and Public Men of Spain. By S. T. Wallis,
Author of ** Glimpses of Spain." Post Svo,
cloth, 7s. 6d.
Ward. — India and the Hindoos :
being a Popular View of the Geography,
History, Government, Maimers, Customs,
Literature, and Religion of that Ancient
People ; with an Account of Christian Mis-
sions among them. By F. De W. Ward.
12mo, cloth.
Washington. — The Writings of
George Washington : being his Correspond-
ence, Addresses, Messages, and other Pa-
f)ers. Official and Private, selected and pub-
ished from 200 folio volumes of Original
Manuscripts, purchased by Order of Con-
gress ; with a Life of the Author, Notes and
Illustrations. By Jared Sparks. In 12
elegant Svo volumes, with Portraits, Maps,
Plans, Eac-similes, and other Illustrations.
£4 16s. Boston. 1842.
Washington. — Correspondence of the
Revolution : being Letters from Eminent
Meu to George Washington, from the time
of his taking Command of the American
Army to the End of his Life. Edited by
Jared Sparks. 4 vols. Svo, cloth, £2 8s.
Washington. — The Life of G-eorge
Washington. By Jared Sparks. Svo, cl, 10s.
Washington. — Memoirs of the Mo-
ther and Wife of Washington. By Margaret
C. Conklin. 12mo, cloth, 4s.
Washington and John Adams, Me-
moirs of the Administrations of. Edited
from the Papers of Oliver Wolcott, Secre-
tary of the Treasury. By George Gibbs. 2
vols, royal Svo, cloth, £1 4s.
Watson. — Camp Fires of the Eevolu-
tion ; or, the War of Independence. Illus-
trated by Thrilling Events and Stories by
the old Continental Soldiers. By Henry C,
Watson. With Original Illustrations by
Croome. Svo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Webster. — Personal Memorials of
Daniel Webster ; with Portrait. Svo, sewed.
Is.
AVebster. — The Speeches, Forensic
Arguments, and Diplomatic Papers of Daniel
Webster. AVith a Notice of his Life and
Works. By E. Everett. 6 vols, large Svo,
cloth, £4 4s. •
Wheeler. — Historical Sketches of
North Carolina, from 1584 to 1851. By John
H. Wheeler, late Treasurer of the State,
Svo, illustrated with Engravings, 14s.
White. — • Historical Collection of
Georgia ; containing the most interesting
Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches,
Anecdotes, &c., relating to its History and
Antiquities, from its First Settlement to the
Present Time. Compiled from Original Re-
cords and Official Documents. Illustrated
by nearly 100 Engravings. By the Rev.
George White, M.A., Author of the "Sta-
tistics of Georgia." Royal Svo, cloth, pp. 704,
ISs.
WiLLAED. — History of the United
States, or Republic of America ; with a Chro-
nological Table and a Series of Progressive
Maps. By Emma Willard. New edition,
Svo, half-bound, 7s. 6d.
52
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Will Ai?D.— Abridged History of the
United States. 12mo, hall-bound, 3s. 6d.
Kew Edition.
WiNTHROP (John) History of New-
England, 1639—1649, New Edition. Edited
by James Savage. 2 vols. 8vo, £1 Ss.
X.
GEOGEAPHY.
EXPEDITIONS, VOYAGES, TEAVELS, &c.
Agassiz. — Lake Superior : its Physical
Character, Vegetation, and Animals, com-
pared with those of other and similar regions.
By L. Agassiz, and Contributions from other
eminent Scientific Gentlemen. With a Nar-
rative of the Expedition, and Illustrations,
by J. E. Cabot. 8vo, cloth, £1 4s,
Alexander. — History of Colonization
on the Western Coast of Africa. By Archi-
bald Alexander, D.D., Professor in the
Theological Seminary at Princeton, New
Jersey. Second Edition. Eoyal 8vo, lOs. 6d.
Baldwin. — A Pronouncing Gazetteer ;
containing Topographical, Statistical, and
other information, of all the more important
Places in the known AVorld, from the most
recent and authentic sources. By Thomas
Baldwin, assisted by several other gentlemen.
To which is added an Appendix, containing
more than Ten Thousand additional Names,
chiefly of the small Towns and Villages, &c.,
of the United States and of Mexico. Ninth
Edition. With a Supplement, giving the
Pronunciation of near Two Thousand Names,
besides those pronounced in the original
work ; forming in itself a complete '^^ocabu-
lary of Geographical Pronunciation. 12mo,
half-bound, 9s.
Baldwin. —A Vocabulary of Geogra-
praphical Pronunciation, for the Use of
Schools ; being the Supplement to Baldwin's
Pronouncing Gazetteer. 12mo, bds. 2s. 6d.
Baetlett. — Personal Narrative of Ex-
plorations and Incidents in Texas, New
Mexico, Califoi'nia, Sonora, and Chihuahua,
connected wdth the United States and Mexi-
can Boundary Commission, during the years
1850, 1851, 1852, and 1853. By John Eussell
Bartlett, U.S., Commissioner during that
period. In 2 vols. AVith Map and Illustra-
tions. Pp. 1170, 8vo, cloth, 303.
Bishop. — Travels of Anna Bishop in
Mexico, in 1849. With Illustrations. Small
Svo, cloth, 5s.
Bond. — Minnesota and its Resources ;
to which are appended Camp-Fire Sketches,
or Notes of a Irip from St. Paul to Pembina
and Selkirk Settlement on the Red River of
the North. By J. Wesley Bond. With
Map. Post 8vo, pp. 368, cloth, 5s.
Bourne. — The Captive in Patagonia;
or. Life among the Giants, A Personal Nar-
rative. By Benjamin Franklin Bourne. With
Illustrations. Post 8vo, cloth, Ss.
BowEN. — The Pictorial Sketch Book of
Pennsylvania; or, its Scenery, Internal Im-
provements, Resources, and Agricvilture.
Popularly Described, and Illustrated with
over 200 Engravings. By Eli Bowen. Royal
8vo, cloth, 12s.
Bulletin oe the American Geogea-
PHiCAL AXD Statistical Society. Vol. 1,
Part I., for 1852. Part II., for 1853. Svo,
sewed, 3s. each volume.
Captain Canot ; or, Twenty Years of
an African Slaver, being an Account of hia
Career and Adventures on the Coast, in the
Interior, on Shipboard, and in the West
Indies. Written out and edited from the
Captain's Journals, Memoranda, and Con-
versations. By Brantz Mayer. Pp. 464,
crown 8vo, cloth, cuts, 73.
Carnes. — Voyage from Boston toWest
Coast of Africa. By J. A. Carnes. Post
Svo, Ss. 6d.
Carpenter. — Travels and Adventures
in Mexico, in the Course of Journeys of up-
wards of 2500 Miles on Foot. By WilUam
W. Carpenter. Post Svo, cloth, 5s.
Cheever. — A Reel in the Bottle for
Jack in the Doldrums ; being the Adventures
of Two of the King's Seamen in a Voyage to
the Celestial Country. Edited from the
Manuscripts of an Old Salt. By Rev. Henry
T. Cheever. 1 vol. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Cheever. — The Sea and the Sailor.
Notes on France and Italy, and other Lite-
rary Remains of Rev. Walter Colton. With
a Memoir. By Rev. Henry T. Cheever,
Author of " The Whale and his Captors,"
&c. &c. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Cheever. — Madeira, Lisbon, and the
Mediterranean, Ship and Shore in. By Rev.
Walter Colton, late of the U.S. Navy. Re-
vised from the " Journal of a Cruise in the
Frigate Constellation." By Rev. Henry T.
Cheever. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Cheever. — Island World of the Paci-
fic ; being the Personal Narrative and Re-
sults of Travel through the Sandwich Islands.
By Henry T. Cheever, M.A. Post Svo, cloth,
5s. 6d.
Choules. — The " Cruise of the North
Star ;" a Narrative of the Excursion of Mr.
Vanderbilt's Party to England, Russia, Den.
mark, France, Spain, Italy, Malta, Turkey,
Madeira, &c. By the Rev. John Overton
Choules, D.D., Author of the " History of
the Missions," &c. i&c. With Illustrations.
Post Svo, cloth, pp. 354, 7s. 6d.
Colton. — Land and Lee in the Bos-
phorus and ^gean ; or. News of Constanti-
nople and Athens. By Rev. Walter Colton,
late of the U.S. Navy. Edited, from the
Notes and Manuscripts of the Author, by
Rev. Henry T. Cheever. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
GEOGRAPHY.
53
OoLVOCORESSES. — Four Years in a Go-
vernment Exploring Expedition to the Island
• of Madeira, Cape Verd Islands, Brazil, Coast
of Patagonia, Chili, Peru, &c. By Lieut.
George M. Colvocoresses, U.S.N., an Officer
of the Expedition. 1 vol. crown 8vo, cL, 6s.
Darby. — A Geographical Description
of the State of Louisiana ; presenting a View
: of the Soil, Climate, &c. By WiUiam Darby.
With a large Map. 8vo, lOs. 6d,
DiTSON. — Circassia ; or, a Tour to the
Caucasus. By George Leighton Dltson, Esq,
8vo, cloth, lOs. 6d.
Dix. — A Winter in Madeira; and a
Summer in Spain and Florence. By J. A.
Dix. Post 8vo, 6s. 6d.
El Mukattem, Lands of the Moslem;
a Narrative of Oriental Travel. 8vo, 93.
Emory. — Notes of a Military Eecon-
naissance from Fort Leavens worth, in Mis-
souri, to San Diego, in California ; including
parts of the Arkansas, Del Norte, and Gila
Kivers. By Brevet-Major Emoiy, Corps of
Topographical Engineers. Maps and Illus-
trations. 1 vol. 8vo, 5s.
Tabens. — Story of Life on the Isthmus.
By J. W. Fabens. Post 8vo, 2s.
I^ARNHAM. — Life, Adventures, and
Travels in California. By T. J. Farnham.
To which are added the Conquest of Califor-
nia, Travels in Oregon, and History of the
Gold Eegions. 8vo, 12s.
PiSHER. — The Book of the World; be-
ing an Account of all Eepublics, Empires,
Kingdoms, and Nations, in reference to their
Geography, Statistics, Commerce, &c. ; to-
gether with a Brief Historical Outline of
their Rise, Progress, and I'resent Condition,
&c. With an Index to all the Countries,
Cities, Towns, Islands, Oceans, Seas, Lakes,
Rivers, &c., mentioned on Colton's Illustrated
Map of the World. By Eichard S. Fisher,
M.D. With Maps and Charts, 2 vols. 8vo,
£1 4s.
TooTE. — Africa and the American Flag.
By Commander Andrew H. Foote, U. S.
Navy, Lieutenant Commanding U. S. Brig
Perry on the Coast of Africa, a.d.. 1850 — 51.
Plates. Crown 8vo, pp. 390, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Forrest. — Historical and Descriptive
Sketches of Norfolk and its Vicinity, includ-
ing Portsmouth and the adjacent Countries,
during a period of 200 Years ; also, Sketches
of Williamsburg, Hampton, Suffolk, Smith-
field, and other places ; with Descriptions of
some of the pi'incipal objects of interest in
Eastern Virginia. By William S. Forrest.
8vo, cloth, 163.
Franchere. — Narrative of a Voyage
to the North-west Coast of America, in the
years 1811, 1812, 1813, and 1814, or the First
American Settlement on the Pacific. By
Gabriel Franchere. Translated and Edited
by J. V. Huntington. With Illustrations.
Pp. 376, post 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Tremont. — The Exploring Expedition
to the Eocky Mountains, Oregon, and Cali-
fornia. By Brevet Col. J. C. Fremont. To
which is added a Description of the Physical
Geography of California. Crown 8vo, cl., 8s.
Oan-Eden : or, Pictures of Cuba.
Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 5s. 6d.
Gesner. — The Industrial Eesources of
Nova Scotia. By Abr. Gesner, Esq. With
Map and Illustrations. 8vo, cloth, 14s.
Goodrich. — Les Etats-Unis d'Ame-
rique; Apercju Statistique, Historique, Geo-
graphique, Industriel et Social, a 1' usage de
ceux qui recherchent des Eenseignements
precis sur cette partie du Nouveau Monde.
Par S. G. Goodrich, Consul des Etats-Unis
d'Amerique a Paris. 8vo, sewed, 8s.
Goodrich. — Travels and Sketches in
North and South America. By C. H. Good-
rich. 8vo, 8s.
Griswold. — The Isthmus of Panama,
and What I saw There, By C. D. Griswold,
M.D. 12mo, cloth, os.
GuYOT. — The Earth and Man: Lec-
tures on Comparative Physical Geography,
in its relation to the History of Mankind. By
Professor Arnold Guyot. Translated from,
the French, by Professor C. C. Felton. With
ntmierous Illustrations. 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
GuYOT. — Comparative Physical and
Historical Geography ; or, the Study of the
Earth and its Inhabitants. A series of gra-
duated courses for the use of Schools. By
Arnold Guyot.
Hammond. — Hills, Lakes, and Forest
streams; or, a Tramp in the Chateaugay
Woods. ByS. H. Hammond. 12mo, 7s. 6a.
Hart. — History of the Valley of the
Mississippi, By Adolphus M. Hart. Crown
8vo, cloth, 5s.
Heap. — Central Route to the Pacific,
from the Valley of the Mississippi to Cali-
fornia : Journal of the Expedition of E. P,
Beale, Superintendent of Indian Affairs in.
California, and Gwinn Harris Heap, from
Missouri to California in 1853. By Gwinn
Harris Heap. With 13 Plates. Koyal 8vo,
cloth, pp. 136, 10s.
Herndon. — Exploration of the Valley
of the Eiver Amazon. By Lieutenant Wm.
Lewis Herndon, U. S. IS". With Map and
Plates. 8vo, cloth, 16s.
HiNEs. — Life on the Plains of tlie Paci-
fic Oregon : its History, Condition, and
Prospects; containing a Description of the
Geography, Climate, and Productions; and
Personal Adventures among the Indians
during a Eesidence of the Author on the
Plains bordering on the Pacific, while con-
nected with the Oregon Mission, embracing
extended Notes of a Voyage Eound the
World. By Kev. Gustavus Hines. Post
8vo, cloth, 6s.
Hodgson. — Notes on Northern Africa,
the Sahara, and Soudan. By Wm. B. Hodg-
son, 8vo, 4s.
Howe.— Oriental and Sacred Scenes,
from Notes of Travel in Greece, Tui'key, and
Palestine. By Fisher Howe. Post 8vo, 9s. 6d.
Jarves. — Scenes and Scenery in the
Sandwich Islands, and a Trip through Cen-
tral America; being Observations from my
Note-Book during the Years 1837—1842. By
James J. Jarves. Embellished with Map
and Plates. Eoyal 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Jefferson. — Notes on the State of Vir-
ginia. By Thomas Jefferson* 12nio, JBs*
Boston, 1829.
54
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Johnson. — California and Oregon ; or,
Lights in the Gold Region, and Scenes by
the Way. By Theodore T. Johnson. With
a Map and Illustrations. Fourth Edition.
12nio, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Kane. — The United States Grinnell
Arctic Expedition in Search of Sir John
Franklin; a Personal Narrative. By Dr.
Kane, Surgeon to the Expedition. Illustrated.
' 8vo, 16s.
Kendal. — Narrative of the Texan
Santa Fe Expedition across the Great South-
western Prairies to the City of Mexico;
comprising^ a Description of a Tour through
Texas, With Illustration. By George Wll-
kins Kendal. 2 vols. postSvo, cloth, 12s.
Kidder. — Sketches of Brazil ; em-
bracing Historical and Geographical Notices
of the Empire and its several Provinces.
By D. P.Kidder. 2 vols, post 8vo, cloth,
^^ath Illustrations, 15s.
Knox. — An Historical Account of St.
Thomas, West Indies, -with its Rise and
Progress in Commerce; Missions and
Churches ; Climate, and its Adaptation to
Invalids ; Geological Structure ; Natural
History and Botany; and Incidental Notices
of St. Croix and St. John's ; Slave Insur-
rection in these Islands ; Emancipation and
present Condition of Labouring Classes.
By John P. Knox, Pastor of the Reformed
Dutch Church, St. Thomas, West Indies.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Letts. — California Illustrated ; includ-
ing a Description of the Nicaragua and
Panama Routes. By J. M. Letts. 48 Illus-
trations, 8vo, cloth, gilt, 14s.
Lewis. — The Valley of the Mississippi ;
Illustrated by a Series of 80 Views, in Tinted
Lithography, taken on the Spot, extending
from the Gulf of Mexico to the Falls of St.
Anthony. By H. Lewis. Also the Man-
ners, Habits, and Customs of the Indian
Tribes still found upon its Upper Waters.
Accompanied with Historical and Geogra-
phical Descriptions. To be completed in 24
Monthly Parts, 4to, at 2s. 6d. each. Parts
1 to 3 are published.
Lynch.— Official E-eport of the United
States Expedition to Explore the Dead Sea
and Kiver Jordan, By Lieut. W. F. Lynch,
U. S. N. Pp. 236, 4to, half-bound, with 16
Plates, £1 8s.
Macaulay. — Kathay ; a Cruise in the
China Seas. By W. H. Macaulay. Post
8vo, 3s.
Mahco Paxil's Yoyages and Travels
4 vols. ISmo, cloth, 6s.
Mauey. — The Amazon and Atlantic
Slopes of South America. A Series of Let-
ters published in the National Intelligencer
and Union Newspapers, under the signa-
tures of " Inca." By M. F. Maury, LL.D.,
Lieut. U.S. Navy. Revised and Corrected
by the Author. 8vo, sewed, 2s.
Mellen. — A Book of the United
States, embracing its Geography, Divisions,
Contributions, and Government, and pre-
Benting a view of the Republic generally,
and of the individual States. Together with
a History, Biographies, and Statistical Ta-
bles. Edited by Grenville Mellen. With
Engravings. 8vo, bound, 12s.
Monette. — History of the Discovery
and Settlement of the Valley of the Missis-
sippi by the then great European Powers,
Spain, France, and Great Britain ; and the
subsequent Occupation, Settlement, and Ex-
tension of Civil Government by the United
States until the Year 1846. By John Mo-
nette. With Maps. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth,
32s.
Mo RAN. — The Footpath and Highway ;
or, Wanderings of an American in Great
Britain in 1851 & 1852. By Benjamin Moran.
12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
MoSQiJERA. — Memoria sobre la Geo-
grafia Fisica y PoUtica de la Nueva Grenada.
Por el General T. C. de Mosquera, ex-Pre.
sidente de la Nueva Grenada. Con Mapa,
8vo, 3s.
Mosquera.— Memoir of the Physical
and PoUtical Geography of New Grenada.
By General T. C. de Mosquera, ex-President
of New Grenada. Translated from the Spa-
nish by Theodore Dwight. With Map, 8vo,
3s.
IS'ew Mexico. — Keports of the Secre-
tary of War, with Reconnaissances of Routes
from San Antonio and El Paso, New Mexico,
Texas, &c. By Lieuts. Bryan, Michler,
Simpson, Whiting, and others. 1 vol. 8vo,
Maps and Illustrations, 16s.
NoiiMAN. — Ruined Cities of Yucatan.
Rambles in "Xucatan; or, Notes of Travels
through the Peninsula ; including a visit to
the Remarkable Ruins of Chi-Chen, Zajnf,
Kabah, and Uxmal. With about 50 effective
Illustrations. By B. M. Norman. Second
Edition, 8vo, cloth, 16s. New York, 1843.
Olin. — Greece and the Grolden Horn ;
with Introduction, by Dr. McClintock. By
Steph. Olin. Post 8vo, 7s.
PoussiN. — The United States, its
Power and Progress. By Guillaume Tell
Poussin, late Minister of the Republic of
France to the United States. Translated
from the French by Edmund L. Du Barry,
M.D. 1 vol. 8vo, cloth, lis.
EiLEY. — Narrative of his Shipwreck
on the Coast of Africa. By James Riley.
8vo, cloth, 5s.
Eoss. — What I saw in New York ; or,
a Bird's Eye View of City Life. By Joel H.
Ross, M.D. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Sandwich Island Notes. By a
Haole. 12mo, cloth extra, 6s. 6d.
Santaeem.— Yespucius and his Yoyages.
By Viscount Santarem. Translated by
E. Childe. 12mo, cloth, 53.
Schoolcraft. — Summary Narrative of
an Exploratory Expedition to the Sources of
the Mississippi River, in 1820 ; resumed and
completed by the Discovery of its Origin ia
Itasca Lake, in 1832. By authority of United
States. With Appendixes. By Henry R.
Schoolcraft. Pp. 600, 8vo, cloth, I63.
Schoolcraft. — Scenes and Adventures
in the Semi-Alpine Region of the Ozark
Mountains of Missouri and Arkansas, which
were first discovered by De Soto, in 1541,
By Henry Rowe Schoolcraft. Svo, cloth,
12s.
GEOGRAPHY.
55
Shea. — Discovery and Exploration of
the Mississippi Valley ; with the original Nar-
ratives of Marquette Allouez, Membre,
Hennepin, and Anastase Douay. By John
Gilmary Shea. With a Fae-simile of the
newly-discovered Map of Marquette. 8vo,
cloth, 123.
SiLLiMAN. — "?^arrative of a Visit to
Europe in 1851. By Professor B. SiUiman,
sen., of Yale College. With Illustrations.
2 vols, post 8vo, cloth, 163.
Simpson. — Journal of a Military Ee-
connaissance to the Navajo Country, made
with the Troops under Command of Bre-
Tet Lieutenant-Colonel JohnM. Washington,
Chief of Ninth Military Department, and
Governor of New Mexico in 1849. By
James H. Simpson, A.M. Profusely Illus-
trated with Coloured and Tinted Lithographs.
8vo. cloth, 18s.
Sketches of New ExaLAND Scenery ;
forming original and beautiful Drawing Co-
pies from Nature. Oblong 4to, 3s. each
part.
Smith. — A Pilgrimaf^e to Egypt, em-
bracing a Diary of Explorations on the Nile,
with observations illustrative of the Man-
ners, Customs, and Institutions of the Peo-
ple, and of the present condition of the
Antiquities and Ruins. With numerous En-
gravings. By T. V. C. Smith, Editor of the
Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 12mo,
cloth, 6s.
Smith. — Canada; Past, Present, and
Future; being an Historical, Geographical,
Geological, and Statistical Account of Ca-
nada West. By W. H. Smith, author of
** The Canadian Gazetteer." Containing 10
County Maps, and 1 General Map of the
Province, compiled expressly for the Work.
2 vols. 8vo, cloth, 24s.
Stephens. — Incidents of Travel in
Yucatan. By John L. Stephens. 120 En-
gravings, from Drawings by F. Catherwood.
2 vols. 8vo, £1 10s.
Stephens. — Travels in Central Ame-
rica, Chiapas, and Yucatan. By John L.
Stephens. With a Map and 88 Engravings,
2 vols. 8vo, £1 10s.
Stephens. — Travels in Egypt, Arabia
Petraea, and the Holy Land. By John L.
Stephens. Engravings. 2 vols. 12mo, 10s.
Stephens. — Travels in G-reece, Turkey,
Russia, and Poland. By John L. Stephens.
Engravings. 2 vols. 12mo, lOs.
Strain. — Cordillera and Pampa, Moun-
tain and Plain. Sketches of a Journey in
Chili and the Argentine Provinces in 1849.
By Lieut. Isaac G. Strain, United States
Navy. Post 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Tappan. — A Step from the New World
to the Old and Back Again. With Thoughts
on the Good and Evil in both. By Henry
P. Tappan. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, lOs.
Taylor. — Views A-foot ; or, Europe
seen with Knapsack and Staff. By Bayard
Taylor. With Preface by N. P. WiUis.
Portrait. Small 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Taylor. — Life and Landscapes from
Egypt to the Negro Kingdoms of the White
Nile; being a Journey to Central Africa.
By Bayard Taylor. Illustrated with elegant
tinted Plates and Engravings on Wood, from
Drawmgs by the Author ; with a Steel Por-
trait. 1 vol. 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Taylor — The Lands of the Saracens ;
or. Memories of Palestine, Asia Minor,
Sicily, and Spain. By Bayard Taylor. Post
8vo, with Maps and Illustrations.
Thomas. — An Historical and Geogra-
phical Account of the Province and Country
of Pennsylvania, and of West New Jersey,
in America. With a Map of both Countries.
By Gabriel Thomas, who resided there about
fifteen years (a faithful fac-simile of the
edition of 1698). 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Thompson. —Photographic Views of
Egypt, Past and Present. By Joseph P.
Thompson, Twenty Illustrations. Post
8vo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
Tiffany. — The Canton Chinese ; or,
the American's Sojourn in the Celestial Em-
pire. By Osmond Tiffany, jun. Royal 8vo,
cloth, 6s.
Treqo. — Pennsylvania ; its Geography,
History, &c., with an Account of its Cli-
mate, Soil, Agriculture, Eesources, &c. By
C. B. Trego. Map. 12mo, 5s. 6d.
United States Exploring Expedition.
By Charles Wilkes, Commander U. S. N.
In 5 vols, imperial 8vo, New Edition, em-
belHshed with 111 Steel Plates, 218 Wood-
cuts, and 13 Maps. £4 4s.
United States Exploring Expedition.
Voyage Eound the World, embracing the
principal Events of the Narrative of the
United States Exploring Expedition. By
Charles Wilkes, U. S. N. 8vo, Illustrated
with 178 Engravings on Wood, cloth, 18s.
United States Illustrated ; in
Views of City and Country, with Descriptive
and Historical Articles. Edited by Charles
A. Dana. The West. Vol. 1, pt. 1. 4 plates,
with letter-press. 4to, sewed, 2s. 6d. The
East. Vol. 1, pt. 1, 4 plates, with letter-
press. 4to, 2s. 6d.
ViGNOLES. — Observations upon the
Floridas. By Charles Vignoles. 8vo, boards^
3s.
Wallis. — Glimpses of Spain ; or,
Notes of an Unfinished Tour. By S. T.
WaUis. Post 8vo, cloth, 7s.
Williams. — The Isthmus of Tehuan-
tepec. Being the result of a Survey for a
Railway to connect the Atlantic and Pacific
Oceans, made by the Scientific Commission,
under the direction of Major J. Gr. Barnard,
U. S., Engineer, with a resum^ of the Geo-
logy , Climate, Local Geography, Production,
Industry, Fauna and Flora of that Eegion.
Illustrated with numerous Maps and Engrav-
ings. By J. J. Williams, Principal As-
sistant Engineer. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth, 21s.
Williams. — The Middle Kingdom ; a
Survey of the Geography, Government,
Education, Social Life, Arts, Rehgion, etc.,
of the Chinese Empire and its Inhabitants.
With a New MapSof the Empire, and Illus-
trations, principally engraved by J . W. Orr.
By T. Wells Williams. Fourth Edition, in
2 vols. 8vo, cloth, £1 Is.
Willis. — ^A Health Trip to the Tropics.
56
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
By N. P. Willis, Author of ** Pencillings by
the Way," &c. 1 vol. post 8vo, 10s. 6d.
Willis. — Summer Cruise in the Medi-
terranean on Board an American Frigate.
By N. Parker Willis. 12ino, cloth, 63.
WiSLiZENUS. — Memoir of a Tour to
Northern Mexico, connected with Colonel
Doniphan's Expedition, in 18i6 and 1847.
By A. WisHzenus, M.D. With 3 Maps,
8vo, 7s.
XI.
MILITAEY & NAVAL SCIENCES.
Byrne. — Lectures on the Art and
Science of War, addressed to Irish- Ameri-
can Citizen Soldiers. By Oliver Byrne, Ma-
thematician, Civil, Military, and Mechanical
Engineer. Pp. 42, royal Svo, sewed, Is. 6d.
Chapman. — Instructions for Young
Marksmen in all that relates to the General
Construction, Practical Manipulation, Causes
and Liability to Error in making Accurate
Performances, and the Theoretic Principles
upon which such Accurate Performances are
founded, as exhibited in the Improved Ame-
rican Kifle. By John EatcUffe Chapman,
Civil Engineer. 12mo, cloth, 63, 6d.
CuLLUM. — Description of a System of
Military Bridges with India-rubber Pon-
tons. Prepared for the Use of the United
States Army. By Captain G. W. Cullum,
U.S. Corps of Engineers. 1 vol. Svo, el. 12s.
JOMiNi. — The Art of War ; or, a New
Analytical Compound of the principal Com-
binations of Stategy, of Grand Tactics, and
of Military Policy. Translated from the
French, by Major O. F. Winship and Lieut.
E. E. M'Lane. Royal Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
JoMiNi. — The Political and Military
History of the Campaign of Waterloo.
Translated from the French of General
Baron de Joraini, by S. V. Benet, U.S.
Ordnance. Post Svo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Kingsbury. — An Elementary Treatise
on Artillery and Infantry. By P. K. Kings-
bury. Post Svo, cloth, 43.
Knowlton. — Notes on Gunpowder,
Cannon, &c. By Lieutenant Knowlton. 4to,
pp. 73. 1S39.
Mahan. — A Treatise on Field Fortifi-
cation ; containing Instructions on the Me-
thods of Laying out. Constructing, Defend-
ing, and Attacking Intrenchments. With
the general Outlines, also, of the Arrange-
ment, the Attack and Defence of Permanent
Fortifications. By D. H. Mahan. Third Edi-
tion. ISmo, 63.
Mahan. — Treatise on Permanent For-
tifications. By D. H. Mahan. This work is
a Lithographed volume, with a number of
Plates, and is used as the Text-book on this
branch in the U. S. Military Academy. Not
being a subject of general interest, the sale
of it would not warrant its being printed and
published in the usual form. £1 6s.
Mahan. — An Elementary Treatise on
Advanced Guard, Out-post, and Detach-
ment Service of Troops, and the Manner of
Posting and Handling them in the presence
of an Enemy. By D. H. Mahan. ISmo,
cloth, 5s.
MoRDECAl. — Report of Experiments
of Gunpowder, made at Washington Arsenal,
in 1813 and 1844. By Captain Alfred Mor-
decai, of the Ordnance Department. Svo,
cloth, 18s.
Official Army Kegisteb, for 1853.
Published by order of the Secretary of War,
in compliance vsdth the Resolution of the
Senate, December 13th, 1815, and Resolu-
tion of the House of Representatives, Fe-
bruary 1st, 1830, and August 30th, 1842.
Svo, sewed, 2s.
Blunt. — The American Coast Pilot.
By J, Blunt. Sixteenth Edition. Svo, £1 Ss.
Blunt. — The Shipmaster's Assistant
and Commercial Digest; containing Infor-
mation necessary for Merchants, Owners,
and Masters of Ships, on Thirty-nine Sub-
jects. By Joseph Blunt. Svo, sheep, £1 10s.
BowDiTCH. — The New American Prac-
tical Navigator ; being an Epitome of Navi-
gation : containing all the Tables necessary
to be used with the Nautical Almanack, in
determining the Latitude and the Longitude
by Lunar Observations, and keeping a com-
plete Reckoning at Sea ; illustrated by pro-
per Rules and Examples. The whole exem-
plified in a Journal, kept from Boston to
Madeira, in which all the Rules of Naviga-
tion are introduced ; also, the Demonstra-
tion of the usual Rules of Trigonometry,
Problems in Mensuration, Surveying, and
Gauging; Dictionary of Sea Terms, &c. ;
with an Appendix. By Nathaniel Bowditch,
LL.D., and continued by his Son, J. Inger-
soll Bowditch. Tweuty-first Edition. 8vo,
bound, £1 8s,
Brady. — The Kedge-Anchor ; or.
Young Sailor's Assistant, appertaining to
the Practical Evolutions of Seamanship,
Rigging, Knotting, Splicing, Blocks, Pur-
chases, Running Rigging, and other Miscel-
laneous Matters applicable to Ships of War
and others. Illustrated with Seventy En-
gravings. By William Brady, Sailing Master,
U.S.N. Sixth Edition, Svo, cloth, I63.
CuMMiNGS. — The Western Pilot ; con-
taining Charts of the Ohio River aud of the
Mississippi, from the Mouth of the Missouri
to the Gulf of Mexico ; accompanied with
Directions for Navigating the same, and a
Gazetteer. By S. Cummings. Svo, bds., 5s.
Dana. — The Seaman's Manual; con-
taining a Treatise on Practical Seamanship,
Dictionary of Sea Terms, &c. By R. H.
Dana. 12mo, plates, 43. 6d.
Grifi?iths. — A Treatise on Marina
MILITARY AND NAVAL SCIENCE.
57
and Naval Architecture; or. Theory and
Practice blended in Shipbuilding. By J.
W. Griffiths. Illustrated with more than
Fifty Engravings. Third Edition. With
. lines of the Yacht America. 4to, cloth, £2 2s.
Jeffers. — A Concise Treatise on the
Theory and Practice of Naval Gunnery. By
William N. Jeffers, jun. 8vo, cloth, 18s.
Leavitt. — A New Method of Finding
the Longitude at Sunrise, Sunset, and at
Noon. By William Leavitt, Teacher of Na-
vigation. Second Edition. Is.
Loehain. — The Square-rigged Cruiser;
or, Lorrain's Sea Sermons, Dedicated to
the United States' Navy, Officers, and Sea-
men of American Merchantmen, and all
True Blues of every Nation under Heaven.
By Alfred M. Lorrain, of the Oliio Confe-
rence. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Maury. — Paper on the Gulf Stream
and Currents of the Sea. By Lieutenant
M. F. Maury. 8vo, Is. Eichmond, Va., 1844.
Maury. — A New Theoretical and
Practical Treatise on Navigation, in which
the auxiliary branches of Mathematics and
Astronomy, comprised of Algebra, Geo-
metry, Logarithms, Plane and Spherical Tri-
fonometry, the Motion of the Heavenly
{©dies. Tides, Variation of the Compass,
&c., are treated of; also, the Theory and
most simple Methods of finding Time, Lati-
tude, and Longitude, by Chronometers,
Lunar Observations, Single and Double Alti-
tudes, are taught. Together with a New and
Easy Plan for finding Difference, Latitude,
Departure, Course, and Distance. By M.
F. Maury, U. S. N. 8vo, bound, 10s. 6d.
Murphy and Jeffers. — Nautical Rou-
tine and Stowage, with Short Eules in Navi-
gation. By J. McLeod Murphy and W. N.
Jeffers. 8vo, cloth, 18s.
Begulatioks foe the Ukifoem and
Dress of the Navy and Marine Corps of the
United States. From the Original Text and
Drawings in the Navy Department. 15
Coloured Plates, 4to, cloth, £1 16s.
EiNGGOLD. — Charts and Sailing Direc-
tions to the Bay and Harbours of California.
By C. Kinggold. Koyal 8vo, 18s.
EoBiNSON. — A Treatise on Surveying
and Navigation ; uniting the Theoretical,
the Practical, and the Educational Features
of these Subjects. By Horatio N. Kobinson,
A.M. 8vo. sheep, 8s.
EoGERS. — The Shipwright's Own Book;
being a Key to most of the different kinds
of Lines made use of by Shipbuilders. Hlus-
trated by Seventeen Copper-plate Engrav-
ings of Drafts and Models. By G. W.
Eogers. 2 vols. 8vo, 18s.
Stuart. — The Naval Dry Docks of the
United States. By Charles B. Stuart, U.S. N".
Engravings and Plans. Imp. 4to, cloth, £2 2s.
-Stuart. — The Naval and Mail Steam-
ers of the United States. By Charles B.
Stuart, U.S.N. lUustrated by 30 Engrav-
ings on Steel, Copper, Stone, and Wood.
Imp. 4to, half- morocco, £2 10s.
.Stuart. — Plates from the above Work.
Engines of the United States Mail Steam-
ers, Arctic, Illinois, and Golden Gate, 4to,
Plates, in a neat Portfolio, 8s. 6d.
Stuart. — Views of the United States
Naval Steamers Mississippi, Powhatan, and
Fulton; and of the United States Mail
Steamers, Arctic, Illinois, and Golden Gate,
4to, Plates, in a neat Portfolio, 8s. 6d.
Sumner. — A New and Accurate Me-
thod of finding a Ship's Position at Sea, by
projection on Mercator's Chart, the princi-
ples of the Method being fully explained and
illustrated by Problems, Examples, and
Plates, with Kules for Practice, and Exam-
ples from Actual Observation. By Captain
Thomas H. Sumner. Third Edition, revised.
8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Totten. — Naval Text-hook. Letters
to the Midshipmen of the U. S. Navy on
Masting, Rigging, and Managing Vessels of
War. By B. J. Totten. 8vo, £1. Boston.
United States Official Charts,
prepared by Lieut. Maury, at the National
Observatory, and published by authority of
the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography,
Washington, United States.
1. North Atlantic Track Charts,
8 sheets £1 4
2. South do. do. do. 8 sheets 14
3. North Pacific do. do. Nos.
8, 9, 10, and 11, 4 sheets 12
4. South do. do. do. Nos 5 & 10
2 sheets 6
6. North Atlantic Pilot Charts, 2
sheets 4 6
6. South do. do. do. 2 sheets 4 6
7. Cape Horn do. do. 2 sheets 4 6
8. Coast of Brazil, do. 1 sheet 2 6
9. North Pacific do. do. Nos. 1
2, 3, 5, & 6, 5 sheets Oil 3
10. South do. do. do. No. 6,
1 sheet 2 6
11. Trade Wind Chart of the At-
lantic, 1 sheet 2 6
12. Whale Chart of the World, 4
sheets 10
13. Thermal Charts of the North
Atlantic, 8 sheets 14
14. Storm and Rain Chart of North
Atlantic, 1 sheet 2 6
Explanations and Sailing Directions to
accompany the Wind and Current Charts,
approved by ^^Commodore Charles Morris,
Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance and
Hydrography, and published by authority
of Hon. J. P. Kennedy, Secretary of the
Navy, By M. P. Maury, LL.D., Lieut.
U.S.N., Superintendent of the National Ob-
servatory. Fifth Edition, enlarged and
improved. 4to, 5s.
The President of the United States, re-
marks, in his late Message, that the advan-
tages of science in nautical affairs have
rarely been more strikingly illustrated than
in the fact that by means of the Wind and
Current Charts, projected and prepared by
Lieut. Maury, the Superintendent of the
Naval Observatory, " the passage from the
Atlantic to the Pacific Ports of our country
has been shortened by about forty days."
United States' Coast Survey,
founded upon a Trigonometrical Survey,
under the direction of Alexander D. Bache
and J. R. Hassler.
Triangulation, — By C. M. Eakin, J.
Ferguson, C. Renard, andE. Blunt.
Topogbaphy.— By H. L. Whiting, W. M.
58
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Boyce, J. Farelj, A. D. Mackay, T. H.
Gerdes, and B. T. Sands.
Hydrography. — Under the direction of
Q. S. Blake and C. II. Davis, Lieuts.
U. S. N.
1. Map of New York Bay and Harbour. 4s. 6d.
2. Map of the Harbour of New London. 3s.
3. Map of Oyster or Siosset Bay. 33.
4. Map of the Harbour of New Bedford. 3s.
6. Map of Little Kgg Harbour, 3s.
6. Map of New Haven Harbour. 3s.
7. Map of the Harbour of Holmes' Hole. 3s.
8. Map of the Harbours of Black Rock and
Bridgeport. 3s.
[ 9. Map of Edgartown Harbour. 3s.
Ward. — An Elementary Course of
Instruction on Ordnance and Gunnery.
Prepared for the Use of the Midshipmen at
the Naval School, Philadelphia; together
with a Concise Treatise on Steam, adapted
especially to the use of those engaged in
Steam Navigation. By James H. Ward.
8vo, boards, 16s.
Ward.— New Lunar Tables, for Cor-
recting the Apparent Distance of the Moon
from the Sun, Fixed Star or Planet, for
the effects of Reflection, Refraction, and
Parallac. Illustrated by appropriate Rules
and Examples, with Plan, and easy Direc-
tions for taking a Lunar Observation, and
some useful Remarks on the Sextant. By
E. C. Ward, Prof. Math., &c., U. S. N. S.,
Brooklyn, N. E. Royal 8vo, boards, 93.
XIT.
POLITICS.
BANKING, COMMERCE, CURHENCY, POLITICAL ECONOMY,
STATISTICS, &c. j
Africans at Home. — From tlie
" Southern Quarterly Review," July, 1851.
Pp. 28, 8vo, sewed. Is.
Alexander. — Universal Dictionary of
Weights and Measures, Ancient and
Modern : reduced to the Standards of the
United States of America. By J. H. Alex-
ander. Royal Svo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
Alexander. — Report on Standards of
Weights and Measures, to the Governor of
Maryland. By J. H. Alexander. Svo,
boards, 93.
Allen. — The Opium Trade; including
a Sketch of its History, Extent, Effects,
etc., as carried on in India and China. By
Nathan AUen, M.D. Svo, sewed, Is. 6d.
American Almanac. — Published An-
nually in one vol.^fcp., sewed, 5s. Boston.
The series was * commenced in 1830.
Complete sets at a reduced price.
American Statistical Annual for
1854. Compiled from authentic sources, by
Richard Swainson Fisher, M.D., and Charles
Colby, A.M. Pp. 540, Svo, half-bound,
7s. 6d. Will be continued annually.
Andrews. — Communication from the
Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the
Report of Israel D. Andrews, Consul of the
United States for Canada and New Bruns-
wick, on the Trade and Commerce of the
British North American Colonies, and upon
the Trade of the Great Lakes and Rivers.
Svo, cloth, pp. 926, and Atlas containing 4
large Maps, 21s. 1854.
AxjTO&RAPHS FOR FREEDOM ; edited
by Julia GriflSths. With Portraits. Svo,
7s. 6d.
Bartlett's Commercial and Bank-
ing Tables ; esibracing Time, Simple In-
terest, Unexpired Time and Interest, In-
terest, Account Current, Time and Averag-
ing, Compound Interest, Scientific Discount,
both Simple and Compound, Annual In-
come and Annuity Tables, equally adapted
to the Currencies of all Commercial Nations,
the True and Intrinsic Value of the Gold
and Silver Coins, and the Standard Weights
and Measures of all Commercial Countries.
Also, American, English, French and
German Exchange j together with the Ex-
change of Brazil, and the Importation of
Rio Coff*ee. Arranged with reference to the
Harmonizing of the Accounts and Exchange
of the World. The whole upon an Original
Plan. By R. Montgomery Bartlett, Prin-
cipal of Bartlett's Commercial College,
Cincinnati, Ohio. 4to, bound in russia,
£5 5s.
Blue Book and Official Eeghster
for 1853 ; containing the Salaries of all the
United States Ministers to Foreign Courts,
the Fees of the United States Consuls in all
parts of the world ; also the Salaries and
Perquisites of all the principal Collectors of
Customs, Naval Officers ; also the Salaries
of the Heads of Departments, Comptrollers,
Auditors, Clerks, &c., &c., in the Public
Departments. Svo, sewed, 2s. 6d.
Blunt. — The Shipmaster's Assistant,
and Commercial Digest; containing Infor-
mation necessary for Merchants, Owners,
and Masters of Ships. By Joseph Blunt,
Counsellor at Law. Fifth Edition, Svo, 30s,
Bulletin oe the American GsoaRA-
PHICA.L AND Statistical Society. Vol. 1,
Part 1, for 1852; Part 2, for 1853. Sfo,
sewed, 3s. each.
Canals. — Ileport of the Select Com-
mittee of the Assembly of 1846, upon the
Investigation of Frauds in the Expenditures
of the Public Moneys upon the Canals of the
State of New York. Svo, 10s. Albany,
1847.
Canals. — Laws of the State of New-
York in relation to the Erie and Champlain
POLITICS.
59
Canals ; together with the Annual Keports of
the Canal Commissioners. Maps and Plates.
2 vols., 8vo, 303. Albany, 1825.
Carey. — Principles of Political
Economy. In Four Parts. By H. C. Carey.
Fart 1. — Of the Laws of the Production and
Distribution of Wealth.
Tart 2. — Of the Causes which retard In-
crease in the Production of Wealth, and
Improvement in the Physical and Moral
Condition of Man.
Part 3. — Of the Causes which retard In-
crease in the Numbers of Mankind.
Fart 4. — Of the Causes which retard Im-
provement in the Physical Condition of
Man.
In all 3 vols. Svo, cloth, 423. Boston, 1837—
1840.
Cakey. — The Slave Trade, Domestic
and Foreign ; why it Exists, and hew it
may be Extinguished. By C. H. Carey.
Svo, cloth, 6s.
Caiiey. — The Harmony of Interests.
Agricultural, Manufacturing, and Commer-
cial. By Henry C. Carey. Second Edition,
Svo, sewed, 3s. 6d,
Carey. — On the Credit System of
France, England, and the United States.
ByH. C. Carey. Svo, cloth, 63. Philadelphia.
Carey. — On the Currency. By H.
C. Carey. Svo, cloth, 33. Philadeljihia.
Carey. — Essay on Wages. By H. C.
Carey. Svo, cloth, 73. 6d. Philadelphia.
Carey. — The Past, the Present, and the
Future. By II. C. Carey. Svo, cloth, 123.
Philadelphia.
Claussen.— The Flax Movement : its
National Importance and Advantages ; with
directions for the Preparation of Flax
Cotton and the Cultivation of Flax. By
Chevalier Claussen. 12mo, Is.
Colton's G-azetteer. — A New and
Complete Gazetteer of the United States of
America, founded on and compiled from
Official, Federal, and State Keturns, and the
Seventh National Census. By Richard
Swainson Fisher, M.D. One vol. royal
Svo, sheep, ISs.
Commerce and NAYiaATiON. — Keport
of the Secretary of the Treasury, trans-
mitting a Report from the Register of the
Treasury of the Commerce and Navigation
of the United States, for the Year ending
June 30, 1852. Svo, cloth, pp. 358, Ss.
Cotton" — Letter from the Secretary of
the Treasury transmitting Tables and Notes
on the Cultivation, Slanufacture, and
Foreign Trade of Cotton. Svo, sewed, 2s.
De Bow. — Encyclopaedia of the Trade
and Commerce of the United States, more
particularly of the Southern and Western
States ; giving a Yiew of the Commerce,
Agriculture, Manufactures, Internal Im-
provements, Slave and Free Labour, Slavery
Institutions, Products, &c,, of the South.
By J. D. B. De Bow, Professor of Political
Economy, &c., in the University of Loui-
siana. Second Edition, in one stout volume,
and a volume of supplementary matter,
forming together 2 vols. Svo. cloth, £3.
Eckfeldt & Dubois. — The Manual of
Gold and Silver Coins of all Nations, struck
within the last Century ; showing their his-
tory and legal basis, and their actual weight,
fineness, and value, chiefly from original
and recent assays; with which are incor-
porated, Treatises on Bullion and Plate^
Counterfeit Coins, &c. &c. By Jacob R.
Eckfeldt, and William E. Dubois. With
Engravings of Coins, by Saxton. 4to, half-
morocco, marble edges, 31s. 6d.
EcKEELDT & Dubois. — Coins, Coin-
age, and Bullion. Third Edition, with
numerous additions. By Jacob R. Eckfeldt
and William C. Dubois, Assayers of the
Mint of the United States. Svo, cloth,
Ss. 6d.
Fisher. — A New and Complete Statis-
tical Gazetteer of the United States of
America, founded on and compiled from
Official, Federal, and State Returns, and the
Seventh National Census. By Richard
Swainson Fisher, M.D. Pp. 9G0, Svo,
sheep, 18s.
Fisher. — The Progress of the United
States of America, from the Earliest Periods,
Geographical, Statistical, and Historical.
Compiled from ^Official Returns. By
Richard Swainson Fisher, M.D. Plates and
Map. Svo, bound, 123. 6d.
Fletcher. — Lessons and Studies on
Slavery. By I. Fletcher. Svo, ISs.
Feeedley. — A Practical Treatise on
Business; or, How to Get, Save, Spends
Give, Lend, and Bequeath Money ; with an
Inquiry into the Chances of Success and
Causes of Failure in Business. By Edwin
T. Freedley. Also Prize Essays, Statistics,
Miscellanies, and numerous Private Letters,
from successful and distinguished Business
Men. Fifth Edition. Post Svo, cloth, 6s.
GiDDiNGS. — Speeches in Congress on
American Slavery. By J. R. Giddings.
12mo, 7s.
GooDELL. — Slavery and Anti-Slavery ;
a History of the Great Struggle in both
Hemispheres. By William Goodell. Svo,
7s. 6d.
Goodrich. — Les Etats-Unis d'Ame-
rique; Apergu Statistique, Historique, Geo-
graphjque, Industriel et Sociel, a I'usage de
ceux qui recherchent des Renseignements
precis sur cette partie du Nouveau Monde.
Par S. G. Goodrich, Consul des Etats-Unis
d'Am^rique a Paris. Svo, sewed, Ss.
Gregg. — Commerce of the Prairies;
or, the Journal of a Santa Fe Trader,
during Eight Expeditions across the Great
Western Prairies, and a Residence of nearly
Nine Years in Northern Mexico. By J.
Gregg. Illustrated with Maps, and En-
gravings. 2 vols, post Svo, cloth, 93.
Gurley. — On the State of Liberia,
Government Report. By the Rev. R. R.
Gurley. Map and 6 plates. Svo, 2s. 6d,
Washington, 1850.
Hall. — The West ; its Commerce and
Navigation. By James Hall. 12mo, cloth, 63.
Hartshorn. — Commercial Tables ;
comprising Simple and Compound Interest
at Ten different Rates of per cent, per
annum, in Dollars, Pounds Sterling, Francs,
and other Currencies of Europe and Asia;
Exchange and Advance Tables of Dollars,
60
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Pounds Sterling, Francs, and other Curren-
cies, etc. By John Hartshorn. With Por-
trait of Mr. Abbot Lawrence. 1 vol.
imperial folio, half-bound russia, £i 4s.
Haywahd. — A Gazetteer of the United
States of America ; comprising a Concise
general View of the United States, and
particular Descriptions of the several States,
Territories, Counties, Districts, Cities,
Towns, Villages, their Mountains, Valleys,
Islands, Capes, Bays, Harbours, Lakes,
Rivers, Canals, Railroads, &c. ; with the
Governments and Literary and other Public
Institutions of the Country ; also, its
Mineral Springs, Waterfalls, Caves, Beaches,
and other Fashionable Resorts ; to which are
added, Valuable Statistical Tables, and a
Map of the United States. By John
Hayward. With Portrait. Pp. 880, royal
8vo, bound, 163.
HiLDRETH. — Despotism in America.
An Inquiry into the Nature, Results, and
Legal Basis of the Slave-holding System
in the United States. By Richard Hildreth.
12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
History oe Democracy in the
United States. — ISTos. 1 and 2, royal Svo,
Is. 6d. each.
Jay. — Miscellaneous "Writings on Sla-
very. By Wm. Jay. Post Svo, 7s.
Jefeerson. — Manual of Parliamentary
Practice ; composed Originally for the Use
of the Senate of the United States. By H.
Jefferson. 12mo, 4s. 6d. Philadelphia,
1850.
Johnson. — Keport to the Navy De-
partment of the United States on American
Coals applicable to Steam Navigation and to
other Purposes. By Walter R. Johnson.
Svo, sewed, 4s.
LlEBER. — Legal and Political Herme-
neutics ; or. Principles of Interpretation and
Construction in Law and Politics, With
Remai'ks on Precedents and Authorities.
Enlarged Edition. By Francis Lieber. 12mo,
7s. Boston.
Lieber. — A Manual of Political
Ethics; designed chiefly for the Use of
Colleges and Students at Law. Part I., con-
taining — Book I., Ethics, General and PoHti-
cal ; Book II., The State. By Francis
Lieber, Professor in Col. College, S. Caro-
lina. 2 vols. 8vo, 28s. Boston.
Lieber, — Laws of Property. — Essays
on Property and Labour, as connected with
Natural Law and the Constitution of Society.
By Francis Lieber, LL.D. With an Intro-
duction, by Rev. Dr. Potter. 18mo, 4s.
New York, 1842.
Lieber. — On Civil Liberty and Self-
Government. By Francis Lieber. 2 vols.
12mo, cloth.
Lord. — Lectures on the Progress of
Civilization and Government, and other
Subjects. By John C. Lord, D.D. 12mo,
cloth, 4s. 6d.
Manual oe Commercial Coree-
SPONDTiifCE, English and French ; or,
Selection of Commercial Phrases, taken
from a number of Letters, Accounts, Cata-
logues, Price Currents, and other Papers,
By a Merchant. 12mo, cloth, 43. 6d.
Matthias. — Eules of Order. A
Manual for Conducting Business in Town
and AVard Meetings, Societies, Boards of
Directors and Managers, and other Delibe-
rative Bodies. Based on Parliamentary,
Congressional, and Legislative Practice. By
Benjamin Matthias, A.M. Fifth Edition.
18mo, cloth, 23. 6d.
Merchants' and Bankers' Almanac
for 1855. Edited by J. Smith Homana,
Svo, sewed, pp. 148, 63. New York,
Published annually.
Mexico. — Codigo de Commercio de
Mexico. Pp. 286, 8vo, sewed, 7s. 6d.
Mexico, 1854.
New York City Directory, 1853 —
1851. By C. B. Rode. Royal Svo, I83.
PubUshed annually.
Ogden. — Tariff or Rates of Duties
payable on Goods, Wares, and Merchandise
imported into the United States of Amei'ica,
from and after December 1st, 1816, in con-
formity with the Act of Congress approved
July 30th, 1846 ; also containing all the
recent Circulars and Decisions of theTreasury
Department relating to Commerce and the
Revenue. Revised and corrected by E. D.
Ogden, Entry Clei'k, Custom House, New
York. Svo, half-bound, 7s. 6d.
Opdyke. — A Treatise on Political Eco-
nomy. By George Opdyke. 12mo, cloth,
53.
Ormsby. — A Description of the Present
System of Bank Note Engraving ; showing
its tendency to facilitate Counterfeiting,
To which is added, a New Method of Con-
structing Bank Notes to prevent Forgery,
By W. L. Ormsby. With Plates, imp. 4to,
cloth, £1 43.
Patent Oepice Eeports. — Eeport of
the Commissioner of Patents. Published
annually, in 2 Parts. Part 1, Arts and Manu-
factures. Part 2, Agriculture. Printed by
Order of Congress, Washington. Svo, cloth,
price of each volume Ts. 6d.
Potter. — Political Economy ; its Ob*
jects. Uses, and Principles considered. With
a Summary for the Use of Students. By A,
Potter, D.D. , Bishop of Pennsylvania. 18mo,
cloth, 33. 6d.
PoussiN. — Tlie Power and Progress
of the United States. By Guillaume Tell
Poussin. Translated from the French by E.
L. Du Barry. Svo, cloth. 143.
Pro-Slayery ARauMENT (The), aa
maintained by the most distinguished
Writers of the Southern States j containing
the several Essays on the subject of Chan-
cellor Harper, Governor Hammond, Dr.
Sims, and Professor Dew. Post Svo, cloth>
73.
Eae. — Statement of some New Princi-
ples on the Subject of Political Economy,
exposing the Fallacies of the System of
Free Trade, and of some other Doctrines
maintained in the *' Wealth of Nations.**
By John Rae. Pp. 414 and xvi., Svo, bound,
Boston, U. S., 1834.
Seaman. — Essays on tlie Progress of
Nations in Civilization, Productive Industry,
Wealth, and Population. Illustrated by Sta-
tistics of Mining, Agriculture, Manufactures^
i
USEFUL ARTS.
61
Commerce, Coin, Banking, &c. By Ezra C.
Seaman. 8vo, cloth, lOs.
Sewaed. — The Works of William II.
Seward. Edited by George E. Baker.
With Portrait. 3 vols. 8vo, cloth, £2 2s.
SXAVERY IX THE SOTJTIIEEN STATES.
— By a Carolinian. 12mo, 2s.
Smith. — A Manual of Political Eco-
nomy. By E. Peshine Smith. Post 8vo,
cloth, pp. 270, 6s.
Statistics of the United States. —
Seventh Census of the United States, 1850 ;
embracing a Statistical I'iew of each of the
States and Territories, arranged by Counties,
Towns, &c. With an Appendix, embracing
Notes upon the Tables of each of the States,
&c. By J. D, B, Do Bow, Superintendent
of the United States Census. Large 4to,
half-russia, pp. 1158, £2 2s. — The Appendix
separate, embracing ISTotes upon the Tables
of each of the States, &,c. 4to, sewed, pp.
136, 7s. 6d.
Statistics of the United States.
Abstract of the Seventh Census. Report of
the Superintendent of the Census for
December 1, 1852 ; to which is appended the
Ileport for December 1, 1852. 8vo, cloth,
6s.
STEAEN-S.-Notes on Uncle Tom's Cabin;
being a Logical Answer to its Allegations and
Inferences against Slavery as an institution.
With a Supplementary Xote on the Key, and
an Ai;)pendix of Authorities. By the Rev.
E. J. Stearns, A.M., late Professor in St.
John's College, Annapolis, M.D. Post 8vo,
sewed, pp. 31-1, 2s. 6d.
Steaes. — The same, bound in cloth,
3s. 6d.
SuMNEE. — White Slavery in the Bar-
bary States. By Charles Sumner. 12mo,
4s.
Tables of Exchange on London. —
Showing the Value in Halifax Currency of
any Sum from One Shilling to One Thousand
Pounds ; in a Progressive Series of One
Quarter per Centum from Par to Fourteen
per Centum above Par. 8vo, half-bound, 3s.
Taeiff of the Duties charged by the
Customs of the United States with Laws and
Regulations of Imports. 8vo, 5s.
Tayloe.— The Geographical andGreolo-
gical Distribution of Fossil Fuel; its Produc-
tion, Consumption, and Commercial Distri-
bution in all parts of the World : the Prices,
Tariffs, Duties, and International Regula-
tions ; with 400 Statistical Tables, and 1100
Analyses of Mineral Combustibles. By R.
C. Taylor. Second Edition. 8vo, Maps and
Diagrams, 24s.
TnoMPSON.-Autographical Counterfeit
Detector. By T. Thompson. 8vo, 2s. 6d.
Thompson. — Coin Chart Manual ; 1125
Fac-similes of Gold and Silver Coins found in
Circulation. By T. Thompson, 4to, 23.
De Tocqueyille. — On Democracy in
America. Translated from the French of
Alexis de Tocqueville. 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Teow's New Yoek City Dieectoey
(H. Wilson, Compiler) for 1854—1855,
With Map. Svo, boards, 18s. Published
annually.
Yan Doeen. — Mercantile Morals.
Thoughts for Young Men entering Mercan-
tile Life. By H. Van Doren. Post 8vo, 63.
Yenezijela. — Exposicion que dirige al
Congreso de Venezuela, en 1854, el Secreta-
rio del Interior y Justicia. Pp. 174,^ Svo,
sewed, 73, 6d. Caraccao, 1854.
Wayland. — Elements of Political Eco-
nomy. By Francis Wayland, D.D., Presi-
dent of Brown Univer.iitv. 12mo, cloth,
7s. 6d.
Wayland. — The same, abridged by
the Author, for the Use of Schools, 18mo,
half-morocco, 3s.
Williamson. — The Inland Seas of
North America ; and the Natural and Indus-
trial Productions of Canada, -with the real
Foundations for its future Prosperity. By
the Rev. James Williamson, A.M., Professor
of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy,
University of Queen's College. Pp. 78, 8vOj^
sewed. Is. 6d.
XIII.
USEFUL AETS.
AQRICULTUEE, AKCHITECTUKE, DOMESTIC ECONOMY, ENGI-
NEERING, GAEDENING, MANUFACTUEES, MACHINEEY, &c.
Allen — Philosophy of the Mechanics
of Nature and the Source and Modes of
Action of Natural Motive Power. By Z.
Allen. Illustrated by numerous Woodcuts.
1 vol. large Svo, cloth, £1 Is.
Allen. — Eural Architecture ; being a
complete Description of Farm Houses, Cot-
tages, and Out-buildings, together with
Lawns, Pleasure Grounds, and Parks ; also.
Useful and Ornamental Domestic Animals
for the Country Resident. By Lewis F.
Allen. Illustrated. 12mo, half-bound, 63.
Allen. — Catalogue of Agricultural and
Horticultural Implements, and of Field and
Garden Seeds, Fruit and Ornamental Trees,
Domestic Animals, etc. By R. L. Allen,
Svo, cloth, Is. New York, 1854.
American ENaiNEEEiNa. Illustrated
by large and detailed Engravings, embracing
various branches of Mechanical Art, Sta-
tionary, Marine, and Locomotive Engines,
Manufacturing Machinery, Printing Presses,
Tools, Grist, Steam, Saw, and RoUing Mills,
Iron Buildings, &c., of the newest and most
6
62
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
approved construction. By Gr. Weissenborn,
Civil Engineer. Publishing at New York, in
folio parts, at 6s. each.
Amekicax Machineey. a Collection
of Drawings in detail of the most approved
Construction of American Machinery, with
descriptions, calculations, and specifications.
By the American Engineering Society of
Ts' ew York. Koyal folio, cloth, £3 3s.
Annual of Scientific Discovekt ;
or. Year Book of Facts in Science and Art :
exhibiting the most important Discoveries
and Improvements in Mechanics, Useful
Arts, Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, Astro-
nomy, Meteorology, Zoology, Botany, Mine-
ralogy, Geology, Geography, Antiquities,
&c. ; together with a list of recent i^cientific
Publications, a Classified List of Patents,
Obituaries of eminent Scientific Men, an
Index of important Papers in Scientific
Journals, Reports, &c. Edited by David
A. WeUs, A.M. 12mo, cloth, 73. 6d, per
annual volume.
This work, commenced in the year 1850,
and issued on the 1st of March annually,
contains all important facts discovered or
announced during the year. Each volume is
distinct in itself, and contains entirely new
matter, with a fine portrait of some distin-
guished scientific man. As it is not intended
exclusively for scientific men, but to meet
the wants of the general reader, it has been
the aim of the editor that the articles should
be brief and intelligible to all. The editor
has received the approbation, counsel, and
personal contributions of the prominent
scientific men throughout the country.
Appleton's Mechanics' Magazine and
Engineers' Journal. Yols. 1 and 2, 4to,
16s. each.
Aenot. — Grothic Architecture applied
to Modern Residences ; containing Designs
for Entrances, Halls, Jitairs, and Pai'lours,
Window Frames, and Door Panellings, the
Jamb and Label Mouldings to a large scale ;
the Decorations of Chimney Brests and
- Mantels ; Panelling and Groining of Ceil-
ings, mth the appropriate Furniture. The
whole illustrated with working and perspec-
tive Drawings, and forming all the necessary
parts of a Modern Dwelling. By D. B.
Arnot. Illustrated with 40 Plates. .4to,
cloth, £1 Is.
Bated. — The American Cotton Spin-
ner and Managers' and Carders' Guide ; a
Practical Treatise on Cotton Spinning. By
Robert H. Baird. 12mo, 63.
Baeey. — The Fruit GTarden. Second
Edition. A Treatise intended to illustrate
and explain the Physiology of Fruit Trees.
Descriptions and Uses of Implements, '&c.
Illustrated. By P. Barry, of the Mount
Hope Nurseries, Rochester, New York. 1
vol. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Baetlett. — Elements of Analytical
3Iechanics. By W. H. C. Bartlett, LL.D.,
Pi'ofessor of Natural and Experimental Phi-
losophy in the U. S. Military Academy at
West toint, and Author of "Elements of
Mechanics, Acoustics, and Optics." 8vo,
half-bound, 16s.
Baetol. — A Treatise on the Marine
Boilers of the United States. By B. H.
Bartol; Engmeer, Svo, plates, cloth, lOs. I
Beans.— A Manual for Practical Sur-
veyors, containing Methods indispensably
necessary for Actual Field Operations. By
E. W. Beans. Pp. 108, 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6cl.
Bennett. — The Poultry Book. A Trea-
tise on Breeding and General Management
of Domestic Fowls ; with numerous Original
Descriptions, and Portraits from Life. By
John C, Bennett, M.D. 12mo, 6s.
Blake. — The Farmers' Every Day
Book ; or. Sketches of Social Life in the-
Country; with the popular Elements on
Practical and Theoretical Agriculture, and
Twelve Hundred Laconics and Apophthegms-
relating to Ethics, Keligion, and General
Literature ; also, live Hundred Receipts on.
Hygeian, Domestic, and Eural Econom}'.
By the Eev. John L. Blake, D.D. Svo,
bound, 7s. 6d.
Beeck. — The Flower Garden ; or,.
Breck's Book of Flowers ; in which are de-
scribed all the various Hardy Herbaceous,,
Perennials, Annuals, Shrul^by Plants, &c.^
&c. AVith Directions for their Cultivation..
By Joseph Breck. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Bullock. — The American Cottage-
Builder ; a Series of Designs, Plans, and
Specifications, from 200 dollars to 20,00a
dollars, for Homes for the People. By John'
Bullock. New Edition, revised. 22 plates,,
and many \toodcuts. Pp. 326, 12mo, cloth,
IDs. 6d.
Byen. — Artist and Tradesman's Com-
panion. By Dr. L. B3'rn. 12mo, 6s.
Btrn. — The ComjDlete Practical Dis-
tiller ; comprising the most perfect and>
exact Theoretical and Pracitical Description
of the Art of Distillation and Eectification,
&c. By M. Lafayette Byrn, M.D. With-
Engravings, 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Btene. — The American Engineer^
Draughtsman, and Machinist's Assistant;
designed for Practical and Working Men,
Apprentices, and those intended for the En-
gineering Profession. Illustrated with 200
Engravings on Wood, and 14 large Engraved
Lithographed Plates of recently-constructed
American Machinerj' and Engine Work. By
Oliver Byrne. Small folio, cloth, £1 8s.
Byene. — The Calculator's Constant
Companion for Practical Men, Machinists,
Mechanics, and Engineers. By Oliver
Byrne. 16mo, cloth, 5s.
Byrne. — The Pocket Companion for
Machinists, Mechanics, and Engineers. By
Oliver Byrne. 12mo, roan tuck, 6s. 6d.
Carstensen and Gildemeistee. —
NcAv York Crystal Palace. Illustrated De-
scription of the Building. By Geo. Car-
stensen and Chas, Gildemeister, Architects
of the Building. With an Oil-colour Exterio?
Yiew, and Six large Plates containing Plans,
Elevations, &c., from the Working Draw-
ings of the Architects. Pp. 76, royal Svo,
cloth, 123.
Chadwick. — Homo Cookery ; Eeceipts,.
Foreign and Domestic. By Mrs. Chadwick.
Svo, 33. 6d.
Cock. — Tne American Poultry Book;,
being a Practical Treatise on the Manage-
ment of Domestic Poultry. By Micajah B..
Cock. 18mo, cloth, 33.
USEFUL ARTS.
63
CoLBUEN. — The Locomotive Engine ;
including a Description of its Structure,
Rules for estimating its Capabilities, and
Practical Observations on its Construction
and Management. By Zerah Colburn. New
Edition. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Curtis. — The Inventors' Manual of
Legal Principles, and Guide to the Patent
Office. By George T. Curtis. 12mo, 7s.
Daguerreotype. — Plain Directions
for obtaining Photographic Pictures by the
Calotype and Energiatype ; also, upon Albu-
menized Paper and Glass, by Collodion and
Albumen, &c. &c. Including a Practical
Treatise on Photography, with a Supple-
ment, containing the Heliochrome Process.
Also, Practical Hints on the Daguerreotype;
being simple Directions for obtaining Por-
traits, Views, Copies of Engravings, Draw-
ings, Sketches of Machinery, &c., by the
Daguerreotype Process, including the latest
Improvements in Fixing, Colouring, and
Engraving the Pictures, with a Description
of the Apparatus. Illustrated with Engrav-
ings. Pp. 224. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
'Dana. — A Muck-^Ianual for Farmers.
By S. L. Dana. Third Edition. 12mo, cloth,
6s. 6d.
D'AuBUissoN. — A Treatise on Hydrau-
lics, for the Use of Engineers. By T. P.
D'Aubuisson de Voisins. Translated from
the French, and adapted to the English units
of Measure, by Joseph Bennett, CivU Engi-
neer. 8vo, cloth, 143.
Davis. — Book of the Telegraph ; Tvitli
numerous Illustrations. By Daniel Davis.
12mo, sewed. Is. Cd.
DowNiNa. — The Architecture of Coun-
- try Houses, including Designs for Cottages,
•Farm Houses, and Villas ; with Eemarks on
Interiors, Furniture, and best modes of
Warming and Ventilating. With 320 Illus-
trations. By A. J. Do vvning. Svo, 24a.
Downing. — Cottage Eesidences ; or, a
Series of Designs for Rural Cottages and
Cottage Villas, and their Gardens and
Grounds, adapted to North America. By A.
J. Downing. Svo, cloth, 14s.
Downing. — The Fruits and Fruit Trees
of America; or, the Culture, Propagation,
and Managfement, in the Garden and Or-
chard, of Fruit Trees generally; with De-
scriptions of all the Finest Varieties of Fruit,
native and foreign, cultivated in this Country.
By A. J. Downing. Illustrated with Co-
loured Engravings. Crown Svo, 9s. {
Downing.— Eural Essays. By A. J. 1
Downing. Royal Svo, 15s.
Duncan. — Practical Land Surveyor's
Guide. By Andr. Duncan. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Eastman. — Treatise on Topographical
Drawing. By Lieutenant Eastman, tjniti»d
States Army. Svo, Plates, 9s. !IS"cw York,
1839.
IEllet. — The Mississippi and Ohio
Rivers ; containing Plan for the Protection
of the Delta from Inundation, and Investi-
gations of the Practicability and Cost of
Improving the I^avigation of the Ohio and
other Rivei's by means of Reservoirs With
an Appendix on the Bars at the Mouths of
the Mississippi. By Charles EUet, jun,,
C.E. Royal Svo, cloth, 16s.
Elliott. — Fruit Book ; or, the Ame-
rican Fruit-grower's Guide. By F. R. El-
liott. Post Svo, 8s. 6d.
Ewbank. — Account of Hydraulic and
other Machines for Raising Water, (By
Thomas Ewbank. Svo, numerous Illustra-
tions, 18s.
Feuohtwanger. — Treatise on Gems,
in reference to their Practical and Scientific
Value ; for the use of Chemists, Jewellers,
Lapidaries, &c. By Dr. Lewis Feueht-
wanger. Svo, 9s. New Yoi'k, 1839.
Field. — City Architecture ; or, De-
signs for Dwelling-houses, Stores, Hotels,
&c. In 20 Plates. With Descriptions, and
an Essa.y on the Principles of Design. By
M. Field. Pp. 76, Svo, cloth, 10s. 6d. Nevr
York.
Fowler. — A Home for All; or, a
Xew, Cheap, Convenient, and Superior
Mode of Building. By O. S. Fowler. Svo,
sewed, 23.
Fowler. — A Home for All ; or, the
Gravel Wall and Octagon Mode of Building.
By O. S. Fowler. Post Svo, 5s.
Fry. — A Complete Treatise on Artifi-
cial Fish-breeding, including the Reports
on the subject made to the French Academy
and the French Government ; and particu-
lars of the Discovery as purs\ied in England,
Translated and edited by W. H. Fry. Il-
lustrated with Engravings. Pp. 200, 12mo,
cloth, 4s.
Gillespie. — A Manual of the Princi-
ples and Practice of Road-making; com-
prising the Location, Construction, and Im-
provement of Roads (Common, Macadam,
Paved, Plank, &c.) and Railroads. By W.
M. Gillespie, A.M., C.E., Professor of Civil
Engineering in Union College. Eighth Edi-
tion, with additions. Pp. 372, post Svo,
cloth, 9s.
Greeley.— Art and Industry as repre-
presented in the Exhibition at the Crystal
Palace, New York, 18,53, and showing the
progress and state of the various Useful and
Esthetic Pursuits. From the " New York
Tribune." Revised and edited by Horace
Greeley. Pp. 386, crown Svo, cloth, 5s.
Griffiths. — Treatise on Marine and
Naval Architecture ; or, Theory and Prac-
tice blended in Ship-building. By John W.
Griffiths; Marine and Naval Architect. Il-
lustrated with more than 50 Engravings,
Third Edition. Pp. 422, 4to, cloth, £2 2s.
Griscom. — The Uses and Ahuses of
Air, showing its Influence in sustaining Life
and prodvicing Disease ; with Remarks on
the Ventilation of Houses, &c. By John H.
Griscom, M.D. Second Edition, with Illus-
trations. Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Hale. — The New Household Receipt
Book ; containing Maxims, Directions, and
Specifics for promoting Health, Comfort,
and Improvement in the Homes of the Peo-
ple. Compiled from the best Authorities,
with many Receipts never before collected.
By Sarah Josepha Hale. Svo, cloth, pp.
394, 6s.
64
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Hartley. — An Essay on Milk (Histo-
rical, Scientific, and Practical), as an Article
of Human Sustenance. By li. M. Hartley.
12mo, 6s. New York, 1812.
Haswell. — Engineers' and Mechanics'
Pocket Book for 1853 — 1854; containing
United States and Foreign Weights and
Measures, Mensuration of Surfaces and
Solids; the Mechanical Powers, Geometry,
Strength, Tonnage, Steam and the Steam
Engine, Cables, Anchors, Combustion, Fuels,
Air, Guns, &c. By Charles 11. Haswell, En-
gineer-in-Chief U. S. Navy. Eighth Edition.
12mo, roan tuck, 6s. 6d.
Hatpield. — The American House Car-
penter. By F. G. Hatfield. Fourth Edi-
tion. 300 Engravings. 8vo, 14s.
Haupt. — Greneral Theory of Bridge
Construction ; containing Demonstrations of
the Principles of Art and their Application
to Practice ; furnishing the means of Calcu-
lating the Strain upon the Chords, Ties,
Braces, Counter-braces, and other parts of
a Bridge or Frame of any description. With
Practical Illustrations. By Herman Haupt,
A.M., Civil Engineer, United States, Ame-
rica, General Superintendent of the Penn-
sylvania Railroad, formerly Professor of
Mathematics in Pennsylvania College, 1 vol.
8vo, cloth, 16s.
Hazen. — Popular Technology ; or,
Trades and Professions. By E. Hazen.
Plates. 2 vols. 8vo, 7s. New York, 1842.
IIenck. — Field-Book for Railroad En-
gineers; containing Formulae for Laying out
Curves, determining Frog Angles, LeveUing,
Calculating Earth-work, <kc. &c. ; together
with Tables of Radii, &c. &c. By John B.
Henck, A.M., Civil Engineer. 12mo, roan
tuck, gilt, pp. 260, 10s. 6d.
HoMERGUE.— The Silk-CuUurist's Ma-
nual. 12mo, 7s. 6d. Philadelphia, 1839.
Hughes. — The American Miller and
Millwright's Companion. By W. C. Hughes.
Illustrated by numerous Cuts of Machinery,
&c. 12mo, 6s.
Humphrey. —American Handbook of
the Daguerreotype, giving the most ap-
proved and convenient methods for preparing
the Chemicals and the Combinations used in
the Art ; containing the Daguerreotype,
Electrotype, and various other Processes
employed in taking Heliographic Impres-
sions. By S. D. Humphrey. 12mo, cloth,
4s. 6d.
Irving, — One Thousand Eeceipts in
Modern and Domestic Cookery. By Luc.
Irving. Post 8vo, 43.
Jenks.— The Brachial Telegraph. An
Original Method of Conversing and Signal-
izing on Latid and at Sea, by means of the
Human Arms, at any and all Distances, even
within furthest range of the Telescope. By
Captain Robert W. Jenks. 8vo, sewed, 2s. 6d.
Johnson. — G-reat Exhibition of 1851.
Beport of Benj. P. Johnson, Agent of the
State of Xew York, appointed to attend the
Exhibition of the Industry of All Xations,
held in London, 1851. With Plan and Plate
of the Prize Medal, Svo, r>s.
Johnson.— The Use of Anthracite in
the Manufacture of Iron. By W. II. John-
son, A.M., C.E., Professor of Chemistry, &c.
12mo, 5s. Boston, 1811.
Jones. — Historical Sketch of the Elec-
tric Telegraph. By Alexander Jones. Svo,
cloth, 63.
KiNGSFORD. — The History, Structure,
and Statistics of Plank Roads in the United
States and Canada. By W. Kingsford, C.E.
With Remarks on Roads in general, by F. G.
Skinner. Svo, 33.
Knapen. — 'Mechanics' Assistant : a
Thorough Practical Treatise on Mensuration
and the Sliding Ilule ; teaching the manner
of Drawing all Regular Superficies, and the
Contents of all Regular Solids, both by N"um-
bers and the Sliding Rule, &c. Adapted for
the use of Carpenters, Shipwrights, and Arti-
sans generally. By D, M. Knapen. 12mo,
half-bound, Gs,
KuRTEN. — The Art of Manufacturing
Soaps, including the most recent Discoveries ;
embracing the best Methods for making all
kinds of Hard, Soft, and Toilet Soaps ; also,
Olive Oil Soap, and others necessary in the
Fabrication of Cloths ; with Receipts for
making Transparent and Camphine Oil Can-
dles. By Philip Kurt en. Practical Soap and
Candle Maker at Cologne on the Rhine,
Post Svo, pp. 240, cloth, 6s.
Larkin. — The Practical Brass and Iron
Founder's Guide : a concise Treatise on the
Art of Brass-founding, Moulding, &c. With
numerous Practical Rules, Tables, and Re-
ceipts for Gold, Silver, Tin, and Copper
Founding; Plumbei's, Bronze and Bell
Founders, Jewellers, &c. &c. By James
Larkin. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
LiEBER. — The Assay er's Guide ; or.
Practical Instructions to Assayers, Refiners,
and Smelters, &c. By Oscar M. Lieber. 1
vol. 12mo, cloth, 43. 6d.
Long. — The Ancient Architecture in
America ; its Historical Value and Parallel-
ism of Development with the Architectures
of the Old World. By — Long. 11 Plates.
Svo, 33. 6d. New York, 1849.
Macfarlane. — History of Propellers
and Steam Navigation. With Biographical
Sketches of the Early Inventors. By Robert
Macfarlane, C. E. 83 Engravings. 12mo,
cloth, pp. 144, 4s. 6d. Ncav York.
Mahan. — Civil Engineering, for the
Use of the United States Military Academy.
By D. II. Mahan. Fourth Edition. Svo,
cloth, 18s.
Mahan. — Industrial Drawing ; com-
prising the Description and Uses of Drawing
Instruments, the Construction of Plan©
Figures, the Projection and Sections of Geo-
metrical Solids; Architectural Elements,
Mechanism, and Topographical Drawing;
with Remarks on the Method of Teaching
the Subject. For the Use of Academies and
Common Schools. By D. II. Mahan, LL.D.
Svo, cloth, 14s.
Meehan. — American Handbook of Or-
namental Trees. By Thomas Meehan, Gar-
dener. 12mo, cloth^ pp. 258, 5s.
MiEFLiN. — Methods of Location ; or,
Modes of Describing and Adjusting Railway
Curves and Tangents, as practised by the
Engineers of Pennsylvania. By Samuel W.
USEFUL ARTS.
65
Mifflin, Civil Engineer. Second Edition.
18mo, sewed, 3s.
lIiLLiNaTOX. — Elements of Civil En-
gineering ; being an Attempt to consolidate
the Principles of the various Operations of
the Civil Engineer into one point of Vievr,
for the Use of Students. By John Milling-
ton. With 273 Illustrations. 8vo, £1 Is.
AlmER.— Domestic Poultry Book. Bj
T. U. Miner. Post 8vo, 43.
MiNiFiE.— A Text-book of Geometrical
Drawing, for the Use of Mechanics and
Schools. With Illustrations for Drawing
Plans, Sections, and Elevations of Buildings
and Machinery ; an Introduction to Isome-
trical Drawing; and an Essay on Linear
Perspective and Shadows. The whole Illus-
trated ynth 56 Steel Tlates, containing over
200 Diagrams. By WiUiam Minifie. Third
Edition. Imperial 8vo, cloth, 16s.
Minifie. — The same, abridged for the
Use of Schools. With 48 Steel Plates. 12mo,
bound, 7s. 6d.
MoRFiT.— Soap and Candle3. The
Chemistry of Soap Candles. By Campbell
Morfit. jN^umerous Illustrations. 8vo, 30$.
^loRFiT. — A Complete Treatise on
Tanning, Currpng, and every Branch of
Leather-dressing ; from the French, and
from Original Sources. By Campbell Morfit.
Illustrated with several Hundred Engravings.
8vo, cloth, £1 8s. N
Morfit. — Perfumery, its Manufacture
and Use ; with Instructions in every Branch
of the Art. Illustrated by numerous Wood-
cuts ; from the French of Celnai't and other
late Authorities. By Campbell Morfit. Se-
cond Edition. Crown 8vo, 9s.
Nash. — The Progressive Farmer. A
Scientific Treatise on Agricultural Chemistry,
the Geology of Agriculture; on Plants, Ani-
mals, Manures, and Soils, applied to Prac-
tical Agriculture. By J. A. Nash. Post 8vo,
cloth, 4s.
NoRRis. — Handbook for Locomotive
Engineers and Machinists. By Septimus
Norris. 1 vol. 8vo, cloth, Ss. 6d.
Nystrom. — A Treatise on Screw Pro-
pellers and their Steam Engines ; with Prac-
, tical Eules and Examples how to Calculate
and Construct the same for any Description
of Vessels ; a,ccompanied with a Treatise on
Bodies in Motion, in Fluid, exemplified for
Propellers and Vessels ; also, a full Descrip-
tion of the Calculating Machine. By T. AV.
Nystrom. With Plates. 8vo, cloth, £1 Is.
I^Tystrom. — Pocket Book of Mechanics
and Engineering. By John H. Nysti'om.
16mo, roan tuck, 7s. Gd.
Ormsby. — A Description of the Present
System of Bank-27ote Engraving; showing
its tendency to facilitate Counterfeiting. To
-which is added, a New Method of Construct-
ing Bank Notes to prevent Forgery. By W.
L. Ormsby. With Plates. Imperial 4to,
' cloth, £1 4s.
Overman. — The Manufacture of Iron,
in all its various Branches, including a De-
scription of Wood-cutting, Coal-digging, the
Burning of Charcoal and Coke, &c. &c. Also,
- a Description of Forge Hammers, EoUing
JMills, Blast Machines, Hot Blast, &c. To
which is added, an Essay on the Manufacture
of Steel. By Frederick Overman, Mining
Engineer. With 150 Wood Engravings.
Third Edition, revised. Svo, cloth, pp. 492.
£1 Is.
Overman. — The Manufacture of Steel ;
containing the Practice and Principles of
Working and Making Steel; a Handbook
for Blacksmiths and Workers in Steel and
Iron, &c., and for men of Science and Ai't.
By F. Overman. 12mo, 4s. Gd.
Overman. — The Moulders' and
Founders' Pocket Guide : a Treatise on
Moulding and Founding in Green Sand, Dry
Sand, Loam, and Cement, &c. By F. Over-
man. With 42 Wood Engravings. 12mo, 68.
Overman. — A Treatise on Metallurgy ;
comprising Mining, and General and Parti-
cular Metallurgical Operations ; with a De-
scription of Charcoal, Coke, and Anthracite
Furnaces, Blast Machines, Hot Blast, Forge
Hammers, Rolling MiUs, &c. &c. By Frede-
rick Overman. Second Edition. With 377
Wood Engravings. Svo, cloth, £1 8s.
Overman. — Practical Mineralogy, Min-
ing, and Assaying ; Instructions for Assaying
and Mining, Description of Useful Minerals,
&c. By F. Overman. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Overman. — Mechanics for the Mill-
wright, Machinist, Engineer, Civil Engineer,
Architect, and Student; containing a clear-
Elementary Exposition of the Principles and
Practice of Building Machines. By Fi*ederick
Overman. Illustrated by 154 Vr^'ood Engrav-
ings, by William Gihon. Crovm Svo, cL, 7s.
Owen. — Hints on Public Architecture.
By Ptobert Dale Owen. 4to, cloth, £1 10s.
Parsons. — The Rose ; its History, Poe-
try, Culture, and Classification. By S. B.
Parsons. With 2 large Coloured Plates, and.
other Engravings. 1 vol. royal Svo, cloth,
7s. 6d.
Patents. — Patent Office Eeports. An-
nual Reports of the Commissioners of Pa-
tents. 2 vols, annually. Svo, cloth, 73. 6d.
each.
Photography IN THE United States.
— An able Article contained in Two Num-
bers of the New York Tribune. Cd.
Potter. — The Principles of Science,
applied to the Domestic and Mechanic Arts,
and to Manufactures and Agriculture ; with.
Reflections on the Progress of the Arts, and
their Influence on National Welfare. By
Alonzo Potter, D.D., Professor of Moral
Philosophy and Rhetoric, Union College.
12mo, 6s. Boston.
Prince. — History of the Vine ; 20O
Foreign, and SO American Varieties. By
W. R. Prince. Svo. New York, 1830.
RiDDELL. — The Scientific Stair Builder.
By Robert Riddell. Illustrated with 40
Plates. Large 4to, £1 16s.
EiTCii. — The American Architect :
comprising Original Designs of cheap
Country and Village Residences ; with De-
tails, Specifications, Plans, and an Estimate
of the Cost of each Design. The Designs
by John W. Ritch, Architect. 4to, half-
bound, £1 10s.
RuFFiN. — Essay on Calcareous Ma-
66
AMEKICAN LITERATURE.
nures. By Edm. Ruffin. Eifth Edition.
Post 8vo, 83. 6d.
Science of Mechanism (The) ; being
a Copious, Descriptive, and Annotated Cata-
logue of the various Divisions of Articles
exhibited in the New York Exhibition, 1853
— 1854; including a large amount of Ori-
ginal and Valuable Information. With se-
veral Illustrations on Wood. Edited by
C. R. Goodrich, Esq. 1 vol. 4to, cloth.
Singer. — Sewing by Machinery. An
Exposition of the Rights of Patentees of
various Sewing Machines, and of the Rights
of the Public. By J. M. Singer & Co. 8vo,
sewed, Is.
Sloan. — The Model Architect. A Se-
ries of Original Designs for Cottages, Villas,
Suburban Residences, &c. ; accompanied by
Explanations, Specifications, Estimates, and
Elaborate Details. Prepared expressly for
the Use of Projectors and Artisans through-
out the United States. By Samuel Sloan,
Architect. 2 vols. 4to, half-bound, £2 2s.
each.
Smith. — A Manual of Topographical
Drawing. By Lieut. R. S. Smith, U. S.
Army. With 8 Plates, Pp. 76. 8vo, cloth, 8s.
SNELLiNa. — A Dictionary of the Pho-
tographic Art, forming a complete Encyclo-
paedia of all the Terms, Receipts, Processes,
Apparatus, and Materials in the Art ; toge-
ther with a List of Articles of every-day de-
scription employed in its Practice. By H.
H. Snelling. Pp. 310, with Illustrations. 8vo,
cloth, 12s.
Snelling. — The History and Practice
of the Art of Photography ; or, the Pro-
duction of Pictures through the Agency of
Light. Containing all the Instructions ne-
cessary for the complete Practice of the
Daguerreian and Photogenic Art both on
Metallic Plates and on Paper. By Henry
H. Snelling. Fourth Edition, 6s.
Storeow. —Treatise on Water Works.
By C. Storrow. 12mo, 6s. Boston.
Steickland. — Reports on Canals and
Railroads, Roads, &c. By William Strick-
land. Folio, £223. Philadelphia, 1826.
Stxjaet. — The Naval Dry Docks of the
United States. By Charles B. Stuart,
U. S. N. With Engravings and Plans. Imp.
4to, cloth, £2 2s. j
Stcaet. — The ISTaval and Mail Steam-
ers of the United States. By Charles B.
Stuart, U. S. N. Illustrated by 30 Engrav-
ings on Steel, Copper, Stone, and Wood.
Imp. 4to, haif-morocco, £2 10s.
Stxjaet. — Plates from the above Work.
Engines of the United States Mail Steamers
Arctic, lUinois, and Golden Gate. 4to,
Plates, in a neat Portfolio, 8s. 6d.
Also, Views of the United States Naval
Steamers, Mississippi, Powhatan, and Fulton;
and of the United States Mail Steamers
Arctic, Illinois, and Golden Gate, 4to,
Plates, in a neat Portfolio, 8s. 6d.
Sydney. — American Cottage and Villa
Architecture. A Series of Views and Plans
of Residences actually built. By J. F.
Sydney, Architect and Civil Engineer. Demy
4to, 5 parts, '3s. 6d. each.
Tannee.- — A Description of the Canals
and Railroads of the United States, compre-
hending Notices of all the Works of Internal
Improvement. By II. S. Tanner. With
an Accurate Map. 8vo, 12s. New York, 1840.
Thomas. — Farm Implements, and the
Principles of their Consiruction and Use ;
an Elementary and Familiar Treatise on
Mechanics, and on Natural Philosophy ge-
nerally, as applied to the ordinary Practices
of Agriculture. By John J. Thomas. With
200 Illustrations. 12mo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
ToTTEN. — Essays on Hydraulic and
Common Mortars, and on Lime-burning.
Translated from the French of Gen. Treus-
sart, &c. With Brief Observations on Com-
mon Mortars, Hydraulic Mortars, and Con-
cretes, and Experiments made therewith.
By J. G. Totten, Lieut.-Co!. of Engineers,
and Brevet-Colonel U. S. Army. 8vo, cloth,
7s. 6d.
Towee's Histoey of THE Ceoton
Aqueduct. Illustrations of the Croton
Aqueduct ; with an Account of other similar
Works. By F. B. Tower, of the Engineer
Department. Eoyal 4to. Numerous Plates.
£15s.
Teall. — Hydropathic Cook-Book. By
E. T. Trail. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
TeANS ACTIONS OF THE AmeeiCAN In-
stitute, City of New York, 1851. 8vo, 15s.
Teaut WINE.— The Field Practice of
Laying out Circular Curves for Eailroads.
By John C. Trautwine, Civil Engineer.
Third Edition^ revised. Pp. 84. Eoan
tuck, 7s. 6d.
Teautwine. — A New Method of Cal-
culating the Cubic Contents of Excavations
and Embankments, by the Aid of Diagrams.
By J. Trautwine, Civil Engineer. 8vo, cloth,
pp. 40, 10 Plates, 7s. 6d.
TuENBULL. —Lectures on the Electro-
Magnetic Telegraph ; with an Historical
Account of its Rise and Progress ; contain-
ing a List of the Number of Telegraphic
Lines of the World. Illustrated by 56
Woodcuts and Two Copper-plate Engravings,
By Lawrence TurnbuU, M.D. Svo, 12s.
TUENBULL AND M'Rea.— Eailway Ac-
cidents and the Means by which they may
be prevented by the Use of the Electro-
Magnetic Safety Apparatus. To which the
attention ef the Travelling Public, Presi-
dents, and Directors of the various Eailroads
throughout the United States, is respectfully
requested. By Lawrence TurnbuU, M.D.,
and William M'Rae. Pp. 64, Svo, sewed.
Is. 6d. Philadelphia.
Upjohn. — Designs for Rural Archi*
tecture. By E. Upjohn. Folio, £1 10s.
Walks and Talks of an American
Farmer in England, in the Years 1850—
1851. 2 Parts, post Svo, cloth, 6s.
Waeinq-.— The Elements of Agricul-
ture; a Book for Young Farmers, with
Questions prepared for the Use of Schools.
By George E. Waring, jun., Consulting
Agriculturist. Pp. 288. 12nio, cloth, 6s.
Wheelee. — Rural Homes; or, Sketches
of Houses suited to American Country Life,
BELLES LETTRES GENEKAL LITERATURE.
67
With over 70 Original Plans, Designs, &c.
By Gervase Wheeler. 1 vol. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
White. — Memoirs of Samuel Slater,
the Father of American Manufacturers,
with a History of the Rise and Progress of
the Cotton Manufacture in England and
America. 8vo, Plates, 18s. Philadelphia,
1836.
Wise. — ASystem of Aeronautics ; com-
prehending its Earliest Investigations, and
Modern Practice and Art. In 3 Parts. By
John Wise. Svo, cloth, 14s.
World op Arts and Industry, il-
lustrated with 504 Engravings. Edited by
Professors SiUiman and Goodrich, Com-
prising the complete Official llecord of the
Exhibition of aU Nations at New York. 1
vol. 4to, cloth, £1 5s.
WRiaHT. — American Eeceipt Book ;
or. Complete Book of Reference : contain-
ing Valuable and Important Receipts for
Cookery, Pastry, Pickling, Perfumery, &c.
By A. S. Wright. Svo, cloth, 63.
Wyman. — A Practical Treatise on Ven-
tilation. By MorriU Wyman. Svo, cloth, 9s.
XIV.
BELLES LETTRES— GENEKAL
LITEEATUEE.
POETEY, NOVELS AND TALES, OEATIONS, ESSAYS, MIS-
CELLANIES.
Adams.— Uncle Tom at Home. By F.
C. Adams. 12mo, 2s.
Adventures of Capt. Simon Suggs,
together with "Taking the Census," and
other Alabama Sketches. 12mo, 3s.
Alice. — In the World, but Not of the
World. By Cousin Ahce. 12mo, 4s.
Allen. — Day Dreams. By Martha
Allen. Post Svo, cloth, 3s.
Allston. — Lectures on Art, and Poems.
By Washington Allston. Edited by Richard
Henry Dana, jun. 1 vol. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Archibald Cameron; or, Heart's
Trials. 12mo, 5s.
Arthur. — Golden Trains from Life ;
Harvest Field. By T. S. Arthur. ]2mo,
5s. 6d.
Arthur. — Lights and Shadows of Eeal
Life. By T. S. Arthur. Svo, lOs. 6d.
Arthur. — True Eiches; or. Wealth
without Wings. By T. S. Arthur. With 2
plates, pp. 216. 12mo, cloth, 33. 6d.
Arthur. — Heart Histories and Life
Pictures. By T. S. Arthur. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
Arthur. — Old Man's Bride. By T.
S. Arthur. 16mo, 5s.
Arthur. — The Two Merchants ; or,
Solvent and Insolvent. By T. S. Arthur.
Svo, Is. 6d.
Arthur. — Library for the Household.
By T. S. Arthur. 12 vols. ISmo, £1 10s.
Arvine.— The Cyclopaedia of Anecdotes
of Literature and the Fine Arts, containing
a copious and choice Selection of Anecdotes
of the various forms of Literature, of the
Arts, of Architecture, Engravings, Music,
Poetry, Painting, and Sculpture, and of the
most celebrated Literary Characters and
Artists of different Countries and Ages, &c.
By Kazlitt Arvine, A.M. With numerous
Imp. Svo, pp. 698, cloth, 15s.
Illustrations.
Boston.
Aryine. — Cyclopaedia of Moral and
Religious Anecdotes ; a collection of nearly
3000 Facts, Incidents, Narratives, Examples,
and Testimonies, embracing the best of the
kind in most former collections, and some
hundreds in addition, original and selected.
By Rev. K. Arvine, A.M. With an Intro-
duction, by Rev. George B. Cheever, D.D.
8vo,°cloth, 15s.
Attorney (The) ; or, the Correspond-
ence of John Quod. Post Svo, 6s. 6d.
Bates. — Poems. By David Bates.
Svo, 5s.
Behind the Curtain ; a Tale of Elt-
ville. Post Svo, 5s. 6d.
Bennett. — Clara Moreland; or. Ad-
ventures in the South-West. By Emerson
Bennett. Post Svo, 6s.
Beranger ; Two Hundred of his Lyri-
cal Poems done into English Verse. By
William Young. Post Svo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Berkeley. — World's Laconics ; or,
Best Thoughts of Best Authors. By E,
Berkeley. Post Svo, 7s.
Bird.— Nick of the Woods; a Tale. By
Dr. Bird. New Edition, revised by the
Author. Post Svo, Ss. 6d.
Blackwater Chronicle — A Narra-
tive of an Expedition into the Land of
Canaan, in Randolph County, Virginia. By
*« The Clerke of Oxenforde." With lUustra-
tions from Life, by Strother. Post Svo,
cloth, pp. 224, 5s.
Book of the Heart; or. Love's Em-
blems. Imperial Svo, morocco, £1 I63.
Brace. — Home Life in Germany. By
C. L. Brace. 12mo, 6s. 1S53.
Bradford. — Nelly Bracken, a Tale of
Forty Years ago. By Annie Chambers
Bradford. Pp. 378, crown Svo, cloth, 63.
^8
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
BoLiNGBEOKE. — The Works of Lord
Bolingbroke. With a Life prepared ex-
pressly for this edition, containing additional
Information relative to his Personal and
Public Character. In 4 vols. 8vo, hand-
poniely printed, with a fine Portrait. £3 3s.
Philadelphia, 1841.
No edition at present exists in England, so
complete or in so desirable a form as this.
BRACKENRiDaE. — Modern Chivalry ;
or, Adventures of Capt. Farrago. By H. H.
Brackenridge. 12mo, 5s.
jBridgman. — Daughters of China ; or,
Domestic Life in China. By Mrs. J. G.
Bridgman. ISmo, 5s.
Bristed. — Five Years in an English
University. By C. A. Bristed. Post 8vo,
cloth, 7s. 6d.
Brown. — Novels, &c. By C. Brock-
den Brown. Viz., Wieland, 1 vol. ; Arthur
Mervyn, 2 vols. ; Clara Howard, 1 vol. ; Ed-
gar Huntley, 1 vol. ; Jane Talbot, 1 vol.
4s. per vol. Boston.
Brockden Brown was one of the earliest
American Novelists.
Brown. — Minnie Hermon; or, the
Night and its Morning j a Tale. By T. W.
Brown. Post 8vo, 63.
Bryant. — Selections from the Ameri-
can Poets. By W. C. Bryant. Forming
No. 3 of the Family Library. 18mo, cloth,
3s. 6d.
Bryant. — Poems. By W. C. Bryant.
Illustrated edition. Royal 8vo, cl. gilt, 21s.
Bryant. — Poems. By W. C. Bryant.
Revised by the Author, with additional
Poems. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, 123. 6d.
Butt. — Anti-Fanaticism ; a Tale of the
South. By Miss Martha Haines Butt. Post
Svo, cloth, 5s.
Carey. — Poems and Parodies. By
Phoebe Carey. 12mo, 5s.
Carey. — Hagar; a Story of To-Bay.
By Alice Carey. Post Svo, 63. 6d.
Caustic. — Matrimony; or. Love Af-
fairs in Our Village Twenty Years Ago. By
Mrs. Caustic. 12mo, 5s.
Chandler. — This, That, and the Other.
By Ellen Louise Chandler. Fifth edition,
vnth 8 Plates. Pp. 412, 12mo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
Chasles. — Anglo- American Literature
and Manners. From the French of Philarete
Chasles, Professor of the College of France.
Crown 8 vo, cloth, 7s.
Clarke. — Knicknacks from an Editor's
Table. By L. Gaylord Clarke. With lUus-
trations. Post Svo, cloth, gilt edges, 7s. 6d.
Cleveland. — A Compendium of Eng-
lish Literature, chronologically arranged,
from Sir John Mandeville to William Cow-
per; consisting of Biographical Sketches of
the Authors, Selections from their Works,
with Notes, explanatory, illustrative, and
directing to the best editions, and to various
Criticisms. By Charles D. Cleveland. 12mo,
half-bound, 10s. 6d.
Cleveland (C. D.) — English Litera-
ture of the 19th Century. 12mo, cl., 83. 1851.
Clifford Family; or, a Tale of the
Old Dominion. Svo, 6s.
Cole. — Course of Empire, Voyage of
Life, and other Pictures. By Thomas Cole.
With Illustrations of his Life, by L. L,
Noble. Post Svo, 9s.
CoLTON. — Tecumseh ; or, the West
Thirty Years Since. A Poem. By George
H. Colton. 12mo, 7s. 6d. New York, 1842.
Cooper's (J. Fenimore) Choice Works ;
comprising the Sea Tales and the Leather-
stocking Series. The Author's revised edi-
tion, with new Prefaces, Notes, &c. 12 vols.
12mo. New York. Price of each volume,
7s. 6d.
Cooper's Sea Tales : —
The Water Witch. 12mo, cloth.
Two Admirals. 12mo, cloth.
Wing and Wing. 12mo, cloth.
Eed E,over. 12mo, cloth.
The Pilot. 12mo, cloth.
Cooper's Leather-stocking Series: —
The Deerslayer. 12mo, cloth.
The Last of the Mohicans. 12mo, cloth.
The Pioneer. 12mo, cloth.
The Pathfinder. 12ino, cloth.
The Prairie. 12mo, cloth.
The Ways of the Hour. 12mo, cloth.
The Spy. 12mo, cloth.
Cooper. — The Rhyuie and Beason of
Country Life^ or. Selections from Fields,
Old and New. By Miss Cooper, Author of
" Rural Hours," &c. &c. With Illustrations
from Dra^vings by C. E. Dopldr. Engraved
by J. W. Orr. Pp. 428, Svo, cloth, 15s.
CoRNYN. — Dick Wilson, the Rumseller's
Victim; a Temperance Story. By J. K.
Cornyn. Post Svo, 03. 6d.
Cousin. — The Youth of Madame de
Longueville ; or, New Revelations of Court
and Convent in the 17th Century. From
the French of Victor Cousin. By F. W.
Eicord. Pp. 404, 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Cox. — A Buckeye Abroad. By S. S.
Cox. Second Edition. 1 vol. 12mo, cloth,
with Illustrations, 7s. 6d.
Dana. — Poems and Prose Writings.
By Richard Henry Dana. 2 vols. 12mo, 15s,
Dana. — Two Years Before the Mast ;
a Personal Narrative of Life at Sea. By E,
H. Dana, jun. 18mo, 4s.
D'Arbouville. — Three Tales. By the
Countess d'Arbouville. Translated by M. B.
Field. Post 8vo, 5s.
Day. — Old Engagement ; a Spinster
Story. By Julia Day. Post 8vo, 4s.
Denison. — AVhat Not. By Mrs. Mary
A. Denison. Illustrated by Engravings from
Designs by White. Pp. 384, crown 8vo,
cloth, 6s.
Dow. — Short Patent Sermons. By —
Dow, jun. Originally published in the ** New
York Sunday Mercury." 2 vols, in 1, post
Svo, cloth, 7s. ; or in 2 vols., paper covers, 4s*
Dow.— Ditto. Vol. 3, sewed, 2s. 6d.
Drury. — Light and Shade ; or, the
Young Artist : a Tale. By A. H. Drury.
12mo, 5s.
Eastman. — Romance of Indian Life,
and other Tales. By Mrs. Mary H. East-
man. With 12 beautiful Illuminations, lloyal
Svo, cloth, gilt edges, £1 Is.
Eastman. — American Aboriginal Port-
BELLES LETTRES GENERAL LITERATURE.
69
folio. By Mrs. Mary Eastman. Illustrated
by S. Eastman, U.S. Army. Embellished
with 27 splendid Steel Engravings. Small
folio, cloth, gilt, £1 lOs.
Eastman. — Chicora, and other Re-
gions of the Conquerors and the Conquered.
By Mrs, Mary H. Eastman. 21 Steel Plates,
pp. 126, royal 8vo, cloth, £1 5s.
Eastman. — Aunt Phillis's Cabin; or,
Southern Life as it is. By Mrs. Eastman.
12mo, cloth, 5s.
EcKERM AN — Fuller, — Conversations
with Goethe, in the Last Years of his Life.
From the German of Eckerman. By S. M.
Fuller (Marchesa Ossoli). New Edition.
Post 8vo, 7s. 6d. Boston, 1839.
Effingham. — The Virginia Comedi-
ans; or. Old Days in the Old Dominion.
Edited from the MSS. of C, Effingham, Esq.
2 vols, crown 8vo,«cloth, 8s. 6d.
Encyclopedia Americana. — Edited
by Francis Lieber, LL.D., assisted by E.
Wigglesworth and T. G. Bradford. 14 vols.
8vo, £6 6s.
On the general basis of the German " Con-
versations Lexicon." The Editor has added
, largely in the literary and historical part;
Mr. R. Walsh, the American Biography;
Mr. Bradford, the American Geography ;
Mr. Ingersoll, on Trade and Manufactures.
Everett. — Orations and Speeches, on
various Occasions, by Edward Everett. 2
vols. 8vo, cloth, £1 12s.
Eabens. — Camel Hunt ; or, Personal
Adventures. By J, W. Fabens. 12mo, 4s.
Eable for Critics; or, better (I
like, as a thing that the reader's first fancy
may strike, an old-fashioned title-page, such
as presents a tabular view of the volume's
contents), a glance at a few of our literary
progenies (Mrs. Malaprop's word) from the
tub of Diogenes ; a vocal and musical med-
ley, that is, a series of Jokes by a Wonder-
ful Quiz, who accompanies himself with a
rub-a-dub-dub, full of spirit and grace, on
the top of the tongue. 12mo, cloth, 3s.
Pay.— Novels, &c. By Theo. S. Fay.
Norman Leslie. 2 vols. 10s. Dreams and
Reveries of a Quiet Man. 2 vols. 10s.
EanntFern. — Fern Leaves from Fanny
Fern's Portfolio. 8vo, 2s. 6d.
Eannt Fern. — Shadows and Sun-
beams; or, the Second Series of "Leaves
from Fanny's Portfolio." By Fanny Fern.
With lUustrations. Cloth, 2s. Od.
Flint. — Novels, &c. By Timothy
Flint. Viz., Francis Berrian. 2 vols. George
Mason. 1 vol. Shoshonee Valley. 2 vols.
Arthur Clenning. 2 vols. 5s. each vol.
Follen. — Sketches of Married Life.
By Mrs. Follen. 16mo, 4s. Boston, 1838.
Follen. — The Works of the late
Charles Follen, LL.D. 5 vols. 12mo, £1 10s.
Boston, 1842.
FuRNESs. — Gems of German Verse.
By W. H. Furness. Post 8vo, 6s. 6d.
Oayarre. — The School for Politics ; a
Dramatic ISTovel. By Charles Gayarre. 8vo,
33. 6d.
Oat and Girardin. — Celebrated
Saloons, by Mad. Gay; and Parisian Let-
ters, by Mad. Girardin. Translated by Wil-
lard. 18mo, 43.
Gems from American Poets. 32mo,
cloth, gilt edges, 23.
Giles. — Lectures and Essays. By
Henry Giles. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, 9s.
Giles. — Discourses on Life. By Henry
Giles. Second Edition. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Giles. — Illustrations of Genius, in some
of its relations to Culture and Society. By
Henry Giles, Author of " Lectures and
Essays." Pp. 362, crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
GiLMAN. — Oracles from the Poets ; a
fanciful diversion for the Drawing-room. By
Caroline Gilman. With Woodcuts. 12mo,
cloth, 6s.
Giseke. — The Rose of tlie Parsonage :
an Idyll of our own Times. Translated from
the German of Kobert Giseke. Complete in
1 vol, pp. 220, crown 8vo, sewed, 2s. 6d. ;
cloth, 4s.
Goethe's Essays on Art. Translated
by Ward. 12mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Goethe's Iphigenia in Tauris ; a
Drama, in Five Acts. Translated from the
German, by G. J. Adler, A.M. 12mo, boards,
4s. 6d.
Goethe and Schiller. — Correspond-
ence from 1794 to 1805. Translated by
George H. Calvert. 1 vol. 12mo, 6s.
Goodrich. — Select British Eloquence :
embracing the best Speeches, entire, of the
most eminent Orators of Great Britain, for
the last Two Centuries ; with Sketches of
their Lives, and Estimate of their Genius,
and Notes, Critical and Explanatory. By
Chauncey A. Goodrich, D;D. Imperial Bvo,
cloth, 18s.
Goodrich. — Poems. By S. G. Good-
rich. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Grace Greenwood. — Greenwood
Leaves. 1st and 2nd Series. 8vo, 15s.
Grace Greenwood. — Poetical Works.
With fine Portrait. 8vo, 53.
Grace Greenwood — Haps and Mis-
haps of a Tour in Europe. Crown 8vo,
cloth, 7s. 6d.
Grillparze». — Correggio : a Tragedy,
by Oehlenschlaeger. Sapho : a Tragedy, by
Grillparzer. With a Sketch of the Autobio-
graphy of Oehlenschlaeger. Translated from
the German. 12mo, cloth, 63.
Griswold. — Poets and Poetry of Ame-
rica; with an Historical Introduction, and
Critical and Biographical Notices. By Eufus
Wilmot Griswold. Portrait. Royal 8vo,
cloth, 163.
Griswold. — The Prose Writers of Ame-
rica; with a Survey of the Intellectual His-
tory, Condition, and Prospects of the Coun-
try. By Eufus Wilmot Griswold. Illus-
trated with Portraits, from original Pictures.
Fourth Edition, revised. 8vo, cloth, 16s.
Griswold. — The Female Poets of Ame-
rica. By Kufus Wilmot Griswold. With
Illustrations. 8vo, cloth, I63.
Hale.— A Complete Dictionary of
Poetical Quotations; comprising the most
excellent and appropriate Passages from the
Old British Poets ; with Choice and Copious
70
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Selections from the best Modern British and
American Poets. By S. J. Hale. 8vo, lOa. 6d.
Hale. — ISTorthwood; or, Life North
and South; showing the True Character of
Both. By Mrs, Sarah Joseph Hale. Illus-
trated. Pp. 403, crown 8vo, sewed, 5s.
Hall. — Frank Freeman's Barber's
Shop; a Tale. By Dr. B. R. Hall. 8vo, 7s.
Hall. — Legends of ttie West. By
James Hall. Post Svo, 6s. 6d.
Halleck. — The Poetical Works of
Fitz-Greene Halleck. New Edition. 12mo,
cloth, 6s.
Hammond. — Hills, Lakes, and Forest
Streams ; or, a Tramp in the Chateau gay
Woods. By S. H. Hammond. Frontispiece
and Illustration. Svo, pp. 350, 6s.
Hahland. — Alone. By Marion Har-
land. Third Edition. Pp. 396, 12mo, cloth,
8s. 6d.
Harry Harson ; or, the Benevolent
Bachelor. By the Author of the " Attorney."
With Illustrations. Post Svo, cloth, ]Dp.
364, 6s.
Hart. — The Female Prose Writers of
America; with Portraits, Biographical No-
tices, and Specimens of their Writings. By
JohnF. Hart, LL.D. Embellished with Ele-
gant Illustrations. 8vo, cloth, gilt back and
edges, 24s.
Hawthorne. — Twice-told Tales. By
Nathaniel Hawthorne. 2 vols. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Hawthorne. — The Scarlet Letter. By
Nathaniel Hawthorne. 12mo, 5s.
Hawthorne. — The House of the Seven
Gables. By Nathaniel Hawthorne. 12mo, 6s.
Hawthorne. — The Snow Image, and
other Twice-told Tales. By Nathaniel Haw-
thorne. 12mo, 5s.
Hawthorne. — The Blithedale Ko-
mance. By Nathaniel Hawthorne. 12mo, 5s.
Hawthorne. — True Stories from His-
tory and Biography. By Nathaniel Haw^-
thorne. With four fine Engravings. 12mo, 5s.
Eeadley. — Letter.s from Italy and
Alps and the Rhine. By J. T. Headley.
12mo, cloth. With Portrait, 7s. 6d.
Headley. — Sketches and Rambles. By
J. T. Headley. 1 vol. 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Headley. — Adirondack; or, Life in
the Woods. By J. T. Headley. With Ori-
ginal Designs from Gignoux, Ingham, Du-
rand, &c. 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Headley. — Miscellanies. By J. T.
Headley. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Hedge. — The Prose Writers of Grer-
many; containing Specimens of Luther,
Kant, Wieland, Lavater, Goethe, Schlegel,
&c. By F. H. Hedge. Koyal Svo, portraits,
cloth, 15s.
Heloise ; or, the Unrevealed Secret.
12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Hentz. — Linda ; or, the Young Pilot
of the Belle Creole. By Car. L. Hentz.
Post Svo, 3s.
Hentz. — Marcus Warland; or, the
Long Moss Spring. By Car. L. Hentz.
Post Svo, 3s.
Hentz. — Rena; or, the Snow Bird; a
Tale. By Car. L. Hentz. Post Svo, 3s.
Hentz. — Aunt Patty's Scrap Bag ; or,
the Brothers; a Tale. By Car. L. Hentz.
12mo, 3s.
Herbert. — Knights of England,
France, and Scotland. By Henry William
Herbert. 12 mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Herbert. — My Shooting Box; a Tale.
By Frank Forester (H. W. Herbert). 12mo,
33.
Herbert. — The Deerstalkers ; or. Cir-
cumstantial Evidence ; a Tale. By Frank
Forester (H. W. Herbert). 12mo, 3s.
HERBERT.-The Quorndon Hounds; or,
a Virginian at Melton Mowbray ; a Tale. By
Frank Forester (II. AV. Herbert). 12mo, 3s.
Herndon. — Louise Elton ; or. Things
Seen and Heard ; a Novel. By Mrs. Mary
E. Herndon. Post Svo J cloth, 63.
HiLLARD. — Six Months in Italy. By
George S. Hillard. 2 vols. 16mo, 15s.
Hoffman. — Poems. By Charles Fenno
Hoffman. ISmo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Hoffman. — Grreyslaer; a E-omance of
the Mohawk. By Charles Fenno Hofl&nan.
12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Holmes. — Poetical Works. By Oliver
Wendell Holmes. With fine Portrait. 12mo,
boards, 6s.
Holmes. — Astra^a. By Oliver Wendell
Holmes. Fancy paper, 12mo, Is. 6d.
Holmes. — Tempest and Sunshine ; or,
Life in Kentucky. By Mary J. Holmes,
Post Svo, 6s.
Homes of American Authors. Uni«
form with the last work; containing Views
of some of the most picturesque and lovely
Localities in the New World, from drawings
or daguerreotypes taken expressly for the
purpose, engraved on steel, with tinted
vignettes on woqd, and fac-similes of the
MS. of a work of each Author, and several
Portraits. Svo, cloth, £1 5s.
HoRWiTZ. — Brushwood, picked up on
the Continent; or, Last Summer's Trip to
the Old World. By Orville Horwitz. Pp.
308, crown Svo, cloth, 6s.
Houssaye. — Philosophers and Ac-
tresses. By Arsene Houssaye. Portraits,
2 vols, post Svo, cloth, lis.
Hudson. — Lectures on Shakspeare.
By H. :N'. Hudson. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, 16s.
Second Edition.
HuNTmaTON. — The Forest. By J. Y.
Huntington, Esq. Post Svo, 9s.
ICOXOGRAPHIC EnCTCLOPJEDIA OF
SciEifCE, LiTERATUKE, AND Art ; Syste-
matically Arranged by G. Heck. With 500
Quarto Steel Plates, by the most distin-
guished Artists of Germany. The Text
translated and edited by Spencer F. Baird,
A.M., M.D., Assistant- Secretary of the
Smithsonian Institution. 4 vols. Svo, Text,
and 2 vols. 4to, Plates ; bound in half-Turkey
morocco, sprinkled edges, £10.
%* A Pamphlet containing a descriptive
account of the above Work may be had
gratis, on application to the London Pub-
lishers.
BELLES LETTllES GENERAL LITERATURE.
71
Ing-kaham. — Captain Kyd ; or, the
Wizard of the Sea. By T. H. Ingraham.
8vo, 2s. 6d.
Ieving's (Washington) Woeks. —
Author's revised Edition, in 15 vols, (in-
cluding New Works). 12mo, cloth, £6 6s.
Vol. 1. Knickerbocker's New York. 1vol.
Vol. 2. The Sketch-book. 1 vol.
Vols. 3, 4, 5. Columbus and his Compa-
nions. 3 vols.
Vol. 0. Bracebridge Hall. 1 vol.
Vol. 7. Tales of a Traveller. 1 vol.
Vol. 8, Astoria. 1 vol.
Vol. 9. The Cra)'on Miscellany. 1 vol.
Vol. 10. Capt. Bonneville's Adventures.
Map. 1 vol.
Vol. 11. Oliver Goldsmith, a Biography,
1 vol.
Vols. 12, 13, Mahomet and his Successors.
2 vols.
Vol. 14. The Conquest of Granada. 1 vol.
Vol. 15. The Alhambra. 1 vol.
Jones. — Life and Adventures of a
Country Merchant. A Narrative of his
Exploits at Home, during his Travels, and
in the Cities. Designed to amuse and in-
struct. By J. B. Jones. Post Svo, pp.
396, 5s.
Jones. — Freaks of Fortune ; or, tlie
History and Adventures of Ned Lorn. By
J. B. Jones. Svo, 7s. 6d.
JuDSON. — Alderbrook. By Fanny
Forester (Mrs. Emily Judson). 3s.
JuDSON. — Kathayan Slave ; with Papers
on Missionary Life. By Emily Judson.
12mo, 43. 6d.
Judson. — My Two Sisters; a Sketch.
By Emily Judson. 12mo, 2s. 6d.
Kennedy. — Swallow Barn ; or, a So-
journ in the Old Dominion. By T. P. Ken-
nedy. Post Svo, 9s.
KiKKLAND. — Garden Walks with the
Poets. By Mrs. C. M. Kirkland. Appro-
priately printed as a Presentation Volume.
12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Kirkland. — Book for the Home Cir-
cle ; Thoughts on Various Topics. By Mrs.
Kirkland. Svo, £1 43.
KiiiKLAND. — The Evening Book ; or.
Fireside Talk on Morals and Manners, with
Sketches of Western Life. By Mrs. C. M.
Kirkland. 1 vol. Svo, cloth, gilt, 21s.
KiEKLAND. — The Helping Hand ; com-
prising an Account of the Home for Dis-
charged Female Convicts, and an Appeal on
behalf of that Institution. By Mrs. C. M.
Kirkland. Sold for the Benefit of that In-
stitution, Svo, boards, 93.
KiKKLAND. — Western Clearings. By
Mrs, Kirkland. 12mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Knoer. — The Two Eoads; or, the
Right and the Wrong. By James Knorr.
Crown Svo, cloth, pp. 372, 63.
Kritm-MAOHEr. — Last Days of Elisha.
From the German of Dr. F. W. Krumma-
cher. 24mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Lamplighter (The) ; a Tale. 12mo,
boards, Is.
XiANGDON. — Ida May; a Story of
• Things Actual and Possible. By Mary
Langdon, Crown Svo, cloth, 63.
Lee. — Master Builder ; or, Life at a
Trade. By D. K. Lee. Post Svo, 7s.
Leg- ARE. — Writings of Hugh Swinton
Legare, late Attorney- General and Acting
Secretary of State of the United States^
consisting of a Diary of Brussels and Jour-
nal of the Khine ; Extracts from his Private
and Diplomatic Correspondence ; Orations
and Speeches ; and Contributions to the
New York and Southern Keviews. Prefaced
by a Memoir of his Life. Embellished with
a Portrait. Edited by his Sister. 2 vols.
Svo, £1 8s.
Lesdeenier. — Voices of Life. By E»
P. Lesdernier. 12mo, 23. 6d.
Leslie. — Behaviour Book ; a Manual
for Ladies. By Miss Leslie. Post Svo,
8s. 6d.
Lestee. — My Consulship. By C. E»
Lester. 2 vols, post Svo, 123.
Life and its Aims, in Two Parts.
Part 1st, Ideal Life. Part 2nd, Actual Life.
Post Svo, cloth, pp. 362, 6s.
Longfellow. — The Golden Legend.
A Poem. By Henry W. Longfellow. 12mo,
cloth, 63.
Longfellow. — Poetical Works. By
Henry W. Longfellow. 2 vols. 16mo, clotb,
12s.
Longtellow. — Voices of the Night.
By Henry W. Longfellow. 16mo, 5s.
Longfellow. — Ballads, and other
Poems. By Henry W. Longfellow. 16mo,
5s.
Longfellow. — Spanish Student ; a
Play, in Three Acts. By Henry W. Long-
fellow. 16mo, 5s.
Longfellow. — Belfry of Bruges, and
other Poems. By Henry W. Longfellow.
16mo, 6s.
Longfellow. — Evangeline ; a Tale of
Acadie. By Henry W. Longfellow. 16mo.
5s.
Longfellow. — The Seaside and the
Fireside^ By Henry W. Longfellow. 16mo,
53.
Longfellow. — The Waif. A Collec*
tion of Poems. Edited by Henry W. Long-
fellow. 16mo, 53.
Longfellow. — The Estray. A Col*
lection of Poems. Edited by Henry W.
Longfellow. 16mo, 5s.
Longfellow. — Hyperion. A Eomance.
By Henry W. Longfellow. 12mo, 6s.
Longfellow. — Outre-mer. A Pil*
grimage. By Henry W. Longfellow. 12mo,
6s.
Longfellow. — Kavanagh. A Tale.
By Henry W. Longfellow. 16mo, 53.
Longfellow. — Poems on Slavery. By-
Henry W. Longfellow. 12mo, Is.
Longfellow. — The Poets and Poetry
of Europe. With Introduction and Bio-
graphical Notices. By Henry W. Long-
fellow. With a Portrait of Schiller. Svo,
cloth, pp. 800, £1 l3.
Lowell. — Complete Poetical Works.
Kevised, with Additions. By James Eussell
Lowell. In 2 Yols. 16mo, cloth, 129.
72
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Lowell. — Sir Launfal. By James
Eussell Lowell. New Edition. 16mo, Is. 6d.
Lowell. — The Biglow Papers. By
James Russell Lowell. New Edition. 16mo,
43. 6d.
Ltjnt. — Lyric Poems, etc. By G.
Lunt. 12mo, clotb, 4s.
Ltnch.— Naval Life. Tlie Midsliip-
man. By Lieut. W. F. Lynch, U.S.N,
12mo, cloth, 6s.
M'CoNNEL. — Western Characters ; or,
Types of Border Life in the Western States.
By J. L, M'Connel. With Illustrations by
Darley. Post 8vo, cloth, pp. 378, 63.
McIntosh. — Evenings at Donaldson
Manor ; or, the Christmas Guest. By Miss
Maria C. Mcintosh. With 10 Steel En-
gravings. 1 vol. 8vo, cloth gilt, 12s. ; mo-
rocco extra, 21s.
Maeyel. — Dream Life. By Ik. Mar-
vel (Donald G. Mitchell). With lUustra-
tions. 1 vol. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Marvel. — Reveries of a Bachelor ; 'or,
a Book of the Heart. By Ik. Marvel (Donald
G. Mitchell). With 25 lUustrations by
Darley. 1 vol. 8vo, 7s. 6d.
Marvel.— Fresh Gle^iings ; or, a New
Sheaf from the Old Fields of Continental
Europe. By Ik. Marvel (Donald G. Mitchell) .
12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Marvel. — Fudge Doings. Being Tony
Fudge's Record of the same. In 40 chap-
ters. By Ik. Marvel (Donald G. Mitchell).
2 vols, post Svo, 14s.
Matthews. — Yarious Writings of Cor-
nehus Matthews. 1 vol. Svo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Maury. — Memoirs of a Huguenot Fa-
mily. By Anne Maury. Post 8vo, 73. 6d.
Mat. — The American Female Poets.
With Biographical and Critical Notices. By
Caroline May. Embellished with 8 Steel
Engravings. Pp. 560, 8vo, cloth gilt, 14s.
Meditatus. — Poems. By Meditatus.
12mo, cloth, 2s. 6d.
Menzel's (Wolfgang) German Litera-
ture. Translated from the German by C.
C. Felton. 3 vols, post 8vo, cloth, 15s.
Mills. — Literature and Literary Men
of Great Britain and Ireland. By Abraham
Mills. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth, 21s.
Milne. — Uncle Sam's Farm Fence. By
A. D. Milne. Post Svo, 5s.
Milton's (J.) Paradise Lost, With
Notes, by J. K. Boyd. Svo, 7s.
Milton's (J.) Poetical Works. With
Life and Notes, by Cleveland. Svo, 7s. 6d.
Montgomery. — Eagle Pass ; or, Life
on the Border. By Cora Montgomery.
12mo, 33.
Mountford. — Thorpe : a Quiet En-
glish Town, and Human Life therein. By
William Mountford . 12mo, cloth, 6s .
Mow ATT. — Autobiography of an Ac-
tress ; or, Eight Years on the Stage. By
Anna Cora Mowatt. With Portrait. Post
Svo, cloth, pp. 448, 7s. 6d.
]Mu<>GE.— Afraja, a Norwegian and
Lapland Tale ; or. Life and Love in Iforway .
Translated from the German of Theodore
Miigge by Edward Joy Morris. In 2 vols.,
sewed, pp. 572, 6s.
Myrtle. — Cap Sheaf, a Fresh Bundle.
By L. Myrtle. Post Svo, 78.
Myrtle.— Myrtle Wreath; or, Stray
Leaves Kecalled. By Minnie Myrtle. Post
Svo, 73. 6d.
News Boy (The). With Two Wood-
cut Illustrations. Pp. 530, 7s. 6d.
NiCHOLL. — Poems. By E. NichoU.
With a Memoir of the Author. Fcap.,
cloth, 5s. 6d.
Nolte. — Fifty Years in Both Hemi-
spheres ; or, Ileminiscences of a Merchant's
Life. By Vincent Nolle, late of New Orleans.
Translated from the German. Pp. 480,
crown Svo, cloth, 9s.
NovALis. — Henry of Ofterdingen ; a
Romance. Translated from the German of
Novalis, with Life of the Author. Post
Svo, cloth, 5s.
Old House by the Riyer. By an
American Author. Post Svo, 6s. 6d.
Old Sights with New Eyes. By a
Yankee. With an Introduction, by Robert
Baird, D.D. Svo, cloth, pp. 372, 5s.
Osgood. — Poetical Works of Frances
S. Osgood. Illustrated by Huntingdon,
Darley, Rossiter, Cushman, and Osgood.
1 vol. Svo, elegantly bound, £1 4s.
Parisian Sights and French Princi-
ples seen through American Spectacles.
Svo, 73. 6d.
Passion Flowers. 1 yoI. 16mo. 5s.
Paulding. — Novels, etc. By J. K»
Paulding (late Secretary of the ISavy). 58.
per vol., viz. : — Salmagundi ; or, the Whim-
whams and Opinions of Launcelot Langstafl',
and others, 4 vols. Letters from the South,
2 vols. Koningsmarke ; or. Old Times in the
New World, 2 vols. The Diverting History
of John Bull and Brother Jonathan. Tales
of the Good Woman, 2 vols. The Dutch-
man's Fireside, 2 vols. The Book of St.
Nicholas. The Three Wise Men of Gotham.
Westward Ho ! 2 vols. ISTew Pilgrim's Pro-
gress. John Bull in America. Winter
Night's Entertainments.
Paulding. — The Puritan and his
Daughter. By J. K. Paulding. 12mo,
cloth, 7s. 6d.
Paxton. — A Stray Yankee in Texas.
By Philip Paxton. 'l2mo, cloth, 6s.
Payne. — Geral Milco ; or, Narrative
of aKesidence in a Brazilian Valley of the
Sierra Paricis. By K. M. Payne. 12mo,-
3s. 6d.
Pearls of American Poetry. Se-
cond Edition. Illuminated by T. W. Gwilt
Mapleson, Esq. 4to, bound, £2 13s. 6d.
Perce.— G-ulliver Joi ; his Three Voy-
ages, being an Account of his Marvellous
Adventure in Kuiloo, Hydrogenia, and
Ejario. By Elbert Perce. 16mo, with H^
lustrations, cloth, 5s.
Peter. — Schiller's William Tell, trans-
lated from the German; and other Poems.
By William Peter, A.M., of Christ Church,.
Oxford. Third Edition, 12mo, cloth, 4s.
BELLES LETTRES GENERAL LITERATURE.
73
Pickings feom the Portfolio of the
New Orleans "Picayune." 12mo, 33.
Planter (The) ; or, Thirteen Years in
the South. 8vo, 3s. 6d.
PoE. — The Works of the late Edgar
Allan Poe, vrith a Memoir by Eufus Wilmot
Griswold, and IS otices of his Life and Genius,
by N. P. WiUis and J. R. Lowell. 3 vols.
8vo, cloth, 21s.
Porter. — Pebbles from the Lake
Shore; or, Miscellaneous Poems. By
Charles Leland Porter, A.M. Pp. 240, crown
8vo, cloth, 6s.
Powell. — Living Authors of England.
By Thomas Powell. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
Rachel Kell. By the Author of
*' My Mother," &c. Post Svo. 63.
Eandolph. — The Cabin and Parlour;
or, Slaves and Masters. B}'^ T. Thornton
Randolph. With Illustrations, post Svo,
cloth, 6s.
Read. — The Eemale Poets of America ;
with Portraits, Biojjraphical Notices, and
Specimens of their Writings. By Thomas
Buchanan Read. Third Edition, with ad-
ditions and alterations. Svo, cloth, gilt
edges, 24?.
Eead. — Poems. By Thomas Buchanan
Read. Illustrated vrith 14 Woodcuts, from
Designs by Kenny Meadows. Fcap. Svo,
cloth, 6s.
Eellstab. — Eomance of War; or,
Napoleon's Campaign in Russia, 1812. By
L. Rellstab. Svo, 2s. 6d.
EiCHARDS. — Summer Stories of the
South. By T. Addison Richards. Post Svo,
cloth, 43. 6d.
EiCHTER (Jean Paul).— Flowers, Fruit,
and Thorn Pieces. 2 vols.' 12mo, cloth, 15s.
EiCHTER. — Walt and Yulfc? or, the
Twins, Translated from the German, by the
Author of " Life of Jean PUul." 2 vols.
12mo, cloth, lOs. 6d.
EoBiNSON. — Hot Corn. Life Scenes in
l^ew York, illustrated ; including the Story
of Little Katy, Madalina, the Rag-Picker's
Daughter, Wild Maggie, &c., &c. By Solon
Robinson. With Original Designs. Crown
Svo, cloth, pp. 408, 7s. 6d.
EoDMAN. — A Grandmother's Eecollec-
tions. By Ella Rodman. With six Tinted
Illustrations. 16mo, cloth, 5s.
EoE. — James Mountjoy ; or, I've been
Thinking. An American Tale. By A. S.
Roe. 12mo, cloth, 4s.
Sargent. — The Temperance Tales. By
Lucius M. Sargent. I^ew Illustrated Edi-
tion. Two volumes in one. 12mo, cloth, 93.
Sayarin.— The Physiology of Taste ;
or. Transcendental Gastronomy. Illustrated
by Anecdotes of distinguished Artists and
Statesmen of both Continents. By Brillat
Savarin. Translated from the last Paris
Edition, by Fayette Robinson. Svo, cloth, ,
pp. 3i3, 73. 6d. I
Saxe. — Poems. By John G-. Saxe. |
With Portrait. 12mo, 53.
ScHROEDER. — Maxims of Washington ;
Political, Social, Moral, and Reiigiovis. Col-
lected and arranged by John Frederick
Schroeder, D.D. Pp. 436, 12mo, cloth,
6s. 6d.
Sedgwick. — Miss Sedgwick's Tales ;
Viz. :— A New England Tale, 12mo, Gs. The
Linwoods; or, "Sixty Years Since" in
America, 2 vols., 12s. Hope Leslie ; or, the
Early Times of Massachusetts, 2 vols. 12mo,
12s. Redwood; a Tale, 2 vols., scarce.
Clarence ; a Tale, 2 vols,, scarce. The Poor
Rich Man and the Rich Poor Man, 13mo,
3s. Live and Let Live j or. Domestic Ser-
vice Illustrated, 18mo, 3s. A Love-Token
for Children, 18mo, 3s. Stories for Young
Persons, 18mo, 3s. 6d. Means and Ends,
ISmo, 33. 6d. Letters from Abroad, 2 vols.
10s. New York, 1842.
Seward. — The Works of William H.
Seward. Edited by George E. Balier. With
Portrait. 3 vols. Svo, cloth, £2 23.
Shady Side (The). A^lth Portrait.
Svo, cloth, 33. 6d.
Shakspeare. — The Works of Sliak-
speare. The Text carefully restored accord-
ing to the First Edition, with Introductory
Notes, original and selected, and a Life of
the Poet. By the Rev. H.N. Hudson, A.M.
In 11 volumes, 16mo, cloth, 6s. per volume.
%* Seven volumes are published.
Sheltox. — U]) the Eiver. By F. U.
Shelton. With Illustrations, from Original
Designs. Post Svo, pp. 3)8, 7s.
SuELTON. — Crystalline ; or, the Heiress
of Fall Down Castle ; a Romance. By P. W.
Shelton. Post Svo, 63.
SiGOURNEY. — Poems. By Mrs. L. H.
Sigourney. Illustrated with Designs by Fe-
lix P. C. Darley. Royal Svo, cloth, 21s.
Sigourney. — Select Poems. By Mrs.
L. H. Sigourney. Svo, cloth, 6s. 6d.
Sigourney. — Olive Leaves. By Mrs.
L. H. Sigourney. Illustrated. Fcap., cloth,
5s, 6d.
Sigourney. — Scenes in my JN'ative
Land. By Mrs. L. H. Sigourney. 12mo,
cloth, Ss.
Sigourney. — Water Drops. By Mrs.
L. H. Sigourney. Fcap., cloth, 5s. 6d.
Sigourney. — The Western Home, and
other Poems. By Mrs. L. H. Sigourney.
With Portrait. Pp. 360, Svo, cloth, 63.;
gilt edges, 7s. 6d.
SiMMS. — Poems : Descriptive, Drama-
tic, Legendary, and Contemplative. By W.
Gilmore Simms. With Portrait. 2 vols.
12mo, cloth, 15s.
SiMMS. — The Sword and the Distaff;
or, " Fair, Fat, and Forty." A Story of
the South at the close of the Revolution.
By W. Gilmore Simms. Post Svo. cloth, 7s.
SiMMS. — The Wigwam and the Cabin ;
or. Tales of the South. By W. Gilmore
Simms. Two Series, in 1 vol. post Svo, cloth,
7s.
SiMMS. — Marie de Bern lere ; a Tale of
the Crescent City, &c., &c. By W. Gilmore
Simms, 12mo, cloth, 53.
SiMMS. — Norman Maurice ; or, the
Man of the People. An American Drama.
By W. Gilmore Simms. Fourth Edition.
Post Svo, cloth, Ss.
7
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Slick. — Higli Life in Kew York. Bv
Jonathan Slick, Esq., of Weathersfleld,
Conn. With Four Engravings. Pp. 300,
12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d. New York.
Smith. — Life at the South ; or, Uncle
Tom's Cabin as it is. By ^Y. L. G. Smith,
Esq. With Illustrations. Crown 8to,
cloth, 93.
Smith. — Way Down East ; or, Por-
traitures of Yankeo Life. By Seba Smith,
the Original Major Jack Downing. With
Illustrations. 8vo, pp. 390.
SouTHWOETH. — Discarded Daughter ;
or, Children of the Isle ; a Tale. By Emma
Southworth. Post 8vo, 7s.
SoiTTHWOETii. — Virginia and Magda-
lene ; or, the Foster Sisters ; a Novel. By
Emma Southworth. Bvo, 3s. 6d.
SPEAauE. — Poetical and Prose Writ-
ings. By Charles Sprague. With Portrait,
cloth, OS.
Speingee. — Forest Life and Eorest
Trees. Comprising Winter Camp Life
among the Loggers, and Wild -wood Adven-
tures j with description of Lumbering Ope-
rations on the various Rivers of Maine and
New Brunswick. By John S. Springer.
12nio, cloth, 6s.
Stephei^"3. — Home Scenes and Home
Sounds ; or, the World from my Window.
By H. M. Stephens. Post Bvo, 4s. 6d.
Stoddaed.— Poems. By R. H. Stod-
dard. Bvo, cloth, 4s.
Stoddaed. — Adventures in Fairy Land.
By R. H. Stoddard. 12mo, 5s.
Stowe. — Uncle Tom's Cabin, and " The
Key." By Mrs. Stowe. Illustrated. 2 vols.
Bvo, cloth, gilt edges, 28s.
Stowe. — Sunny Memories of Foreign
Lands. By Mrs. Stowe. With 60 Illustra-
tions, 53.
Sfmnee. — Orations and Speeches. By
Charles Sumner. 2 vols. 12mo, cloth, IGs.
SrNNY Side (The); or, the Country
Minister's Wife. 18mo, 2s. 6d.
Table Tale: on Books, Men, and Man-
ners, from Sydney Smith and others. Edited
by C. Evelyn. Post Bvo, 3s.
Talti.— Life's Discipline; a Tale. By
Talvi. 12mo, cloth, 3s.
Talti.— The Exiles ; a Tale. By Talyi.
8vo, cloth, 73.
Tayloe.— Poems. By Bayard Taylor.
8 vo, cloth, 4s.
Tayloe.— Book of Eomance, Lyrics,
and Songs. By Bayard Taylor. Fcp., cL, 4s.
Tayloe. — Poems of the Orient. By
Bayard Taylor. 12mo, pp. 204,5s. Boston,
1855.
Temme. — Anna Hammer; a Tale of
German Life. Translated from Temme,
by A. H. Guernsey. Bvo, Is. 6d.
The Know NoTHiNa (?) 8vo, pp. 350,
73. Boston, 1855.
Thistleton. — How 1 came to be Go-
vernor of the Island of Caeona ; with a
particular Account of my Administration of
the Aiiairs of that Island. By the Hon.
Francis Thistleton, late Governor of Caeona,
Pp. 218, 18mo, sewed, 2s. 6d.
Thomas. — Farmingdale; a Tale. By
Caroline Thomas. Pp. 392, crown 8vo, cloth^
7s.
TiiOEEAU. — AYalden ; or. Life in the
Woods. By Henry D. Thoreau. Pp. 360,
12mo, 53.
TiCKNOE. — History of Spanish Litera-
ture. With Criticisms on the particular
Works and Biographical Notices of i)romi-
nent AYriters. By George Ticknor. 3 vols..
8vo, 36s.
Teials and Confessions of an Ameri-
can Housekeeper. Post Bvo, pp. 312, 5.3.
Teusta. — Peep at Number Five; or,.
Chapter in the Life of a City Pastor. By
H. Trusta. ISmo, 23. 6d.
Teusta. — Tell Tale ; or. Home Secrets...
. By H. Trusta. 18mo, 3s.
Tuckeeman. — Poems. By Henry T..
Tuclcerman. 12mo, cloth, 33. 6d.
TucKEEMAN. — Italian Sketch Book;.
By Henry T. Tuckerman. 12mo, cloth, 6s.
TucKEEMAN. — Sicily; a Pilgrimage. By
H. T. Tuckerman. 12mo, 3s, 6d.
Tuckerman. — Poems. By Henry T-
Tuckerman. 12mo, cloth, 3s.
TuCKEEMAN. — Characteristics of Lite-
rature. Illustrated by the Genius of Dis-
tinguished Men. By Henry T. Tuckerman.
Post Bvo, cloth, 5s.
YiDi.— Mr. Frank, the Underground
Mail- Agent. By Vidi. Illustrated with;
Designs by White. Pp. 2i0, crown Bvo,
cloth, 4s.
Waee.— Zenobia ; or, the Fall of Pal-
myra : an Historical Komance. In Letters
of Lucius M. Piso, from Palm}Ta, to his
friend Marcus Curtius, at Kome. 2 vols,
post 8vo, 73.- 6d.
Waee. — Aurelian ; or, Eome in the-
Third Century. 2 vols, post Bvo, 7s, 6d.
Waee.— Julian ; or. Scenes in Judea.
2 vols, post Bvo, 7s. 6d.
Waeeen. — Yagamundo ; or, the At-
tache in Spain. By John E. Warren. 1 voL
12nio, 6s.
Watson.— Nights in a Blockhouse ; or,
Sketches of Border Life, embracing Adven-
tures among the Indians, Feats of the Wild
Hunters, and Exploits of Boone, &c. By
Henry C. Watson. With Illustrations.
1 vol.' Bvo, Bs. .
Watson.— A Dictionary of Poetical
Quotations ; consisting of Elegant Extracts
on every Subject. Compiled from various
Authors, and arranged under appropriate
Heads. By J. P. Watson. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Webbee.— Tales of the Southern Bor-
der. By C. W. Webber. Bvo, cloth, 73. 6d^
Webbee. — Romance of Natural His-
tory; or, Wild Scenes and Wild Hunters.
With lUustrations. By C. W. Webber.
8vo, cloth, 143.
Webbee.— Wild Scenes and Song Birds.
By C. W. Webber. With 20 Illustrations,
printed in Colours, from Drawings by Mrs.
FINE ARTS.
75
'C. W. Webber and A. J. Miller. Eoyal 8vo,
cloth, gilc, pp. 360, £1 10s.
Weir. — Simon Kenton ; or, tlie
Scout's Revenge. An Historical Novel. By
James Weir. Post 8vo, sewed, 2s.
Weir. — The Winter Lodge ; or, Vow
Fulfilled : an Historical Novel. A Sequel
to " Simon Kenton." By James Weir. Post
8vo, cloth, pp. 232, 43.
Wellmont, — Substance and Shadows ;
or, Phases of E very-day Life, By Emma
Wellmont. Pp. 320, 12mo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
Boston.
Wemyss. — Chronology of the American
Stage, 1752-1852. By — Wemyss. 12mo,
2s. 6d.
Wensley : a Story without a Moral.
12mo, 53.
Wetherell. — The Wide, Wide World.
By Ehzabeth Wetherell (Miss Warner).
2 vols, post 8vo, 6s.
Wethereli/.— Queechy. By Elizabeth
Wetherell (Miss Warner). 2 vols, post 8vo,
12s.
Whipple. — Essays and Keviews. By
Edwin P. Whipple. 2 vols. 12mo, 143,
Whipple. — Lectures on Subjects con-
nected with Literature and Life. By Edwin
P. Whipple. 12mo, 4s.
Whipple. — Washington and the He-
volution. By Edwin P. Whipple. 12mo,
Is. 6d.
White. — Shakspeare's Scholar ; being
Historical and Critical Studies of his Text,
Characters, and Commentators, mth an Ex-
amination of Mr. Collier's Folio of 1632.
By Richard Grant White. A.M. Pp.543,
8vo, cloth, 15s.
Whittier. — Old Portraits and Modern
Sketches. By John G. Whittier. 12mo, 5s.
Whittier. — Margaret Smith's Jour-
nal. By John (r. Whittier. 12mo, 5s.
Whittier. — Songs of Labour, and
other Poems. By John G. Whittier. 12mo,
33. 6d.
Whittier. — The Chapel of the Her-
mits. By John G. Whittier. 12mo, 3s. 6d,
Whittier. — A Sabbath Scene. By
John G. Whittier. Hlustrated. Fcap.,
sewed. Is.
White Slave (The) ; or, Memoirs of
a Fugitive. Post 8vo, 7s.
Wilbur. — The Biglow Papers. Edited,
with an Introduction, Notes, Glossary, and
copious Index, by Homer AVilbur, A.M.,
Pastor of the first Church in Jaalam, and
Member of many Literary, &c., &c. So-
cieties. (By James Russell Lowell.) Third
Edition. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Willis.— Poems. By N. P. Willis.
8vo, cloth. 12s. Philadelphia.
Willis.— Fun Jottings. Bv N. P.
Willis. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Willis. — Pencillings by the Way. By
N. P. Willis. 12mo, cloth, 7s. Cd.
Willis. — People I Have Met ; or,
Pictures of Society and People of Mark —
drawn under a thin veil of Fiction. By N.
P. WiUis. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Willis. — Hurrygraphs ; or. Sketches
of Scenery, Celebrities, and Society, taken
from Life. By N. P. Willis. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Willis. — Life Here and There ; or,
Sketches of Society and Adventure at Far-
apart Times and Places. By N". P. Willis.
12ino, 7s. 6d.
Winthrop. — Hon. E». C. Winthrop's
Speeches and Addresses on various occa-
sions. 1 vol. royal 8vo, 18s.
Wood. — Personal Eecollections of the
Stage ; embracing Notices of Actors,
Authors, and Auditors, during a period of
Forty Years. By William B. Wood, late
Director of the Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Washington, and Alexandria Theatres. With
a Portrait. Pp. 478, post 8vo, cloth, 6s.
Woodbury. — Writings of Levi Wood-
bury, LL.D,, PoKtical, Judicial, and Lite-
rary. Now first selected and arranged. In
3 volumes, Svo, cloth, £1 IGs.
WoRMELEY. — Amabel ; a Family His-
tory. By Mary Elizabeth Wormeley. Svo,
pp. 470, 73. 6d. New York, 1854.
XV.
FINE AETS.
Parley. — Six Illustrations of the
Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Designed and
Etched by Felix O. C. Darley. Square
foUo, 12s.
Darley. — Six Illustrations of Wash-
ington Irving's Rip van Winkle. Designed
and Etched by Felix O. C. Darley. Square
4to, 12s.
.DrNLAP. — The History of the Rise
and Progress of the Arts of Design in the
United States. By William Dunlap, Pres.
of American Academy of Fine Arts. 2
vols. Svo, 24s. New York, 1834.
Handbook of Oil-painting. — Hand-
book of Young Artists and Amateurs in Oil-
Painting ; being chiefly a condensed compila-
tion from the celebrated Manual of Bouvier,
with additional matter selected from the
labours of Merriwell, De Montabert, and
other distinguished Continental Writers in
the Art. In Seven Parts; adapted for a
Text-book in Academies of both Sexes, as
well as for Self- Instruction. Appended — a
new Explanatory and Critical Vocabulary.
By an American Artist. 12mo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
Huntington. — A Greneral Yiew of the
Fine Arts, Critical and Historical ; with aa
76
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Introduction. By B. Huntington, M.A,
12mo, cloth, 7s. Gd.
Lee. — Familiar Sketches of Sculpture
and Sculptors. By Mrs. II. F. Lee. 2 vols.
12nio, cloth, 10s.
LosSTxa.— Outline History of the Fine
Arts ; embracing a View of the Else, Pro-
gress, find Influence of the Arts among
ditferent Nations, Ancient and Modern, with
Notices of the Character and Works of
many celebrated Artists. By B. J. Lossing.
Engravings. 18mo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
PAiNTixa. — Its Eise and Progress
from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time.
Conr.piled from the best Authorities. 12mo,
cloth.
kScijlpture, and the Plastic Art.
Compiled by the Author of the ** History of
the Art of Painting." 12rao, cloth, Gs.
Spooner. — Biographical and Critical
Dictionary of Painters, Engravers, Sculp-
tors, and Architects, from Ancient to
Modern Times; with the Monograms,
Ciphers, and Marks used by distinguished
Artists to certify their Works. By Shear-
jashub Spooner, A.B., M.D. 8vo, cloth, 86s.
Spooner. — Anecdotes of Painters,
Engravers, Sculptors, and Architects. By
Dr. S. Spooner. 3 vols. 12mo, 123.
Theory op Effect; embracing the
Contrast of Light and Shade, of Colour,
and of Harmony. By an Artist. 15 Illus.
trations. 12mo, 3s.
TucKERMAN. — Artist Life; or,
Sketches of American Painters. By Henry
T. Tuckerman. 12mo, cloth, Ss.
XVI.
MUSIC.
Ellett. — Nouvellettes of the Musi-
cians. By Mrs. E. F. Ellett. With JPor-
traits. 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Ellis. — The Organ, and Church Music.
Two Discourses delivered in Harvard Church,
Charleston, September 20, 1852. By Greorge
G. Ellis. 8vo, sewed. Is. 6d.
Fetis. — Music explained to the World ;
or, how to understand Music and enjoy its
Performance. From the French of Francis
James Fetis, Director to the *' Musical
Review" of Pai-is. Translated for the Boston
Academy of Music. 12mo, cloth, 4s. 6d.
Gould. — Church Music in America ;
comprising its History and its Peculiarities
at different Periods, with cursory Remarks
on its Legitimate Use and its Abuse ; with
Notices of the Schools, Composers, Teachers,
and Societies. By Nath. D. Gould. 12mo,
cloth, 53.
Hastings. — Dissertation on Musical
Taste. By Thomas Hastings. Crown Svo,
cloth, 8s. 6d.
Hastings. — History of Forty Choirs.
By Thomas Hastings. Post 8vo, 53.
Havergal. — A History of the Old
Hundredth Psalm Tune, with Specimens. By
the Eev. W. H. Havergal, M.A. With a
Prefatory Note, by the Right Rev. J. M.
Wainwright, D.D. Pp. 74, Svo, cloth, 5s.
Lyrics from the " Wide, Wide World."
The Words by W. H. BeUamy. The Music
by C. W. Glover. 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
Marx. — Theory and Practice of Musi-
cal Composition. By A. B . Marx. Trans-
lated from the Third German Edition, by H.
S. Saroni. Svo, cloth, IBs.
MA.so:Nr."Musical Letters from Abroad ;
including detailed Accounts of the Birming-
ham, Norwich, and Dusseldorf Musical Fes-
tivals of 1852. By Lowell Mason. Pp.
312, Svo, cloth, 7s.
Moore. — Complete Encyclopajdia of
Music, Elementary, Technical, Historical,
Biographical, Vocal, and Instrumental. By
John W. Moore. Pp. 1004, royal Svo, cloth,
£14s.
Moore. — The same, half-bound, £1 73.
Warner. — Kudimental Lessons in
Music ; containing the Primary Instruction
requisite for all Beginners in the Art, whether
Tocal or Instrumental. By James F.
Warner. ISmo, 33.
Weber and Warner. — Theory of
Musical Composition. Translated from the
German of Von Weber. With Additions
and Notes. By James F. Warner. Svo,
14s. New York, 18 i2.
XVII.
FEEEMASONRY.
American Masonic EEaisTER for
1813-44, and 1846—47. By Bro. Hofi-
mann. 2 vols. Svo, cloth, 30s.
Mackey. — A Lexicon of Freemasonry.
By Dr. A. G. Mackey. Svo, cloth, 10s. 6d.
MoORE. — New Masonic Trestle Board,
for the Use of Lodges and Brethren,
Chapters, Councils, and Encampments, the
Degrees of Mark M., P.M., M.E.M., E.A.,
E.M., S.M., and the Encampment Orders of
SPIRITUALISM.
17
K., of E. C, K.T. andK. of Malta ; with the
Installation, Consecration, and Dedication
Ceremonies, &c. By C. W. Moore, Boston,
U.S. With Engravings. Cloth, boards,
10s. 6d.
The Masonic Mirror and Symbolic
Chart, with Engravings of the Emblems of
the E.A.P., F.C., M.M., R.A., and Mark
M. Degrees, Price 2s. on a sheet ; 4s.
mounted in cloth case, or 7s, 6d. mounted
on roller and varnished.
XVIII.
MOEMONISM.
Bennett. — The History of the Saints ;
or, an Exposure of Joe Smith and Mormo-
nism. By John C. Bennett. I2mo, 5s.
Caswall.— The History of the Mor-
mons. By Henry Caswall. 12mo, 7s. 6d.
Ferris. — The History, Government,
Doctrines, Customs, and Prospects of the
IJatter-Day Saints ; from Personal Observa-
tion during a Six Months' Residence at
Great Salt Lake City. By Benjamin G,
Ferris, late Secretary of Utah Territory.
With numerous Illustrations. I2mo, cloth,
6s. 6d.
Gunnison. — Tlie Mormons, or Latter-
Day Saints, in the Valley of the Great Salt
Lake ; a History of their Rise and Progress
peculiar Doctrines, present Condition and
Prospects, derived from Personal Observa-
tion during a Residence among them. By
Lieut. T. W. Gunnison. Fcap. 8vo, cloth,
3s. 6d.
KiDDEE. — Mormonism and the Mor-
mons : an Historical View of the Rise and
Progress of the Sect self-styled Latter-Day
Saints. By D. T. Kidder. I2mo, sheep,
2s. 6d.
MoR]ViONS. — Report of the Commission
of the United States Government. 8vo, 28.
Stansbury. — Expedition to the Valley
of the Great Salt Lake of Utah ; including a
Description of its Geography, Natural His-
tory, and Minerals, and an Analysis of its
Waters ; with an Authentic Account of the
Mormon Settlement. By Howard Stansbury,
Captain Corps Topograph. Engineers, U. 8.
Army, Numerous Illustrations of the
Country, Natural History, &c, j and a sepa-
rate volume of Maps. Royal 8vo, cloth, £1 os.
The Book of Mormon Doctrines
AXD Covenants. 12mo, 2s. 6d.
The Mormons, or Latter-Day Saints ;
with Memoirs of the Life and Death of
Joseph Smith, "the American Mahomet.'*
Illustrated with 40 Engravings. 2s. 6d.
Van Deusen. — Spiritual Delusions ;
being a Key to the Mysteries of Mormonism,
exposing the particulars of that astounding
Heresy, the Spiritual AVife System as prac-
tised by Brigham Young of Utah. By
Increase Van Deusen, and Mai'ia, his \Nife,
seceders from that singular sect. With
Illustrations. Pp. 64, 8vo, sewed. Is. 6d.
XIX.
SPIEITUALISM.
Davis. — The Great Harmonia ; being
a Philosophical Revelation of the Natural,
Spiritual, and Celestial Universe. By
Andrew Jackson Davis. 3 vols. 12mo, cloth,
2 is.
Davis. — The Approaching Crisis ;
being a Review of Dr. Bushnell's Recent
Lectures on Supernaturahsm. By Andrew
Jackson Davis. 8vo, sewed, 3s 6d.
Davis. — Philosophy of Special Provi-
dences. By Andrew Jackson Davis. 8vo,
sewed, 2s.
Davis. — The Present Age and Inner
Life ; a Sequel to Spiritual Intercourse :
Modern Mysteries Classified and Explained.
By Andrew Jackson Davis. Illustrated with
Engravings. Svo, cloth, pp. 282, 7s.
Edmonds and Dexter. — Spiritualism.
By John W. Edmonds, and George T. Dexter,
M.D. With an Appendix, by Nathaniel
P. Tallmadge. 8vo, cloth, 12s.
DODS. — Immortality Triumphant. By
J. B. Dods. 12mo, 4s. 6d.
DoDS.-Spirit Manifestations Examined
and Explained. By John Bovee Dods. Post
8vo, 5s.
Elliot's Mysteries ; or, Glimpses of
the Supernatural. I2mo, 5s.
FiSHBOiJGH. — Macrocosm and Micro-
cosm ; or. Universe Without and AVithin.
By W. Fishbough. Post Svo, 33. 6d.
Mattison. — Spirit Eapping Unveiled*
By Rev. H. Mattison. Post Svo, 4s. 6d.
New Bond oe Love. — Scraps from the
Writer's Album. I2mo, Is. 6d.
Newman. — Fascination ; or, Philoso-
15hy of Charming. By J. B. liTewman.
Post Svo, 3s. 6d.
Oldfield. — " To Daimonion ;" or, the
Spiritual Medium. Its Nature Illustrated
by the History of its Uniform Mysterious
Manifestation, when unduly evinced. la
Twelve Familiar Letters to an Inquiring
Friend. By Traverse Oldfield. 18mo,
cloth, 2s. 6d.
78
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Ross. —The Spirit World; or, the
Caviller Answered. By Joel H. E033, M.D.
18mo, cloth.
The Universe no .Desert, the
Earth no Monopoly ; preceded by a
Scientific Exposition of the Unity of Plan in
Creation. Two volumes in one. Pp. 3S4,
crown 8vo, cloth, Gs.
Webber.— Spiritual Vampirism ; or,
Ethereal Softdown, and her Friends of the
" New Light." By C. W. Webber. Post
8vo, Gs.
XX.
GUIDE-BOOKS, ATLASES, MAPS,
AND CHAETS.
Appleton's IS'ew and Complete Uni-
ted States Guide-book pob Travellers :
embracing the Northern, Eastern, Southern,
and AVestern States ; Canada, Nova Scotia,
New Brunswick, &c. Illustrated with 45
Engraved Maps, including Plans of the Prin-
cipal Cities of the Union, and numerous
Engravings. 1 vol. 12rao, cloth, 12s.
Belden. — JSTew York ; Past, Present,
and Future. By E. Porter Belden. Cr. Svo,
cloth, Gs.
Canada Directory (The) : containing
the Names of the Professional and Business
Men of every description in the Cities,
Towns, and principal Villages of Canada ;
together with a complete Post-office Direc-
tory of the Province, a variety of Statistical
and Commercial Tables, &c., brought down
to November, 1851. Svo, bound, lis.
Colton's Traveller's and Tourist's
Guide-book through the United States of
America and the Canadas, and of the prin-
cipal Cities and Towns in each. With a Map.
ISmo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
CoLTox's Western Tourist and Emi-
grant's Guide through the States of Ohio,
Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Iowa,
and Wisconsin, and the Territories of Minne-
sota, Missouri, and Nebrasca; being an accu-
rate and concise Description of each State
and Territory, and containing the Routes and
Distances on the Great Lines of Travel.
With a Map. 43. 6d.
Colton's G-uide-book through the
New England and Middle States. 5s.
Curtiss. — Western Portraiture and
Emigrant's Guide ; a Description of Wis-
consin, Illinois, and Iowa ; with Remarks On
Minnesota and other Territories. By Daniel
S. CuL'tiss. With a Map. Post Svo, cloth, 6s.
Disturnell's Railway, Steamship,
AND Telegraph Book ; being a Guide
through the United States and Canada,
24mo, sewed. Is. Gd.
Fisher. — Indiana : its G-eography,
Statistics, Institutions, County Topography,
&c. ; compiled from Official and other Au-
thentic Sources. By Richard S. Fisher, M.D.
With a Sectional Map of the State. 1 vol.
12.no, pp. 128, 12s.
EisuER. — Grazetteer of Maryland.
Compiled from the Returns of the Seventh
Census of the United States, and other Offi-
cial Documents ; to which is added a Ge-
neral Account of the District of Columbia.
By Richard S. Fisher, M.D. With a Map.
1 vol. Svo, bound, 7s. 6d.
G-azetteer. — Hay ward's New Im-
proved Gazetteer of the United States. Svo,
cloth, 16s.
G-AZETTEER. — Lippincott's New and
Complete Gazetteer of the United States.
Svo, bound, £1 Is.
G-AZETTEER.— A New and Complete
Statistical and General Gazetteer of the
United States of America, founded on and
compiled from Official, Federal, and State
Returns, and the Census of 1850. By Richard
Swainson Fisher, M.D. Svo, bound, 18s.
Guide prom Montreal and Quebec
to the Eastern Townships of Lower Canada
and to Portland ( Maine) . With a Map. Pp .
42, 12mo, cloth, 2s.
Guide to Montreal and its Environs.
With a Map. Pp. 56, 12mo, cloth, 23.
Guide to Quebec and its Environs.
With a Map. Pp. 76, 12mo, cloth, 2s.
Horn's Overland Guide from Coun-
cil Bluffs to California : containing »
Table of Distances, and showing all the
Rivers, Lakes, Springs, Moimtains, Camp-
ing Places, and other Prominent Objects;
with Remarks on the Country Roads,
Timbers, Grasses, &c. &c. Accompanied
by a Map. 3s. 6d.
Mackay. — The Stranger's Guide to
the Cities and Principal Towns of Canada,
with a Glance at the most remarkable Cata-
racts, Falls, Rivers, Watering Places, Mi-
neral Springs, &c. &c. ; and a Geographical
and Statistical Sketch of the Province,
brought down to 1854. With Maps and Illus-
trations. By Robert W. Stuart Mackay,
Editor of "The Canada Directory," &c.
Pp. 136, 12mo, stiff wrapper, 2s. 6d.
Marshall's Farmer's and Emi-
GRA2fT's IIaedbook : comprising the Clear-
ing of Forest and Prairie Land, Gardening,
Farming generally. Farriery, Cookery, and
the Prevention and Cure of Diseases ; with
Copious Hints, Recipes, and Tables. 12mo,
cloth, 63.
Matthews (Corn.) — Pen and Ink Pa-
norama of New York. ISmo.
Mitchell's New Traveller's Guide
through the United States, containing the
iPrincipal Cities, Towns, &c., alphabeticalhr
arranged; together with the Railroad,
Steamboat, Canal, and Stage Routes, with
GUIDE-BOOKS, ATLASES, MAPS, AND CHARTS.
79
the Distances in miles, from place to place.
Illustrated by an accurate Map. 6s.
Mitchell's Pocket GtUIDE to Cali-
fornia. 18mo, roan, 3s.
Mitchell's Pocket G-uide to Ca-
nada East. 18mo, roan, Is. 6d.
Mitchell's Pocket G-riDE to Flo-
rida. 18mo, roan, Is. 6d.
Mitchell's Pocket Guide to ISTew
York. 18mo, roan. Is. 6d.
Mitchell's Pocket G-ijide to Texas,
Oregon, and California. ISmo, roan, 3s.
x^ew YoEK Directory. — Wilson's Bu-
siness Directory of New York City, Pub-
lished annually. Pp.319 and xxxviii. 12mo,
cloth, 3s. 6d.
New York Daguerreotyped. With
numerous Illustrations. 1 vol. 8vo.
New York. — Handbook of New York.
A Manual for Strangers. ISmo.
New York iis- a Nutshell ; or, Yi-
sitor's Handbook to that City. Illustrated
by F. Saunders. ISmo, cloth. Is. 6d.
Pathfinder (The) Railway Guide,
••New England States, 32mo, Is.
Phelp's Traveller's Guide through
the United States; of upwards of Seven
Hundred and Fifty Eadroad, Canal, Stage,
and Steamboat Koutes. With a Maj). In
pocket case, 3s. 6d.
Philadelphia as it is in 1852 ; being
a Correct Guide to aU the Public Buildings,
Literary, Scientific, and Benevolent Institu-
tions, and Places of Amusement, &c, ; with
Illustrations, and a Map of the City and En-
virons. By II. A. Smith. Cr. 8vo, cloth, 8s.
Boss. — What I saw in New York ; or,
a Bird's Eye View of City Life. , By Joel
H. Ross, M.D. Cr. 8vo, cloth, 6s. '6d.
EOUTE-BOOK THROUGH THE XJnITED
States, &c. Traveller's and Tourist's Route-
book through the United States of America
and the Canadas. With a Map. 5s.
Saunders, — New York in a Nutshell ;
or. Visitor's Handbook. By F. Saunders.
ISmo, Is. 6d.
Smith. — The Illustrated Handbook ; a
New Guide for Travellers through the
United States of America ; containing a De-
scription of the States, Cities, Towns, Vil-
lages, Watering Places, Colleges, &c. With
the liaiiroad. Stage, and Steamboat Routes,
the Distances from place to place, and the
Fares on the Great Travelling Routes. Em-
beUished with 125 Engravings, and a large
and accurate Map. By J. Calvin Smith.
ISmo, cloth, 7s. 6d.
West. — Cincinnati ; its Early Annals
and Future Prospects. By Charles Cist.
Webb. Plates, 12mo, cloth, 5s.
Williams's Guide-book to the United
States. ^Illustrated with Maps, Plans, &c.
Showing the Distance, Time, and Fare,
between every Place of Importance in the
Union, British Colonies in Axuerica, &c. By
W. Williams, 12mo, 6s.
AMERICAN MAPS.
Brooklyit. — Map of the City of Brook-
lyn. Two sheets. 48 by 36 inches. Mounted,
£1 4s.
California. — Map of California. Com-
piled by William M. Eddy, State Surveyor-
General. Two sheets. 48 by 40 inches.
£1 lis. 6d. ; in case, 183.
Ca:nada. — Map of Canada. 3 feet by
1 foot 7 inches. In case, 43.
Central America.— New Map of Cen-
tral America. One sheet. In case, 33. 6d.
Illinois. — Sectional Map of the State
of Illinois. By J. M. Peck, John Messen-
ger, and A. J. Mathewson. Two sheets.
43 by 32 inches. Mounted, ISs. j in case, 9s.
Indiana. — Map of the State of Indiana.
Compiled from the United States' Surveys,
by S. D. King. Six sheets. 66 by 48 inches.
Mounted, £1 16s.
Indiana. — Map of the State of Indiana.
Compiled from the United States' Svirveys.
Two sheets. 43 by 32 inches. Mounted, 18s.
Iowa. — Colton's Township Map of the
State of Iowa. Scale, 14 miles to the inch.
32 by 29 inches. Mounted, 9s.; in case, 4s.
Kentucky. — Map of Kentucky and
Tennessee. One sheet. 25 by 17 inches.
Mounted, 7s. 6d.; in case, 3s. 6d.
Long- Island. — Map of Long Island.
Four sheets. 60 by 43 inches. Mounted,
£1 4s.
Maine.— Township Map of the State
of Maine, Two sheets. 43 by 37 inches.
Mounted, 15s.; in case, 9s.
Massachusetts. — Colton's New Kail-
road and Township Map of the States of
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecti-
cut. 32 by 29 inches. Mounted, 9s, ; in
case, 4s.
Mexico. — Map of the Bepublio of
Mexico, One sheet. 42 by 32 inches.
Mounted, 12s. ; in case, 93.
Michigan. — Map of Michigan. By
John Farmer, One sheet. 35 by 25 inches.
Mounted, 12s. ; in case, 9s.
MiNESOTA. — Map of the Territory of
Minesota. Compiled by T. Knauer. Scale,
6 miles to the inch. 32 by 30 inches. Mounted,
123,; in case, 63.
Missouri. — Colton's New Map of Mis-
souri. Scale, 15 miles to the inch. 32 by 29
inches. Mounted, 9s.; in case, 43.
New England,— Map of New Eng-
land. Four sheets, 64 by 56 inches. Mounted,
Coloured in Counties, £1 lis. 6d.
New England. — Map of the States of
New England and New York ; with parts of
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, the Canadas, &c.
One sheet. 30 by 23 inches. Mounted, 9s.
New Hampshire. — Colton's New Kail-
road and Township Map of the States of
New Hampshire and Vermont. 32 by 29
inches. Mounted, 9s.; in case, 48.
New York. — Map of the Country
Thirty-three Miles around the City of New
York. One sheet. 29by 26 inches. Mounted,
9s.; iu case, 4s.
80
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
ISTew York.— Plan of the City of New
York, in North America. Surveyed in the
Years 1766 and 1767. By B. Ratzer, Lieu-
tenant in His Majesty's 60th or Royal Ame-
rican Regiment. Two sheets. 44 by 40
inches. Mounted, £1 lis. 6d.
New York. — Map of the State of New
York, with parts of the adjacent country,
embracing Plans of the Principal Cities, and
some of the Larger Villages. By David H.
Burr. Six sheets. 60 by 50 inches. Mounted,
£1 lis. 6d.
New York.— Map of the City and
County of New York. Three sheets. 56 by
32 inches. Mounted, I83.
New York. — Map of the Country
Twelve Miles around the City of New York.
Two sheets. 40 by 40 inches. Mounted, or
in ease, 18s.
New York.— Colton's Railroad and
Township Map of the State of New York.
Scale, 15 mUes to the inch. 32 by 29 inches.
Mounted, 9s. j in case, 43.
New York. — Map of the City and
County of New York. One sheet. 8*2 by 20
inches. Mounted, 9s,; in case, 3s. 6d.
New York.— Map of the City of New
York. One sheet. 32 by 26 inches. Mounted,
9s. J in case, 3s. 6d.
New York.— Statistical Map of the
state of New York ; comprising all the prin-
cipal Statistics of each County. By R, S.
Fisher, M.D. One sheet. 32 by 26 inches.
Is. 6d.
North and South America. — Map
of North and South America. With a
plan of the Isthmus of Panama. One sheet.
32 by 25 inches. Mounted, 93.
North America- — Map of North
America, One sheet. 29 by 26 inches.
Mounted, 7s. 6d. ; in case, 43.
Ohio. — Colton's Railroad and Town-
ship Map of the State of Ohio. Scale, 12
miles to the inch. 32 by 29 inches.
Mounted, 9s, ; in case, 4s.
South America. — Map of South
America. Two sheets. 44 by 31 inches.
Mounted, 4s.
South America. — Map of South
America. One sheet. 32 by 25 inches.
Mounted, 9s.
South Carolina. — Map of the State of
South Carolina. Compiled from Railroad,
Coast, and State Surveys. By G. E. Walker
and J. Johnson, Civil Engineers. Four
sheets. 73 by 57 inches. Mounted, £3 33.
iSouTHERN States. — Map of the
Southern States. Viz., Maryland, Virginia,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia,
Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana,
Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee, and
Kentucky. Four sheets. 62 by 54 inches.
Mounted and coloured, £1 lis. 6d.
States Maps. — Colton's New Series of
Maps for Travellers. This series embraces
maps of each of the United States, of the
several British Provinces, and of Mexico,
Central America, and the West Indies, exhi-
biting vnth accuracy the railroads, canals,
stage routes, &c., also the principal cities, !
and other objects of interest, in ajppended
diagrams.
Michigan, South, 2s.
Alabama, 2s.
Arkansas, 2s.
Calilbrnia, 3s.
Canada, East, 2s.
Canada, West, 2s.
Central America, 3s.
Connecticut, 2s.
Delaware and Mary-
land, 2s.
Florida, 2s.
Georgia, 2s.
Ilhnois, 2s.
Indiana, 23.
Iowa, 23.
Kentuck}'- and Tennes-
see, 2s.
Lake Superior, 2s.
Louisiana, 2s.
Maine, 2s,
Massachusetts and
Rhode Island, 2s.
Mexico, 33.
Michigan, North, 23.
Minnesota, 2s.
Mississippi, 2s,
Missouri, 2s.
New Brunswick, Nova
Scotia, &c. 23.
New Hampshire, 23,
NewJersey, 23.
New Mexico and
Utah, 3s.
New York, 23.
North Carolina, 23.
Ohio, 2s.
Oregon and Washing-
ton Ter., 33.
Pennsylvania, 23.
Rhode Island, 23.
South Carolina, 23.
Texas, 2s.
Vermont, 23.
Virginia, 2s.
West Indies, 33,
Wisconsin, 23.
States Maps. — Mitchell's Maps of the
states. In roan case.
Alabama, 2s.
Arkansas, 2s.
California, with Terri-
tories of Oregon,
Utah, and New
Mexico, 2s.
California, with Guide,
3s. 6d,
Canada, East, 2s.
Canada, West, 2s.
Carolina, North, 2s.
Carolina, South, 2s.
Florida, 23.
Georgia, 2s.
Illinois, 2s.
Indiana, 2s.
Iowa, 2s.
Kentucky, 2s.
Louisiana, 2s.
Massachusetts, Con-
necticut and Rhode
Island, 3s. 6d.
Maine, 2s.
Thayer's States
Maryland and Dela-
ware, 23.
Mexico and Guate-
mala, 3s. 6d.
Michigan, 28,
Minnesota, with Guide,
3s. 6d.
Mississippi, 2s,
Missouri, 2s.
Missouri, with the ad-
jacent Copper and
Mineral Lands,
3s. 6d,
New York, 23.
Ohio, 2s.
Pennsylvania, 2s.
Tennessee, 2s.
Texas, 2s.
Texas, with Oregon,
3s. 6d-
United States, 3s. 6d.
Virginia, 2s.
Wisconsin, 2s.
Maps. — Pocket
Maps of the States. Coloured, in case, each,
2s. 6d.
Texas. — Cordova's Map of Texas.
Compiled from new and original surveys.
Four sheets. 36 by 34 inches. Mounted,
£1 lis. 6d. ; in case, 18s.
United States, — Map of the United
States and the Canadas, Nine sheets. 82
by 68 inches. Mounted, or in portable
form, £3 3s.
United States. — Map of the United
states, the British Provinces, Mexico, and
the West Indies. Showing the country from
the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. 4 sheets,
62 by 55 inches. £1 lis. 6d.
United States. — Map of the United
States, the British Provinces, Mexico, the
West Indies, and Central America, with
parts of New Granada and Venezuela,
Exhibiting the country from the Atlantic to
the Pacific, and from 50" north lat. to the
Isthmus of Panama and the Oronoco Rirer.
GUIDE-BOOKS, ATLASES. MAPS, AND CHARTS.
81
Tvro sheets. 45 by 36 inches. Mounted,
15s. ; in case, 93.
United States. — Map of the United
states. 28 by 33 inches. In ease, 3s. 6d.
United States. — Mitchell's large Map
of the United States. Compiled on a Scale
of Twenty-five Miles to an inch, on Flam-
stead's Projection. Mounted on rollers,
£2 2s.
West Indies. — Topographical Map of
the West Indies. With the adjacent coasts.
One sheet. 32 by 25 inches. Mounted, 9s. ;
in case, 4s.
Western States. — Map of the
Western States ; viz., Ohio, Indiana, Michi-
gan, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Iowa, and
the Territories, 48 by 36 inches. Mounted,
IBs. ; and in portable form, 9s.
Western States. — Map of the
Western States; viz., Ohio, Michigan,
Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, and Wis-
consin, and the Territory of Minnesota. By
J. Calvin Smith. One sheet. 28 by 24
inches. Mounted, 7». 6d.
Wisconsin. — Colton's Township Map
of the state of Wisconsin. Scale, 15 miles
to the inch. 32 by 29 inches, Mounted, 9s. ;
in case, 43.
BiDWELL. — Missionary Map of China,
embracing chiefly the Eighteen Provinces,
from the latest and best Authorities. By
O. B. Bidwell. 7 feet by 5^. Mounted on
rollers, £2 12s. 6d.
Colton. — American Atlas, illustrating
the Physical and Political Geography of the
United States of America, the British
Provinces, Mexico, Central America, the
West Indies, and South America; con-
etructed from official surveys and qkker
authentic materials. The '* American Atlas"
contains separate maps of every state and
country of Korth and South America, and
the West Indies, engraved in the most
elaborate style, and coloured so as to dis-
tinguish readily the civil and political divi-
sions of each. The work embraces about
50 maps, in imperial folio, and each map is
accompanied with a letter-press description
of the country it may represent ; exhibiting,
in a condensed form, all its great interests,
industries, and institutions. (In progress.)
£3 15s. ; or, without letter-press, £3 3s.
Colton. — Atlas of the World, illus-
trating Physical and Political Geography ;
constructed from official surveys and other
authentic materials. The "Atlas of the
World " contains all the maps and letter-
press comprised in the American Atlas, with
the addition of between 30 and 40 maps
and descriptions of the several countries of
Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceanica, and in
■every respect is got up in the same splendid
style, and with the same regard to authenti-
city and correctness. (In progress.)
£4 lOs. ; or, without letter-press, £3 15s.
Colton's Map of the World, on
Mercator's Projection, exhibiting the recent
Arctic and Antarctic Discoveries and Ex-
plorations, &c., &c. Six sheets. 80 by
60 inches. Mounted, £3 3s.
Colton's Map of the World, on
Mercator's Projection, exhibiting the recent
Arctic and Antarctic Discoveries and Ex-
plorations, &c., &c. Two sheets. 44 by 36
inches. Mounted, ISs.
Colton's Map of the World, on
Mercator's Projection, &c. One sheet. 28 by
22 inches. Mounted, 9s.
Colton's Missionary Map of the
World, on a Hemispherical Projection, each
hemisphere being six feet in diameter, and
both printed on one piece of cloth at one
impression. 160 by 80 inches, £3 3s.
Colton's Map of Africa. One sheet. 32
by 25 inches. Mounted, 9s.
Colton's Map of Africa. Four sheets.
58 by 44 inches. Mounted, £1 lis. 6d.
Colton's Map of Asia. One sheet. 32
by 25 inches. Mounted, 9s.
Colton's Map of Asia. Four sheets. 58
by 44 inches. Mounted, £1 lis. 6d.
Colton's Map of Europe. One sheet.
32 by 25 inches. Mounted, 9s.
Colton's Map of Europe. Four sheets.
58 by 4i inches. Mounted, £1 lis. 6d.
Colton's Map of Egypt, the Peninsula
of Mount Sinai, Arabia Petrsea, with the
southern part of Palestine. One sheet. 32
by 25 inches. "Mounted, 9s.
Colton's Map of Palestine, from the
latest authorities ; chiefly from the maps
and drawings of Eobinson and Smith, with
corrections and additions, furnished by the
Rev. Dr. E. Eobinson. Two sheets.] 43 by
32 inches. Mounted, 15s.
Colton's Map of Palestine, from the
latest authorities ; chiefly from the maps
and drawings of Robinson and Smitn,
with corrections and additions, furnished by
the Rev. Dr. E. Robinson, and with plans of
Jerusalem, and of the Journeyings of the
Israelites. Four sheets. 80 by 62 inches.
Mounted, 36s.
Colton's New Testament Map. A Map
of the Countries mentioned in the New
Testament, and of the: Travels of the
Apostles. One sheet. 32 by 25 inches.
Mounted, 7s. 6d.
Colton's Map of Mountains and
Rivers. A combined view of the principal
mountains and rivers in the world, with
tables showing their relative heights and
lengths. One sheet. 32 by 25 inches.
Mounted, 9s.
Colton's Chart of National Flags,
each represented in its appropriate colours.
One sheet. 28 by 22 inches. Mounted, 93.
Colton's Map of Human Life,
Deduced from passages of Sacred Writ.
One sheet. 25 by 20 inches. Mounted,
4s. 6d.
Guyot's Mural Maps ; a Series of
elegant Coloured Maps, projected on a
lar^e scale, for the Recitation Room, con-
sisting of a Map of the World, North and
South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, &c.,
exhibiting the Physical Phenomena of the
Globe, &c. By Professor Arnold Guyot*
Map of the World, £3 3s.
Map of North America, £3 3s.
Map of South America, £3 3s.
Map of Geographical Elements, £3 3s.
Other Maps of the series are in preparation.
82
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
Maps made by order of the Senate.
Oregon and Upper California, from the
surveys of J. C. Fremont. Folio, 53. Wash-
ington, 1848.
Maps made by order of tlie Senate.
Arkansas, Rio del Norte and Rio Grila, from
the survey of W. H. Emory, Lieutenant,
being a military reconnaissance under the
command of Brigadier-General S. W.
Kearny. Three sheets, folio, 7s. 6d. 18i7.
Marcou. — GJ-eological Map of the
United States and the British Provinces of
Iforth America, with an Explanatory Text,
Geological Sections, and Plates of the
Fossils which characterise the Formations.
By Jules Marcou. 8vo, cloth, IBs.
Mitchell's large Map of the World.
£2 23.
Mitchell's Universal Atlas ; com-
prehending Seventy-five Imperial Quarto
.sheets, giving one Hundred and Twenty
Maps, Plans, and Sections, engraved and
coloured in the first style of the art. Imp.
4to, half-bound, £3.
Morse's North American Atlas ; con-
taining Fifty coloured Maps. Royal 4to,
cloth, 163.
INlCOLLET. — Map of the Hydrographi-
cal Basin of the Mississippi River, from
Astronomical and Barometrical Observa-
tions, Surveys and Information. Govern-
ment Report. Two sheets, folio, 4s. Wash-
ington, 1843.
Stream of Time ; or. Chart of Uni-
versal History. From the original German
of Strauss. 'Revised and continued by R.
S. Fisher, M.D. 43 by 32 inches. Mounted,
15s.
United States Official Charts,
prepared by Lieutenant Maury, at the
National Observatory, and published by
authority of the Bureau of Ordnance and
Hydrography, Washington, United States.
1. North Atlantic Track Charts. Eight
2. South Atlantic Track Charts. Eight
3. Korth Pacific Track Charts. Ncs. 8, 9,
10, and 11. Four sheets, 123.
4. South Pacific Track Charts. jSTos. 5 and
10. Two sheets, 6s.
5. North Atlantic Pilot Charts. Two
sheets, 4s. 6d.
6. South Atlantic Pilot Charts. Two sheets,
4s. 6d.
7. Cape Horn Pilot Charts. Two sheets,
4s. 6d.
8. Coast of Brazil Pilot Charts. One sheet,
2s. 6d.
9. North Pacific Pilot Charts. Nos. 1, 2,
3, 5, and 6. Five sheets, lis. 6d.
10. South Pacific Pilot Chart. No. 6. One
sheet, 2s. 6d.
11. Trade Wind Chart of the Atlantic. One
sheet, 2s. 6d.
12. Whale Chart of the World. Four
13. Thermal Charts of the North Atlantic.
Eight sheets, £1 4s.
14. Storm and Rain Chart of the North
Atlantic. One sheet, 2s. 6d.
Explanation and Sailing Directions to ac-
company the Wind and Current Charts,
approved by Commodore Charles Morris,
Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance and
Hydrography, and published l)y authority
of Hon. J. P. Kennedy, Secretary of the
Navy. By M. F, Maury, LL.D,, Lieutenant,
U.S.N., Supei'intendent of the National
Observatory. Fifth Edition, enlarged and
improved. 4to, 5s.
United States' Coast Stjryet,
founded upon a Trigonometrical Survey,
under the direction of Alexander D. Bache
and J. R. Hassler.
Triangulatioit — By C. M. Ealdn, J".
Ferguson, C. Renard, and E. Blunt.
TopoQRAPHY— By H. L. Whiting, W. M.
Boyce, J. Farely, A. D. Mackay, T. H.
Gerdes, and B. T. Sands.
Hydbogkaphy — Under the direction of
G. S. Blake, and C. H. Davis, Lieuts.,
U.^S. N.
1. Map of New York Bay and Harbour.
4s. 6d.
2. Map of the Harbour of New London.
3s.
3. Map of Oyster or Siosset Bay. 3s.
4. Map of the Harbour of New Bedford.
3s.
5. Map of Little Egg Hai-bour. 3s.
6. Map of New Haven Harbour. 3s.
7. Map of the Harbour of Holmes' Hole.
3s.
8. Map of the Harbours of Black Rock
and Bridgeport. 3s.
9. Map of Edgartown Harbour. 3s.
XXL
PEEIODICALS.
American Bible Union. — Bible
Union Reporter, published by the American
Bible Union. Edited by William H. Wyck-
hofi*, Corresponding Secretary, and C. A.
Buckbee, Assistant Treasurer. Published
in Monthly Parts. Annual Subscription, 3s.
American Board of Commissioners
FOR I'oREiGN Missions Publica-
tions.
1. Journal oe Missions, Issued Monthly,
on a large Royal Sheet. Annual Sub-
scription, Is. 6d.
2. Missionary Herald, Issued Monthly,
in 8vo Parts. Annual Subscription, 6s.
3. Youth's Day Spring, Issued Monthly,
in Pamphlet form. Annual Subscrip-
tion, Is.
Messrs, T. ^ Co, are the European Agents
of the Board.
American Journal of Dental
Science. Edited by Chapin A. Harris,
PERIODICALS.
83
M.D., D.D., and Alfred A. Blandy, M.D.,
D.D. Published in Quarterly Parts, at 6s.
each.
American Journal or Medical
Science. Edited by Isaac Hays, M.D. Pub-
lished in Quarterly Parts, at 7s. 6d. each.
American Journal op Science and
Arts. Conducted by Professors B. Silliman,
B. Silliman, jun., and James Dana, in con-
nection with others of Cambridge, Boston,
and New York. Published every Second
Month, in 8yo Parts, at 5s, each.
American Methodist Quarterly
Review. 12s per Annum.
American National Preacher. A
Monthly Repository of Original Sermons.
Edited by the Rev. J. M. Sherwood. Pub-
lished in Monthly Parts, at 8d. each.
American Polytechnic Journal.
Devoted to Science, Mechanical Arts, and
Agriculture. Conducted by Professors Chas.
G. Page, J. J. Greenough, and Chas. L.
rieischmann. Published Monthly, at Is. 6d.
American Railroad Journal. Steam
ISTavigation, Commerce, Mining, Manufac-
tures, &c. Edited by Henry V. Poor. Pub-
lisned Weekly, at New York. Annual Sub-
crip tion, £1 lOs.
Arthur's Home Magazine. Published
at Philadelphia. In Monthly Parts.
Astronomical Journal (The) . Edited
by Benjamin Apthorp Gould, jun., Ph. D.,
Eellow of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences, of the American Philosophical
Society at Philadelphia, &c. PubHshed in
Numbers, at irregular intervals, generally
varying from Two to Three Weeks. 24 Num-
bers make a Volume. Subscription, per
Volume, £1 5s., including American Postage.
Vol. 3 was completed in June, 1854.
BiBLIOTHECA SaCRA AND AMERICAN
Biblical Repositobt. Conducted by Pro-
fessor E. A. Park, and T. H. Taylor, M.A.,
of Andover, with the special co-operation of
Dr. Robinson, and Professors H. B, Smith,
G. E. Day, D. H. AUen, Dr. W. Lindsay
Alexander, of Edinburgh, and Dr Samuel
Davidson, of Manchester, In Quarterly
Parts, at 3s. 6d. Annual Subscription, 14s.
Boston Medical and Surgical
Journal. Edited by J. V. C. Smith, M.D.,
and George S. Jones, M.D. Published in
Weekly Numbers and Monthly Parts. An-
nual Subscription, 18s.
Brownson's Quarterly Ketiew.
Published at Boston. Annual Subscription,
103.
Charleston Medical Journal and
Review. Edited by Drs. Cain and Porcher.
Published every alternate Month, at 4s.
Annual Subscription, £1 4s.
Christian Examiner and Religious
Miscellany. Published at Boston every
alternate Month. In 8vo Parts, at Ss. 6d.
each.
Christian Review. PubHshed in
Quarterly Parts, at New York. Annual
Subscription, £1.
Church Review and Ecclesiastical
EivGiSTEB. Edited by Dr. Kichardson, of
Newhaven. Published Quarterly. Annual
Subscription, lOs.
Connecticut Common School Jour-
nal, AND Aknals OF Education. Published
Monthly, under the direction of the Common
State Teachers' Association. Annual Sub-
scription, 5s.
De Bow's Review. A Journal of
Commerce, Agriculture, Manufactures, In-
ternal Improvements, Statistics, &c. &c.
Primarily adapted to the Southern and
Western States of the Union. Including
Statistics of Foreign and Domestic Industry
and Enterprise. Edited by J. D. B. De Bow,
Washington City, D.C. Published Monthly,
at New Orleans, in Parts of about 100 pp.
each, at 2s. 6d.
Freemasons' Monthly Magazine.
Edited by Bro. C. W. Moore, Boston,
U. S. A. Annual Subscription, los.
Godet's Lady's Book. Edited by
Sarah J. Hale, L.A. Godey. Published in
Monthly Parts, at Philadelphia. Annual
Subscription, 24s.
Graham's American Monthly Ma- -
GAziNE. Philadelphia. Annual Subscrip-
tion, 24s.
Humphrey's Journal, devoted to the
Daguerrian and Photogenic Arts; also em-
bracing the Science and Arts pertaining to
Heliography . In Fortnightly Numbers, 8vo,
sewed, at 6d. each.
Hunt's Merchant's Magazine and
Commercial Keview. Conducted by Free-
man Hunt. Published Monthly, at New
York, at 2s. 6d.
Journal of Education, Upper Ca-
nada. Published once a Month, at Toronto.
Annual Subscription, 5s.
Journal op the American Oriental
Society, Published at Newhaven.
Journal oe the Franklin Institute
of the State of Pennsylvania, for the Pro-
motion of the Mechanic Arts. Published
Monthly. Annual Subscription, £1 10s.
Knickerbocker ; or, New York
Monthly Magazine. Annual Subscription,
183.
This is the oldest, and one of the best,
American literary Magazines.
Little Pilgrim (The). A Monthly
Newspaper. Edited by Grace Greenwood.
With Contributions by M. F. Tupper, Mary
Ilowitt, Mrs. Hall, Mrs. Crosland, &c. An-
nual Subscription, payable in advance,
23 6d., or 33. 6d. if sent by Mail direct from
Philadelphia.
Masonic Eegister and Union (The).
A Monthly Magazine, devoted to Freema-
sonry, its History, Jurisprudence, and Phi-
losophy, the Fine Arts, and Polite Litera-
ture. Published Monthly, at New York.
Annual Subscription, £1 Is.
Medical Examiner and Becord op
Medical Science. Edited by Drs. Smith
and Biddell, of Philadelphia. Published
Monthly. Annual Subscription, £1 4s.
Memphis Medical Becorder. Pub-
lished every Two Mon+lis, by the Memphis
Medical College. Annual Subscription, 6a.
84
AMERICAN LITERATURE.
MEECEESBTJEGn QUARTEELY EeYIEW.
Published by the Alumni Association of
Franldin and Marshall College. 59. per
Number.
Mining Magazine. Edited and con-
ducted by William J. Tenney. Published at
3S'ew York, in Monthly Parts of about 100
j)p, each, at 23. 6d.
Monthly Law Eepoetee. Edited
by George S. Hale, Boston. Annual Sub-
scription, 18s.
New Yoek Jouenal of Medicine,
AN-D THE Collateral Sciences. Edited
by Samuel S. Purple, M.D., and Stephen
Smith, M.D. Published every alternate
Month. Annual Subscription, IBs.
New Yoek Medical Gazette and
Jouenal oe Health. Edited by D.
Meredith Eeese, M.D., LL.D. Published
Monthly, at New York. Annual Subscrip-
tion, 123.
New Yoek Quaeteely. Devoted to
Science, Philosophy, and Literature. An-
nual Subscription, 16s.
New Yoek Teachee. Publislied
Monthly. Annual Subscription, 6s.
NoETn Ameeican Eeyiew. Com-
menced in 1815. Published in Quarterly
Parts, at Boston, at 6s. each.
The leading Critical Journal, Among its
Coniributors hare been Everett, Judge Story,
Charles Sumner, E. P.Whipple, Bowen, Perk-
ins, Professors Felton, Longfellow, Ware, &c.
Dr. Eobinson, the Oriental scholar, Mr. Pick-
ering, the philologist, &c.
NoETii Ameeican Homceopathic
JoiJENAL. A Quarterly Magazine of Medi-
cine and the Auxiliary Sciences. Conducted
by C. Hering, M.D., Philadelphia; E. E.
Marcy, M.D., and J. W. Metealf, M.D.,
New York. Annual Subscription, 18s.
Noeton's Liteeae^ Gazette and
Publisher's Circular. Published every
Fortnight. Annual Subscription, lOs.
Peteeson's Ladies' National Ma-
gazine. Edited by Mrs. Ann S. Stephens
and Charles J. Peterson. Published Monthly,
at Philadelphia. Annual Subscription, 24s.
Philadelphia Jouenal of Homceo*
PATHY. Edited by William A. Gardiner,
M.D., Professor of Anatomy in the Homoeo-
pathic College at Pennsylvania, assisted by
the following Contributors : — Drs. B. F.
Joslin, A. H. Okie, H. C. Preston, J. P.
Dake, P. P. WeUs, W. E. Payne, C. Dun-
ham, James Kitchen, W. S. Helmuth, A, E.
Small, S. K. Dubs, W. E. Payne. Published
Monthly. Annual Subscription, 18s,
PnoToaEAPHic AND FiNE Aet Jotje-
KAL. H. H. Snelling, Editor. Published
Monthl}^, in ^to Parts, at 2s. 6d, each.
Peinceton Review ; or, Biblical Re-
pertory. Published Quarterly. Annual
Subscription, £1 4s.
Putnam's Monthly Magazine of
American Literature, Science, and Art,
Published at New York, at 2s. per Part.
Qfaeteely Homceopathic Jouenal.
Edited by Drs. J. Birnstill and J. A. Tarbell^
Boston. Price per Year, 6s.
Scientific Ameeican. A Weekly-
Journal of Scientific, Mechanical, and other
Improvements. Annual Subscription, Ids.
SouTHEEN Quaeteely Review. Edi-
ted by W. Gilmore Simms, Esq. Published
at Charleston, at 6s. per Part.
Spieit op Missions. Edited for tlie
Board of Missions of the Protestant Epis-
copal Church in the United States of Ame-
rica. Published Monthly. Annual Sub-
scription, 6s.
United States Review. Publislied
Monthly, at New York.
APPENDIX.
A.— LIST OP LIBRARIES IN THE UNITED
STATES.
Maine.
Location. Founded.
Title.
Augusta 183fi State Library
Bangor 1832 Theoloiiical Seminary
Brunswick 1802 Bowdoin College
Houlton 1849 Forest Club
Portland 1827 A<henseum
Waterville 1820 Waterville College
New Hampshire.
Concord
Ditto
Ditto
Dublin
Ditto
Ditto
Exeter
Gilmanton
Great FaHa
Hanover
Ditto
Meriden Village
Few Hampton
Northfield
Pcrtsmoutli
Ditto
Ditto
Sanbornton
Wakefield
Burlington
Middlebury
Montpelier
Ditto
Norwich
State Library
1846 Methodist Biblical Inst.
1823 N. Hampshire Hist. Soc.
1793 Union Library
1799 Ladies' Library
1822 Juvenile Library
1783 Phillips's Academy
1835 Theological Seminary
Manf. & Village Library
1769 Dartmouth College
1841 Northern Academy of
Arts and Sciences
1814 Kimball Union Academy
1821 Theological Seminary
New Hampshire Confer-
ence Seminary
1817 Athenaeiim
S t . J ohn' s Church Library
UnitarianChurchLibrary
Public Library
1797 Wakefield and Brookfield
Union
"Vermont.
1800 University of Vermont
1800 Middlebury College
State Library
1838 Hist. & Antiquarian Soc.
1843 Norwich University
Massachusetts.
Amherst 1821 Amherst College
Andover 1808 Theological Seminary
Ditto PhiUips's Academy
Ditto English High School
Boston 1806 Boston Athenaeum
Ditto 1794 Boston Library
Ditto 1780 Amer. Academy of Arts
and Sciences
Ditto 1852 Boston Free Library
Ditto 1826 General Court
Ditto 1845 Mercantile Library
Ditto 1791 Massachusetts Hist. Soc.
Ditto 1820 Mechanics' Apprentices
Ditto 1822 Amer. Board of Com.
for For. Missions
Ditto 1830 Boston Soc. Nat. Hist.
Ditto Amer. Oriental Society
Ditto 1839 Amer. Statistical Assoc,
Ditto 1845 New England Genealogi-
cal Association
Location. Founded.
Boston
Ditto
Ditto
Cambridge
Cambridgeport
1849
Groton
1827
Lawrence
1847
Lowell
1844
Ditto
1825
Nantucket
1836
New Bedford
1852
Newton
1825
Roxbury
1848
Salem
1810
Ditto
1848
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
1805
Ditto
1818
Ditto
1818
Williamstown
1793
Worcester
1812
Ditto
1843
Ditto
1843
Newport
Ditto
Provid.nce
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
East Windsor
Hartford
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Middletown
New Haven
Ditto
Norwich
Albany
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
. ^ Title.
Social Law Library
Bowditch Library
Prince Library
Harvard College
Parish Library
Lawrence Academy
Franklin Library
City School Library
Middlesex Mechanics'
Association
Athenceum
Free Library
Theological Seminary
Athenaeum
Athenaeum
Essex Institute
Mechanics' Institute
East India Marine boc.
Essex Medical Society
Essex Agricultural Hoc.
Salem Evangelical Lib.
Williams' College Library
Amer. Antiquarian Soc.
College of the Holy Cross
Library of Mechanics'
Institute
Lyceum
1832 Manual Labour and
High School
Rhode Island.
1730 Redwood
1828 Mechanics
1763 Brown University
1531 Athenaeum
Mechanics' Association
1822 Rhode Island Hist. Soc.
Friends' BoardingSchool
1823 FrankHn Society
Public School Library
^Connectictjt.
1833 Theological Institute
Young Men's Institute
State Library
1825 Historical Society
1823 Trinity College
1831 Wesleyaii University
1700 Yale College
Young Men's Institute
Otis Library
New York.
1818 Stats Library
Assembly Library
1833 Young Men's Association
State Normal School
1532 New York State Agricul-
tural Society
Albany M;-d'cal Society
1828 Albany In^tibute
8
86
APPENDIX.
Location. Founded. Title.
Auburn 1821 Theological Seminary
Brooklyn 1833 Uuited States Naval
Lyceum
Ditto 1839 City Library
Ditto 1823 Youths' Free Library
Buffalo 1837 Young Men's Association
Ditto University (Medical De-
partment)
Clinton 1812 Hamilton College
Ditto 1834 Union Society
Ditto Phoenix Society
E. Hampton 1803 Library Company
Flushing St. Paul's College
Fordham 18iO St. John's College
Ditto 1^^40 St. Joseph's Seminary
Geneva 1825 College Library
Ditto 1835 Medical Library
Ditto Hermaean Society
Hamilton 1820 Madison University
Hartwick 1815 Theological Seminary
Hudson 1838 Franklin Library
JSTewburg 1802 Theological Seminary
New York City 1820 Mercantile Association
"New York 1754 New York Society
Ditto 1839 Astor Library
Ditto 1804 N. York Historical Soc.
Ditto 1838 Union Theol. Seminary
Ditto 1757 Columbia College
Ditto 1820 Apprentices' Library
Ditto 1817 Episcopal Theol. Inst.
Ditto 1770 New York Hospital
Ditto 1828 American Institute
Ditto 1830 New York Law Institute
Ditto 1831 University of New York
Ditto 1830 Mechanics' Institute
Ditto 1809 Printers* Eeading-room
Library
Ditto 1818 Lyceum of Nat. History
Ditto American Bible Society
Ditto Amer.andFor.BibleSoc.
Ditto College of Physicians
and Surgeons
Ditto Amer. Ethnological Soc.
Ditto 1851 Free Academy
Poughke?psie 1838 Lyceum of Literature,
Science, &c.
Ditto Public Library
Rochester 1832 Athenaeum Library
Ditto Court of Appeals
S henectady 1795 Union College
Ditto Young Men's Association
Vomers Public Library
Troy 1835 Young Men's Association
Utiea Young Men's Association
West Point 1812 United States Military
Academy
New Jeesey.
Burlington 1846 College Library
Newark 18 i5 New Jersey Hist. Soc.
Ditto Library Institution
New Brunswick 1807 Eutger's College
Orange
Princeton
Ditto
Trenton
Ditto
Allegh ny
Canonsburg
Ditto
Carlisle
Chester
Lyceum Library
17r)5 Coll. Libraries N. Jersey
1812 T.heological Seminary
1824 State Library
PMlomathean Library
Pennsylvania.
1827 Theological Seminary of
Presbyterians
1S02 Jefferson College
1H31 Theological Seminary
1782 Dickinson College
AthenSBum Library
Location. Founded. Title.
Easton 1833 Lafayette College
Ditto 1811 Easton Library
Erie 1839 Irving Literary Institute
Fallsington 1802 Fallsington Library Co.
Gettysbu. g 1832 Pennsylvania Coll. Lib.
Ditto 1825 Theological Seminary
Harrisburg 1816 State Library
Hatborough 1755 Union Library
Jonestown Swatara Literary Assoc.
Lancaster Franklin College
Ditto Mechanics' Institute
Lewisburg 1849 University Library
Meadville 1815 Alleghany College
Mercersburg 1820 Keformed German Theo-
logical Seminary
Ditto Marshall College
Norristown 1796 Library Company
Philadelphia Lib. Co. and Loganian
Ditto 1742 American Philos. Soc.
Ditto 1«23 Mercantile Library
Ditto 1812 Acad, of Nat. Science
Ditto 1821 Apprentices' Library
Ditto 1813 Athenaeum
Ditto 1750 Pennsylvania Hospital
Ditto Law Association
Ditto 1830 FrankHn Institute
Ditto 1750 Univ. of Pennsylvania
Dicto American Baptist Soc.
Ditto 1825 Historical Society
Pittsburg 1847 Young Men's Mercantile
Ditto 1828 Theological Seminary
Washington 1806 Washington College
Westchester 1826 Cabinet of Nat. Sciences
Ditto 1827 Chester Co. Athenaeum
Delaware.
Dover State and Law Library
Newark 1833 Delaware College
New Castle 1812 Public Library
Maryland.
Annapolis 1827 State Library
Ditto 1784 St. John's College
Baltimore 1796 Baltimore Library
Ditto 1809 St. Mary's College
Ditto 1839 Mercantile Library
Ditto 1843 Historical Society
Ditto 1849 Odd Fellows
Ditto 1850 Female College
Ditto Medico-Chirurgical Soc,
Ditto University Medical
Ditto Law Library
Ditto Mechanical & Patapsco
Fire Company
Ditto 1849 Mechanics' Institute
Chestertown 1783 Washington College
Emmetsburg !?H. Mary's College
Hagerstown St. James's CoUege
Ditto Belles Lettres Society
Ditto Irving Society
EockviUe 1849 Montgomery Association
Ditto Academy Library
Sandy Spring 1841 Sandy Spring Company
District of Columbia.
Georgetown 1792 College Library
Washington 1800 Congress Library
Ditto H. of Eepresentatives
Ditto 1781 State Department
Ditto 1832 War Department
Ditto 1821 Columbian College
Ditto Navy Department
Ditto Patent Office
Ditto Treasury Department
Ditto Engineer Department
APPENDIX.
87
Location. Founded.
Title.
Washington 1841 Washington Library
Ditto 1846 Smithsonian Institution
Ditto 1840 National Institute
Ditto Jefferson Apprentices
Ditto 1842 Observatory
YlEaiNIA.
Location.
Founded. Title.
LOTJISIANA.
BerryviUe
Bethany 184^
Boydtown 1832
Charlottes 1825
Emory 1839
Fairfax County
Lexington 1776
Ditto 1841
Madinson 1843
Northumberland 1819
Parkersburg 1844
Prince Ed. Co. 1^12
Ditto 1783
Premtytown 1839
Eichmnnd 1828
Ditto 1831
Ditto 1843
Ditto
Romney 1819
Williamsburg 1692
NOETH
Academy Library
Bethany College
Macon College
University of Virginia
Emory and Henry Coll.
Theological Seminary
Washington College
Virginia Military
Library Association
Academy Library
Literary Association
Union Theol. Seminary
Hampden Sidney College
Rector College
State Library
Hist, and Philosophical
Richmond College
Library Association
Literary Society
William and Mary Coll.
Caeolina.
Chapel Hill 1789 Univ. of N. Carolina
Mecklenburg Davidson CoUege
Raleigh State Library
Salem 1804 Fayette Academy
VaUe Crucis Mission School
Wake Forest College Libraries
South Caeolina.
Charleston
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto ^
Columbia
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Furman
Greenwood
Lexington
Athens
Augusta
Ditto
Macon
MillidgeviUe
Oxford
Pennfield
Savannah
La Grange
Marion
Mobile
Spring Hill
Tuscaloosa
Pensacola
St. Augustine
Tallahassee
Jackson
Claiborne Co.
Oxford
Washington
1748 Library Society
1824 Apprentices' Library
College of Charleston
Medical CoUege
College Library
Clasiosophic Society
Euphradian Society
1831 Theological Seminary
1826 Theological Seminary
1848 Hodge's Institute
1833 Theological Seminary
Geoeqia.
1831 Franklin College
1833 Medical CoUege
1848 Young Men's
1839 Female CoUege
1838 Oglethorpe University
1839 Emory College
1838 Mercer University
1839 Hist and Savannah Soc.
Alabama.
CoUege Library
1842 Howard CoUege
1835 Franklin Society
CoUege Library
1831 University Libraries
Floeida.
1847 Naval Hospital
Judicial Library
1845 State Library
Mississippi.
1838 State Library
1831 Oakland College
1848 University of State
CoUege Jjibraiy
Grand Coteau 1838 St. Charles
Opelousas
Baton Rouge
Ditto
Bringiers
Jackson
1839 Franklin CoUege
1838 State Library
CoUege Libraries
Jefferson CoUege
Louisiana CoUege
Texas.
Austin 1837 State Library
Independence Baylor University
Aekansas.
Little Rock
Lyceum Library
Tennessee,
Columbia
1834 Jackson CoUege
Ditto
1839 Female Institute
Greenville
CoUege Libraries
KnoxviUe
1819 Tennessee University
Lebanon
1844 Cumberland
MaryvUle
1821 CoUege Library
Murphreesborough Union University
NashviUe State Library
Ditto 1785 Nashville University
Ditto 1844 FrankHn College
Washington Co. Washington College
Kentucky.
Augusta
Bordstown
Covington
DanviUe
Frankfort
Georgetown
Ditto
Ditto
Harrodsburg
Lexington
Dit^o
DrennonSprings
Louisville
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Marion Co.
Princeton
ShelbyviUe
Athens
Blendon
Cincinnati
Walnut HiU -
Cincinnati
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
Cleveland
Ditto
Delaware
Gambler
Granville
HuUsborough
Hudson
Marietta
New Athens
Oberlin
Oxford
S' ringfield
Ditto
College Libraries
1824 St. Joseph's College
1845 Theological Institute
1824 Centre CoUege
1834 State Library
1837 Georgetown College
Students' Libraries
1838 Female Institute
Bacon CoUege
Students' Libraries
1848 Transylvania College
1847 Western Military Inst.
LouisviUe Library
1838 Historical Society
Law School
Medical Library
St. Mary's College
1826 Cumberland CoUege
Shelby CoUege
Ohio.
1804 University Library
1843 Central College
1835 Mercantile Library
1832 Lane Seminary
1841 St. Xavier College
1829 Mechanics' Institute
1831 Historical and Philos.
Apprentices' Library.
1826 Medical CoUege
1840 Orphan Asylum
Woodward CoUege
Medical College
State Library
1845 Wesleyan University
1824 Kenyon College
1836 CoUege Societies
184t) Female Seminary
1826 Western Re=!erve
1835 Marietta CcUige
FrankUn CoUege
1833 Institute Libraries
1809 Miami University
1846 WiUiamsburg CoUege
1832 Lyceum Library
88
APPENDIX.
Location. Founded. Title .
Steubenville 1817 City Library
Zaaesville ls28 Atheageum
IXDIAXA.
1816 State TJuiversity
Monroe County
1833 Wabash College
Vanderburg County
College Libraries
University Library
1829 Hanover College
Medical College
1825 State Library
Sigourney Library
18i2 St. Mary's
1806 Public Library
County Library
Illinois.
1S42 Mechanics' Library
1844 Knox College
183s Female Seminary
1830 College Library
1B20 McKendree College
State Library
German Library
Shurtleff CoUege
MiSSOIJRI.
Cape Girardeau St. Mary's College
Columbia 1812 Missouri University
Fayette 1849 Howard High School
Jeiicrson City 1829 State Library
Ditto Historical and Philos.
Blooding ton
Ditto
Crawfordsville
Evansville
Franklin
Greeneastle
South Hanover
Laporte
Indianapolis
Logans port
Northbend
Vincennes
Bloomington
Chicago
G-alesburg
Godfrey
Jacksonville
Lebanon
Springfield
St. Clair County
Upper Alton
Location. Founded. Title.
Palmyra
Masonic College
Ditto
St. Charles College
St. Louis
1829 University Library
Ditto
Society Libraries
Ditto
1846 Mercantile i^ ssociation
Ditto
1810 Law Library
MiCHiaAN.
Albion
1818 Wesleyan College
Ann Arbor
Detroit
1837 Michigan University
St. Phillip's College
Ditto
1833 Young Men's Society
Lansing
1836 State Library
Monroe
Public Library
Spring Arbor
Central CoUege
Township Libraries
District School
Iowa.
Iowa City
1839 State Library
Wisconsin.
Beloit
Beloit College
Madison
1836 State Library
Milwaukie
Young Men's Assoc.
Minnesota.
St. Paul
1849 Historical Society
Ditto
^ Terr i.torial Library ^^
St. Ant&ony
18 1 9 Library Association
Calipoenia.
San Francisco
1850 Mercantile Lib. Ass.
B.— THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION.
The Smithsonian Institution derives its name and endowment from James Smithson, Esq., an
Englishman.
Mr. Smithson was a son of the first Duke of Northumberland. He was educated at Oxford,
where he distinguished himself by his scientific attainments. In 1787, the year after taking his
Master's degree, he was elected a Fellow of the Koyal Society. To the " Philosophical Trans-
actions" he contributed, at different times, eight valuable papers. He was an associate of most
of the eminent men of science of the last generation in England, and was much respected for
his proficiency in the department of chemistry, as well as for his amiable and unassuming man-
ners. He had no fixed residence, and formed no family ties. The last years of his life were
spent mostly on the Continent, and he died at Genoa, June 27th. 1829.
From the property which he received by his mother, and the ample annuity allowed him by
his father, his frugahty enabled him to accumulate a fortune, which, at the time of his death,
amounted to about £120,000 sterling.
By his will, he directed that the income of this property (after deducting some small annui-
ties) should be paid to his nephew, Henry James Hungerford. during his life, and that the pro-
perty itself should descend to his children, if he had any, absolutely and for ever.
" In case of the death of my said nephew without leaving a child or children, or of the death
of the child or children he may have had, under the age of twenty-one years, or intestate, I
then bequeath the whole of my property (subject to an annuity of 4il00 to Johu Fitall, and for
the security and payment of which, I mean stock to remain in this country) to the United
States of America, to found at Was^hington, tender the name of the Smithsonian Institution, an
edahlishment for the increase and diffusion of knoicledge among men."
Such are the words of the Avill, and the only words of ^.mithson which have come to us
relating to this remarkable bequest.
Of the reasons which led him to make this disposal of his fortune we know nothing except by
inference. He was never in America, had no friends or acquaintances here, and is supposed to
have ha 1 no particular fondness for republican institutions. No sentence among his papers, no
book in his library, no recollection of his associates, shows that he had made our country an
object of special thought and study. It was, we may suppose, to perpetuate his name as the
friend and patron of science and learning that he made this beques't ; and it is the highest com-
pliment that he could pay our country, to select it as the Trustee of his noble purposes, and to
abstain from trammelling the legacy by any condition, restriction, reservation, or direction.
Young Hungerford died at Pisa, on the 5h of June, 1835, without issue. The event thus
occurred in which the claim of the United States attached. The particulars of the bequest
were communicated to our Government, and both Houses of Congress passed a bill, which was
approved the 1st of July, 1836, authorizing the President to appoint an agent to prosecute, in
the Court of Chancery of England, the right of the United States to the bequest ; and pledging
APPENDIX. 89
the faith of the United States to the application of the fund to the purposes designated by the
donor.
Hon. Richard Eush, of Philadelphia, was by the President appointed the agent of the United
States. He proceeded to England, instituted a suit in the Court of Chancery, recovered the
fund, and paid it into the Treasury of the United States, in sovereigns, during the month of
September, 1833.
The amount of the fund at this time was 515 169 dollars. It was not till eight years after this
period, 10th August, 1846, that the act establishing the Smithsonian Institution was finally
This act creates an establishment, to be called the Smithsonian Institution, composed of
the President and Vice-President of the United States, the Secretaries of State, of the
Treasury, of War, and the Navy, the Postmaster-General, Attorney- General, and Mayor
of Washington, with such others as they may elect Honorary Members. It devolves the
immediate government of the Institution upon a Board of Regents, of fifteen members;
namely, the Vice-President of the United States, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court,
and the Mayor of the city of Washington, ex officio, three members of the Senate, to be
appointed by the President thereof, three members of the House to be appointed by the
Speaker, and six persons to be chosen from the citizens at large, by joint resolution of the
Senate and House, two of whom shaU be members of the National Institute, and the other four
inhabitants of States, and no two from the same State.
The act establishes a permanent loan of the original fund (515,169 dol'ars) to the United States,
at six per cent, interest ; appropriated the accumulated interest, then amounting to 242,129
dollars, or so much as might be needed, together with so much of the accruing income as might
be unexpended in any year, for the erection of a building provided for the establishment of a
Library, Museum. Chemical Laboratory, &c., and left most of the details of the organization to
the Board of Regents.
As the result of the conscientious labours of the Board of Regents, a plan of organization
has been .idopted which seems to give universal satisfaction, and promises the widest usefulness.
The cost of the building is limited (with furniture, grading the grounds, &c.) to 250,000
dollars. This will be taken mostly from the income of the original and building funds, so as to
save 150,000 dollars of the building fund, which will be added to the original fund, making a
permanent fund of 675,000 dollars, yielding nearly 40,000 dollars per annum.
This income, with all sums received Irom other sources, is to be permanently and equally
divided between two great methods of increasing and diffusing knowledge : the first, by publi-
cations, researches, and lectures ; the second, by collections of literature, science, and art.
The first two volumes of a series entitled " Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge," in
quarto, have been issued ; a'so, several works in a series of a more popular character, and in
octavo form, entitled *' Smithsonian Reports ." It is proposed also to publish, for still wider cir-
culation, a monthly " Bulletin." Researches in various departments of science ha%e been insti-
tuted or aided by the Institution, and several courses of free lectures have been delivered.
The various publications of the Institution have been very liberally distributed among the
literary and scientific Institutions of this country, and of foreign countries.
The Library has been commenced, and although the funds have not been available for its rapid
growth, it is destined, we hope, to meet that great want of American scholarship — a National
Library for reference and research. Measures have been taken also for suppljdng the Cabinet
of Natural History and the Gallery of Art.
The building is in the later Norman or Lombard style. It consists of a centre and two
wings, united by connecting ranges. Its extreme length is 447 feet, and its greatest breadth
132 feet. It is adorned by nine towers, the highest of which is 145 feet. The central portion
of the building contains, on the first floor, a Library, 134 feet by 50. divided into alcoves, and a
II aU for philosophical apparatus, 65 feet by 50. The second story contains the Museum, 200
feet by 50. This is diArided into three aisles, the centre aisle being 40 feet in height.
The east wing contains a Lecture-room, capable of accommodating one thousand persons.
The eastern range contains laboratories, workshops, rooms for apparatus, offices, &c.
The western wing and range contains two large rooms, one of which wiU be used as a Read-
ing-room. Beneath are rooms for unpacking books, and other purposes of the Library,
Members ex officio. ' A. Dallas Bache, Member of National Institute.
Franklin Pierce.
William L. Marcy.
James Guthrie.
Jefferson Davis.
James C. Dobbin.
James CampbeU. , Joseph G. Totten,
Ro^e^r B^'raifc ' Officers.
Charles Masonf * ^^® President of the United States, ex officio,
John T. Towers. • Presiding Officer.
T, J J, T, . ' ' The Aace-President of the United States, «x
Board of Megents. \ ^^^.^^^ Second Presiding Officer.
Vice-President of the United States. Roger B. Taney, Chancellor.
Roger B, Taney, Chief Justice United States. Joseph Henry, LL.D , Secretary.
John T. Towers, Mayor of Washington, Spencer F. Baird, Assistant Secretary.
James A. Pearce, United States Senator. William I. Rhees „ ,,
James M. Alason, ,, ,, W. W. Seaton, Treasurer.
Stephen A, Douglas, „ ,, I -n j.- r^ x^
James Meacham, U. S. Representative. ' Executive Committee.
William H. English „ „ Joseph G. Totten j A. Dallas Bache; Jamea
David Stuart, ,, ,, I -^* Pearce.
Rufus Choate, Massachusetts, Citizen. ^^ ,^ ^
Gideon Hawley, New York. „ ITonorary Members.
Richard Rush, Pennsylvania, „ Robert Hare ; Washington Irving; Beujamin
John M. Berrien, Ga.) ,, I Silliman ; Parker Cleaveland.
90
APPENDIX.
List of Works published hy the Smithsonian Institution^ Washington. For Sale
hy Trubner Sf Co., 12, Paternoster Roil\ London.
QUARTO.
Smithsonian Contributions to
Kis'ow LEDGE. Vol. 1, 4to. Pp. 316, with
48 plates, and 207 woodcuts. Containing —
Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Val-
ley. Comprising the Results of exiensive
original Surveys and Explorations, By
Messrs. Squier and Davis.
Smithsonian Conteibutions to
Knowledge. Vol. 2. 4toj 18j1. Pp. 464,
and 24 plates. Containing —
1. Researches relative to the Planet, Nep-
tune. By Sears C. Walker, Esq. Pp.
65.
2. On the Vosal Sounds of Laura Bridge-
man, the Blind Deaf Mute, at Boston,
compared with the Elements of Phonetic
Language. By Dr. Francis Lieber. Pp.
32, and 1 plate.
8. Microscopical Examination of Soundings,
made by the United States Coast Sur-
vey, off the Atlantic Coast of the United
States. By Professor J, W. Bailey. Pp.
16, and 1 plate.
4. Contributions to the Physical G-eogra-
phy of the United States. By Charles
Ellet, jun. Pp. 64, and 1 plate.
5. Mosasaurus, and the three allied new
Genera, Holcodus, Conosaurus, and Am-
phorosteus. By Robert W. Gibbes,
M.D. Pp. 14, and 3 plates.
6. The Classification of Insects from Em-
bryological Data. By Professor L.
Agassiz. Pp. 28, and 1 plate.
7. On the Expiosiveness of Nitre, with a
view to elucidate its Agency in the Ex-
plosion of July, 1845, in New York.
By Dr. Robert Hare. Pp. 20.
8. Miscroscopical Observations made in
South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida.
By Professor J. W. Bailey. I'p. 48, and
3 plates.
9. Aboriginal Monuments of the State of
New York; comprising the Results of
Original Surveys and Explorations. With
an Illustrative Appendix. By E. G.
Squier. Pp. 183, 14 plates and 72 wood-
cuts.
10. Ephemerisof the Planet Neptune for the
Date of the Lalande Observations ol
May 8 and 10, 1795, and for tho Opposi-
tions of 1847, 1848, and 1849. By Sears
C. Walker, Esq. Pp. 32.
11. Ephemeris of the Planet Neptune for
the Year 1850. By Sears C. Wallter,
Esq. Pp. 10.
- 12. Ephemeris of the Planet Neptune for
the Year 1851. By Sears C. Walker,
Esq. Pp. 10.
13. Occultations visible in the United States
during the Year 1851. Computed by
John Downes, Esq. Pp 26.
Smithsonian Contributions to
KNOWLEDGE. Vol. 3, 4to, 1852. Pp 564,
and 35 plates. Containing —
1. Obiervations on Terrestrial Magnetism.
By John Locke, M.D., M.A.P.S. Pp. 30.
2. Researches on Electrical Rheometry. By
A. Secchi. Pp. 60, and 3 plates.
3. Contributions to the Natural History of
the Fresh Water Fishes of North Ame-
rica. By Charles Girard. I. A Mono-
graph of the Cuttoids. Pp. 80, and 3
plates.
4. Nereis Boreali- Americana ; or, Contri-
butions to a History of the Marine Alg®
of North America. By William Henry
Haivey, M D., M.R.I.A. Part I. Me-
lanospermeae. Pp. 152, and 12 coloured
plates.
5. PJantae Wrightianae Texano-Neo-Mexi-
canae. By Dr. Asa Gray, M.D. Part I.
Pp. 146, and 10 plates.
6. The Law of Deposit of the Flood Tide :
its Dynamical Action and Ofiice. By
Charles Henry Davis, Lieutenant United
States Navy. Pp 14.
7. Description of Ancient Works in Ohio.
By Charles Whittlesey. Pp. iO, and 7
plates.
8. Occultations visible in the United States
during the Year 185i. Computed by
John Downes, Esq. Pp. 34.
9. Ephemeris of Neptune for the Year 1852.
By Sears C. Walker, Esq. Pp. 10.
Smithsonian Contributions to
Knowledge. Vol 4, 4to, 1853. Pp.
416, cloth. Containing — A Grammar and
Dictionary of the Dakota Language.
Collected by the Meml)ers of the Dakota
Mission. Edited by Rev. S. R, Riggs,
A.M., Missionary of the American Board,
for Foreign Missions.
Smithsonian Contributions to
Knowledge. Vol. 5, 4to, 1853. Pp. 538,
and 45 plates.
1. Introduction. Pp. 16.
2. A Flora and Fauna within Living Ani-
mals. By Joseph Leidy, M.D. Pp. 68,
and 10 plates.
3. Memoir on the Extinct Species of Ame-
rican Ox. By Joseph Leidy, M.D. Pp.
20, and 5 plates.
4. Anatomy of the Nervous System of Rana
Pipiens. By Jeffries Wyman, D.D.
Pp. 52, and 2 plates.
5. Nereis Boreali-Americana ; or. Contri-
butions to the History of the Marine
Algae of North America. By William
Henry Harvey, M.D., M.R.I.A. Part
II., Rhodospermeae. Pp. 262, and 24
plates.
6. Plantae Wrightianae Texano-Neo-Mexi-
canae. Part II. An Account of a Col-
lection of Plants, made by Charles
Wright, A.M., in Western Texas, New
Mexico, and Sonora, in the Years 1851
and 1852. By Asa Gray, M.D. Pp. 120,
and 4 plates.
Smithsonian Contributions to
Knowledge. Vol. 6. Pp. 476, and 53
plates.
1. Introduction. Pp. 16.
2. Plantae Fremontianae ; or. Description of
Plants collected in California, by Colonel
J. C. Fremont. By John Torrey, F.L.S.
Pp. 24, and 10 plates.
3. Observations on tha Batis maritima of
Linnaeus. By John Torrey, F.L.S.
Pp. 8, and 1 plate.
4 On the Darlingtonia Californica, a new
Pitcher Plant from Northern California.
APPENDIX.
91
By John Torrey. F.L.S. Pp. 8, and 1
plate,
5. Synopsis of the Marine In vertebral a of
Grand Manan, or the Region about the
Bay of Fundy. By William Stimpson.
Pp. 68, and 3 plates.
6. On the Winds of the Northern Hemi-
sphere. By James U Coffin, Professor
of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy,
in Lafayette College. Pp. 200, and 13
plates,
7. The Ancient Fauna of Nebraska; or, a
Description of Itemains of Extinct Mam-
malia and Chelonia, from tlie Mauvaises
Terres of Nebraska. By Joseph Leidy,
M D., Processor of Anatomy in the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania. Pp. 126, and
25 plates.
8. Occultations for 1853.
OCTAVO.
Bepoets on the Pkogeess op Know-
ledge.
On Recent Improvements in the Chemical
Arts. By Professors James C. Booth and
Campbell Morlit. Svo, pp. 216,
On the History of the Discovery of the Planet
Neptune. By Dr. B. A. Gould, jun.
Pp. 56.
Notices of Public Libraries in the United
States. By Professor C. C. Jewett. Pp.
208.
Five Annual l^eports of Operations, &c.,
have also been published by ordtr of Con-
gress.
Meteorolog'cal and other Tables. By Pro-
fessor Arnold Guyot. Pp. 30J.
Guide to the Experimenter in Physics. By
Dr. J. Frick, of Freiburg. Jb'rom the
German.
Report on the Recent Progress of Electricity
and Magnetism. By Dr. J, Muller, of
Freiburg. From the German,
Directions for making Observations and Col-
lections in Natural History.
Catalogue of the Coleoptera of North Ame-
rica. By Dr. F. E. Melsheimer.
C— UNITED STATES EXPLORING
EXPEDITION.
1. Narrative,
(being Vols. 1 to 6 of the whole work,)
Wilkes. — Narrative of the United
States Exploring Expedition round the
World, during the Years 1838, 1839, 1840,
1841, and 18i2. By Charles AVilkes, U, S. N.
Commander of the Expedition, Member of
the American Philosophical Society, &c.
This Expedition consisted of six vessels
from the United States Navy, and was ab-
sent about four years. The Narrative con-
tains comprehensive and interesting accounts
of Madeira, Brazil. Terra del FuegO, Chili,
Peru, Panmotu Group, Tahiti, Samoan
Group, New South Wales, New Zealand, the
Islands of the South Pacific and Antarctic
Oceans, the New Antarctic Continent, Cali-
fornia, and the North-west Coast of Oregon.
The principal Edition is in Five splendid
Volumes, imperial 8vo, with an Atlas, con-
taining Sixty-eight large Steel Plates, Forty-
seven exquisite Steel Vignettes, over Two
Hundred Woodcuts, and Fourteen large
and small Maps. Price £8 8s.
The Edition printed for presentation to
Foreign Governments (of which only Ten
Copies are for sale) is in imperial 4to, large
type. Price £18 18s.
And the cheap Edition is in five Svo Vo-
lumes, extra cloth, with Maps, and nearly
Three Hundred Illustrations on Wood. This
Edition is well suited for public and private
Libraries, having all the matter of the larger
Editions, without the htrge Engravings and
Maps, in a neat and convenient form. Price
£2 103.
Also, an Edition condensed in One Volume,
embracing the principal events. Cloth, l8s.
2. Scientific Portion".
Philology, being Yol. 7 of the whole
Work. Ethnology and Philology. By Ho-
ratio Hale. 4to, cloth, £3 3s. Philadelphia,
1846.
CoEALS, being Yds. 8 and 9 of the
whole Work. Dana on Zoophytes. 4to,
cloth. £4 4s.
Atlas of Plates to ditto, beautifully co-
loured. In foho, cloth. Philadelphia, 1848—-
1849. £10 10s.
GEOLoaY, being Vol. 10 of the whole
Work. Dana's Geology of the United
States Expedition. 4to. With an Atlas of
Plates. In folio, cloth, £5 5s. Philadelphia,
1849.
Ethnology, being Vol. 11 of the whole
Work. Pickering's Races of Men, and their
Distribution, 4to, cloth. Coloured Plates
and Map, Boston, 1848,
MoLLUSCA, being Vol. 12 of the whole
Work, Gould's Mollusca and Shells, By
Aug, A. Gould, M.D., Fellow of the Ame-
rican Philosophical Society, and Boston So-
ciety of Natural History, &c. Imp, 4to, cl.
£1 10s, Boston, 1853.
Celtstacea, being Vol. 13 of the whole
Work. Crustacea. By James D. Dana,
A.M., Member of the Society Caes. Nat.
Cur., of Moscow ; the Societe Philomatique
of Paris ; the Geological Society of London;
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
at Boston ; the Acaden.y of Natural Sciences
of Philadelphia, &c. With a Folio Atlas of
96 Plates, and 2 vols letter-press. Royal
4to, cloth. By Authority of Congress. Phi-,
ladelphia, 1852. £6 6s,
The Atlas is not published yet.
Botany, being Vol. 14 of the whole
Work. By Asa Gray, M.D. V/ith a Folio
Atlas of 100 Plates. 1 vol. royal 4to, £3 3s.
New York, 1854.
The Atlas is not published yet.
Animal and Botanical Geogeaphy,
being Vol. 15. The Geographical Distribr-
tion of Animals and Plants. By Charles
Pickering, M.D., Member of the Scientifio
Corps attached to the Expedition. Pp. 214.
4to, cloth, £1 4s. Boston, 1854.
INDEX.
A.
A Presbyterian Clergyman, 1
Abbot (A. A. and E.), Genealogical Register, 44
Abbott's Lucy Books, 36
Abbott, Law of Merchant Ships, 13
(J.), Franconian Series, 36
Histories for Youth, 36
Jonas' Stories, 36
Marco Paul's Voyages, 36
Young- Christian Series, 36
Acott (W. A.), on Life and Health, 16
Adams, Conchology, 25
(A.), Annals of Portsmouth, N. H., 44
(C. F.), J. Q- Adams's Life, 44
- Life and Works of J . Adams, 44
- (F. C), Uncle Tom at Home, 67
- (N.), Friends of Christ, 1
- (W.), Christian Science, 1
Adventures of Capt. Simon Suggs, 67
^Eschines in Ctesiphum, ed. Champlin, 34
^schyli Agamemnon. Trans, by Peter, 34
Africans at Home, 58
Agassiz (L.), Comparat. Embryology, 25
Lake Superior, 25, 52
Study of Natural History, 25
Agassiz and Gould, Zoology, 25
Alexander (A.), Bible Trurh, 1
Canons of Scripture, 1
Colonization in Africa, 52
Israelites, 1
Moral Science, 1, 31
- Thoughts, 1
(J. A.), Isaiah, 1
- Psalms, 1
- (J. H.), on Stand, of Weights, 58
- Univ. Diet, of Weights, 58
- (J. W.), Consolation, 1
- Life of A. Alexander, 1
Alger (W. R.), Cross of Christ, 1
Alice (C), In the World, 67
Allen (J.), Autocracy of Poland, 44
(L. F.), Rural Architecture, 61
(M.), Day Dreams, 67
(N.), Opium Trade, 58
(R. L.), Cat. of Agricult. Implements, 61
(W.) , American Biograph. Dictionary, 44
(Z.), Mechanics of Nature, 61
Allston (W.), Lectures on Art, and Poems, 67
Alston (P. W.), Sermons, 1
American Annual Register, 44
Almanack, 58
Archives, edited by P. Force, 44
Bible Union, 82
Union's Publications, 1
Billical Repository, 1
Biography, the Library of, 44
Second series, 44
Board for Missions' Publications, 82
Engineering, 61
American Journal of Dental Science, 82
Medical Science, 83
Science and Arts, 83
Hist, and Literary Curiosities, 44
Machinery, 62
Masonic Register, 76
Methodist Quarterly Review, 83
National Portrait Gallery, 44
National Preacher, 83
Polytechnic Journal, 83
Railroad Journal, 83
State Papers, 44
Statistical Annual, 58
Andral (F.), Dispases of the Heart, 16
(G.), on the Blood in Disease, 16
Andrew fS. P.), True Constitution, 1
Andrevrs (J.), Grammar of Hawaian Lang., 38
(J. D.), on the Traue of British
North American Colonies, 58
(S. P.), Discoveries in Chinese, 38
Annals of the Lyceum of Natural History, 25
Annual of Scientific Discovery, 62
Anspach (F. R.), Sepulchres, 1
Anthon's (C.) Works & Editions of Classics, 34
Appleton's U. S. Guide for Travellers, 78
Mechanics' Magazine, 62
Appleton, Works, 1
Aran (F. A.), Diseases of the Heart, IG
Archibald Cameron, 67
Aristophanis Aves. Greek, by Felton, 34
Nubes. Greek, by Felton, Si-
Armstrong's (W. J.) Memoir and Sermons, 2
Army Register, Official, 56
Arnot (D. B.), Gothic Architecture, 62
Arrawaek, Acts of the Apostles in, 38
Arthur's Home Magazine, 83
Arthur (R.), Diseases of the Teeth, 16
(T. S.), Golden Trains of Life, 67
Heart Histories and Life Pic-
- Library for the Household, 67
- Lights and Shadows of Real
tures, 67
Life, 67
- Little One's Library, 36
- Old Man's Pride, 67
- String of Pearls, 36
- the 1 wo Merchants, 67
— True Riches, 36, 67
Arvine (K.), Cyclopaedia of Anecdotes, 67
Religious Anec, P7
Americans' Guide, 13
Astronomical Journal, 25, 83
' Obseuvations, 25
Atkin (G.), Homoeopathic Directory, 21
Atlee (W. F ), on M. Bernard's Lectures, 16
Attorney (The) , 67
Atwater (.C), Sioux (Dacota) Grammar, 38
Audubon (J. J.), Bii'ds of America, 25
Ornithological Biography, 25
Audubon and Bachman, Quadrupeds, 25
Autobiogi'aphy of John A. Little, 2
Autographs for Freedom, 58
INDEX.
93
B.
Badger (Rev. Jos.), Memoir of, 2
Badois (C), Granimaire Anglaise, 43
Key to ditto, 42
Baird (R. H.), American Cotton Spinner, 62
Baird (R.), Sketches of Protestantism, 2
Baker (Dr.), Revival Sermofts, 2
Baldvsrin, Vocabulary of Geograph. Pronunc.52
(A. C), Themes for the Pulpit, 2
(J. G.), Party Leaders, 44
fT.), Pronouncing Gazetteer, 52
Ballon fH.^, Lecture Sermons, 2
(M. M.), History of Cuba, 45
Bangs (N.), History of Meth. Episc. Church, 2
(J. N.), Life of Arminius, 2.
(N.), State of Method, Episc. Church, 2
Bancroft (G.), American Revolution, 45
History of the United States, 45
Banvard (J.), Adventures of the Explorers, 45
Novelties of the World, 45
Pictorial Question Book, 2
Plymouth and the Pilgrims, 45
the American Statesman, 36
Barnard (H.), National Education, 33
Normal Schools, 33
Public Schools, 33
on School Architecture, 33
Tribute to T. Gallaudet, 45
Works, 32, 33
- (S.), Polyglot Grammar, 38
,45
Barber (J. W.), Connecticut Hist. CoUec,
Barnum (P. T.), Autobiography of, 45
Barrington (A.), on Physical Geography, 35
Barry ( I'.), the Fruit Garden, 62
Bartlett's Commercial Tables, 58
Bartlett (E.), on the Philosophy of Med. Sci., 16
Typhoid and Typhus, 16
(J. R.), Explorations in Texas, 52
Diet, of Americanisms, 38
Progress of Ethnology, 26
(W. H. C), Analytical Mechanics, 62
(W. S.), Mem. of Rev. Bailey, 2
— the Frontier Missionary, 2
Bartol (C. A. j, Discourses, 2
(B. H.j, Treatise on Marine Boilers, 62
Bassnett (T.), Theory of Storms, 26
Bates (D.), Poems, 67
Bayles, Plymouth Colony, 45
Beans (E. W.), Manual for Surveyors, 62
Beck (J. B.), on Infant Therapeutics, 16
(L. C), Adulterations, 16
(L. F.), Botany of the United States, 26
(R), Me licalJurisprudence, 13
(T. R.), MedicalJurisprudence, 16
Becker (A. C), Allopathy — Hahnemannism, 21
— on Dentition, 21
Diseases of the Eye, 21
on Consumption, 21
Bedell (G. T.), Sermons, 2
Beecher (E.), Conflict of Ages, 2
. (L.). WcrUs, 2
Behind the Curtain, 67
Belcher (J.), Clergy of America, 2
Belden (E. P.), New York, 78
BeU (J.), on Baths, 16
BeU and Stoke, on Practice of Physic, 16
Belknap's History of New Hampshire, 45
(J.), American Biography, 45
BeUamy (J ), Works, 2
Bennett (E.), Clara Moreland, 67
— (J. C), History of the Saints, 77
i'oultry Book, 62
Bentham (J.), Theory of Legislation, 14
Benton, Thirty Years' View, 45
Beranger, Lyrio Poems, 67
Berkeley (E.), World's Laconics, 67
Bertram, Missionary Life, 2
Berzelius (J. J.), Blowpipe in Chemistry, 26
the Kidneys and Urine, 16
Bibliotheca Sacra, 2, 83
Bid well (O. B.), Missi<mary Map of China, 81
Bigelow (J.), Nature in Disease, 16
(J. R.), the American's Own Book, 14
Billard (C. M.), Diseases of Children, 16
Biography of the Signers of the Decl., 45
Bird (Dr.), Nick of the Woods, 07
Bishop (A.), Travels in Mexico, 52
Blackwater Chronicle, 67
Blackwell (E.), Laws of Life, 33
Blake (J. L.), Farmers Day Book, 62
Scripture Readings, 2
Bledsoe (A. T.), a Theodicy, 2
Blue Book for 1853, 58
Blunt (J.), American Coast Pilot, 56
Shipmaster's Assistant, 5P, 58
Boardman (H. A.), Bible in the Counting-
house, 2
Bible in the Family, 2
Boenuinghausen (C. v.), Homceop. Exercises, 21
Sides of the Body, 21
Therapeutic Pocket-
• Treatment of Inter-
book, 21
mittent Fevers, 21
Bogue (D.), Lectures, 2
Bolingbroke, Works, 67
Bonaparte (C), American Ornithology, 28
Bond (J. W.), Minnesota, 52
(T. K.), on Denial Medicine, 16
Book of the Heart, 68
of Mormon Doctrines, 77
Booth (J. C), Knclyclopsedia of Chemistry, 26
and Morfit, Chemical Art, 26
Boston Journal of Natural History, 26
Medical Journal, 83
Quarterly Homoeopathic Journal, 21
Bourne (B. F.), the Captive in Patagonia, 52
Bouvier (J.), Institutes, 13
Law Dictionary, 14
Bowditch (H. T.), Young Stethoscopist, 16
(N.), Mecanieiue Celeste of De la
Place, 26
Practical Navigator, 56
Bowen (E.), Sketch Book of Pennsylvania, 52
(F.), Lowell Lectures, 2
Bowers (B. F.), Reason why Homoeopathy, 21:
Bozman's History of Maryland, 45
Brace (C. L.), Home Lite in Germany, 68
Brackenridge (H. H.), Modern Chivalry, 68
Bradford (A.), History of the Federal Govern-
ment, 45
(A. C), Nelly Bracken, 68
(A. W.), American Antiquities, 42
Brady (W.), Kedge Anchor, 56
Brazils, Colleccao das Leis do, 14
Breck (J.), Flower Garden, 62
Breckenridge, War of 1812, 45
Bridgman (.1. J.). Daughters of China, 68
Brierre de Boismont (A.), Hallucinations, 17^
Bristed (C, A.), Five Years in an English Uni-
versity, 68
Brocklesby (J.), Meteorology, 26
Microscopic World, 26
Brooklyn, Map of the City of, 79
Brodhead (J. R.) Historv of New York, 45
Brown (C B.), Novels, 68
(G. ), First Lines of English Grammar, 35
the Grammar of English Grammars, 35
Institutes of English Grammar, 35
- (J), Dictionary of the Bible, 2
(T. W.), Minnie Hernion, 68
(W.), Cases in the High Court, 14
(T). and Taylor, Discussion on the
Sabbath, 2, 4
Browne (P. A.), Trichologia Mammalium, 26
94
INDEX.
Brownell (C. de W.), Indian Races, 45
(H. H.), Discoverers, 45
Brownson's Quarterly Review, 83
Bryant (A.), Attractions of the World to Come, 2
- — Millennarian Views, 2
(J.), Pocket Manual of Horn. Med,
Rival Schools of Medicine, 21
21
(W. C), American Poets, 68
Poems, 68
Buckminster (J. S.), Works, 2
Bulfinch (T.), Hebrew Lyrical History, 3
Bulletin of the Geographical Society, 52, 58
BuUock (J.), American Cottage Builder, 62
Bulwer and Forbes, on the Water Treatment, 21
Bungener (L.), Preacher and King, 3
■— Priest and Huguenot, 3
Burchard (S. D.), Daughters of Zion, 3
Burgess (Gr.)> L^ast Enemy, 3
Burleigh (J. B.), the Thinker, 35
(T. B.), Legislative Guide, 14
Burmeister (H J, the Black Man, 26
Burmese Bible, 88
Burr, Memoirs of A. B., 45
Burrowes (G.), on Song of Solomon, 3
Burstow (G.), History of New Hampshire, 45
Buschmann (J, C.E.), Azteldachen Ortsnamen,
38
Bush (G.), Anastasis, 3
on the Book of Exodus, 3
on the Book of Genesis, 3
on the Book of Joshua, 3
on the Book of Judges, 3
' — on the Book of Leviticus, 3
on the Millennium, 3
Scripture Illustrations, 3
the Soul, 3
Bushnell (H.), Christian Nurture, 3
Butler (C. M.), Old Truths, 3
(F. ), Spanish Teacher, 42
( J. D ) , Incentives to Mental Culture, 33
Butt (M. H.), Anti-Fanaticism, 68
Butterworth(J.), Concordance, 3
Byington (C), English and Choctaw Definer, 38
Byrn (L.), Artist & Tradesman's Companion, 62
(M. L.), Complete Practical Distiller, 62
Byrne (O.), American Engineer, 62
on the Art of War, 56
— — Calculator's Companion, 62
Pocket Companion, 62
c.
Caldwell(C.), Original Unity of Human Race, 26
Calhoun (J. C), Disquisition on Government,14
Works, 45
California, Map of, by W. E. Eddy, 79
Callicot (T. C), Universal Geography, 35
Campaign in Northern Mexico, Sketches of, 50
Canada Directory, 78
Canada, Map of, 79
Cannon (J.S.), Lectures on Pastoral Theology, 3
Capron's History of California, 45
Captain Canot, 62
Carl Krinken, 36
Carnes (J. A.), Voyage from Boston, 52
Carnochan (J. M.), on Etiology, 17
Carpenter, (W. W.), Travels in Mexico, 52
Carey (A.), Hagar, 68
(H. C), Slave Trade, 59
on the Credit System, 59
on the Currency, 59
Harmony of Interests, 59
the Past, Present, &c., 59
-^ Political Economy, 59
on Wages, 59
(Ph.), Poems and Parodies, 68
Car^ (A.)j Ciovernook Children, 36
Carstensen and Gildemeister, New York Crystal
Palace, 62
Caspari's Homoeop. Domestic Physician, 21
Cassin (J.), Birds of California, 26
Caswall (H.)> History of the Mormons, 77
Catalogue of Approved School Public, 33
Caughey (J.), Help to a Life of Holiness, 3
Methodism in Earnest, 3
Caustic (Mrs.), Matrimony, 68
Cazeaux (P.), on Midwifery, 17
Central America, Map of, 79
Chad wick (Mrs.), Home Cookery, 62
Chailly (M.), on Midwifery, 17
Champollion's Hieroglyphic System, 39
Chandler (E. L), This, That, and the Other, 68
(P. W.) American Criminal Trials, 14
Channing (W.), Etherization in Childbirth, 17
Reformation of Medical Science, 21
Chapin (E.H.), on Beatitudes, 3
Characters in the Gospel, 3
Chapman, Theory and Practice of Medicine, 17
(G. T.), American Episc. Church, 3
(J. R.), Instructions for Marksmen, 56
Charity and the Clergy, 3
Charleston Medical Journal, 83
Chasles (P.), Anglo-American Literature, 68.
Chauvenet (W.), on Lunar Distances, 26
on Plane and Spherical Trigon., 31
Cheever (G.B.), Capital Punishment, 3
Hill Difficulty, 3
Journal of the Pilgrims, 3
PowersoitheWorldtoCome,3
Wanderings in the Alps, 3
Windings of the River, 3
(H. T.) . Island World of the Pacific, 52
Life and Trials, 3
Madeira, Lisbon, 52
a Reel in the Bottle, 52
the Sea and the Sailor, 52
Child (L. M.), Hopper's Life, 3
Choules (J.O.), the Cruiseof the North Star, 52
Christian Examiner, 83
Review, 83
Christianity and its Relations, &c., 4
Christie (R.)j History of Lower Canada, 46
Chronicles of Pineville, 46
Church (T.), History of Philip's War, 46
Church Review, 83
Civil Code of Louisiana, 14
Cicero's Tusc. Disputations. By Anthon, 35
Clark (D. W.), Methodist Episcopal Pulpit, 4
Clark (T. M.), Formation of Character, 4
Clarke (R. W.), Heaven, 4
Memoir of Emerson, 4
(L. G.), Knicknacks from an Editor's
Table, 68
Claussen (Chevalier), the Flax Movement, 59
Clay (H.), Life of, 46
Clayton (G.), jun.. Remarks on Angels, 4
Clement (J.), Deeds of American Women, 46
Cleveland (Ch. D.), Compendium of English
Literature, 68
Clifford Family, 68
Clymer (M.), Diseases of Genital Organs, 17
Cock (F.), Obstetrics, 17
(M. R.), American Poultry Book, 62
Code, Civil and Criminal, of New York, 14
Coit (T. W.), Puritanism, 4
Colburn (Z.), the Locomotive Engine, 63
Cole (Th.), Course of Empire, 68
Coleman (L.), Ancient Christianity, 4
Hist. Geography of the Bible, 4
Historical Text-book, 4
Collections of the Georuia Historical Soc, 46
Maine Historical Society, 46
Massachusetts liist. Soc, 46
INDEX.
95
Collections of 'New Hampshire Hist. Soc, 46
New York Historical Society, 46
Ehode Island Historical Soc, 46
Collot (A.G.),Chefs-d'(Euvres Dramatiques,43
Colombat de I'lsere, Diseases of Females, 17
Colton's American Atlas, 81
Atlas of the World, 81
Chart of National Flags, 81
Gazetteer, 59
.. Guide-book through N. England, 78
• Map of Africa, 81
Map of Asia, 81
. Map of Egypt, 81
Map of Europe, 81
-. Map of Human Life, 81
- Missionary Map, 81
Map of Mountains, 81
Map of Palestine, 81
Township M;ip of Wisconsin, 81
. Map of the World, 81
New Testament Map, 81
. New Series of States Maps, 80
Traveller's United S. Guide-book, 78
. Western Tourist, 78
(C), Genius of Prot. Epis. Church, 4
(G. H.), Tecumseh, 68
• (W.),Land&LeeintheBosphorus, 52
Cutter (C), First Book of Anatomy, 27
(E. P.), Human Anatomy, 27
D.
Daguerreotype, 63
Dakota Grammar, 38
and Dictionary, 38
Dana (J. D.), on Coral Eeefs, 27
Crustacea of the U. S. E. E., 27
Geology of the U. S. E. E., 27
Manual of Mineralogy, 27
System of Mineralogy, 27
Zoophytes of the U. 8. E. E., 27
(K. H.), Poems and Prose Writings, 68
Seaman's Manual, 56
Two Years before the Mast, 68
- (S. L.), Muck Manual for^Farmers, 63
D'Arbouville (Countess), Three Tales, 68
Darby (W.), Louisiana, Geographical, 53
Darley (O. C), Hlustrations of Irving' s Rip
Van Winkle, 75
Illust. to Sleepy Hollow, 75
Colvocoresses (G. M.), Four Years in an Ex-
pedition, 53
Comforts (.1. W.), Thomsonian Practice, 17
Comstock (J.L.), Introduction to Botany, 26
, Elements of Chemistry, 27
— Elements of Geology, 26
Introduct . to Mineralogy, 26
, Physiology, 27
Comte (A.), Philosophy of Mathematics, 31
Condie, Diseases of Children, 17
Connecticut Common School Journal, 33, 83
Conrad (E. T.), Sanderson's Biography, &c., 46
(T. A.), MonogTaphy of Unionidse, 27
Consecrated Talents, 4
Constitution of States of the Union, 14
Constitutional Text-book, 14
Convention Sermons, 4
Cook (G. W.), Mariner's Physician, 23
Cooper's (J. F.), Choice Works, 68
Hist, of American Navy, 46
Cooper (Miss), the Ehyme and Eeason of
Country Life, 68
Cordova's Map of Texas, 80
Cornyn (J. K ), Dick Wilson, 68
Cotton, Letter on Trade of, 59
Coultas (H.), Principles of Botany, 27
Cousin (M. v.). Hist, of Modern Philosophy, 31
(V.), Psychology, 31
Youth of Mme. de Longue-
viUe, 68
Alice, the Bird, 37
Covell (L. T.), Digest of English Grammar, 35
Cox (S. H.), Interviews, 4
(S. S.), a Buckeye Abroad, 68
Cozzens, Geological History of Manhattan, 27
Crimes of the House of Austria, 49
Croserio (0.), Manual of Obstetrics, 21
Croswell, Memoir of Wev. Dr. W., 4
CuUum (G. W.), on Military Bridges, 56
Cummings (S.), Western Pilot, 56
Curtis (J. T.), Homoeopathy & Chemistry, 21
and Lillie (J.), Epitome of Ho-
mooopathic Practice, 21
> (T.), Manual of Legal Principles, 63
(T. T.), Communion, 4
^'irtiss (D. S.), Western Portraiture, 78
Cashing (L. S.), Manual of Parliamentary
Practice, 14
Cutter (C), on Anatomy, 27
Darlington (W.), Flora Cestrica, 27
Darrach (W.), Anatomy of the Groin, 17
D' Aubuisson (T. F.), Treatise on Hydraulics, 63
Davies (C), Logic of Mathematics, 33
(S.), Sermons on Important Subjects, 4
— Substance of Sermons, 4
Davis (A. J.), the Approaching Crisis, 77
the Great Harmonia, 77
Philosophy of Special Provi-
the Present A ge an dinner Life, 77
deuces, 77
(T).), Book (^f the Telegraph, 63
(D., jun.). Manual of Magnetism, 27
(E.), the Half Century, 46
(fl. W.), War of Ormuzd, 46
(S.), Prayer Book for the six Nations, 38
(Mrs. T.), Sabbatarian Chiarch, 4
Day (H. N.), Elements of Art of Ehetoric, 35
(J.), Old Engagement, 68
(S.), Hist. Collections of Pennsylvania, 46
Dean (A.), MedicalJurisprudence, 14, 17
De Bow, Encyclopaedia of the U. S. Trade, 59
De Bow's Eeview, 83
Deems (Ch, F.), Family Worship, 4
De Hart (W. C), Courts Martial, 14
Delafield(J., jun.), American Antiquities, 42
Denison (Mrs. M. A.), What Not, 68
De Puy (H.), Ethan Allen, 46
De Sacy and Fosdick, General Grammar, 38
Dew (T.), Digest of the Laws, 14
Dewees (W. P.), System of Midwifery, 17
De Wette (W.), Introduction to the Canonical
Scriptures, 4
Dewey (O.), Controversial Theology, 4
on Human Nature, 4
Moral Views of Society, 4
on Nature of Eeligion, 4
Diplomatic Correspondence of the U. S., 46
Diplomatic Correspondence, edited by J.
Sparks, 46
Discussion on the Sabbath, 2, 4
Disturnell's E ail way, &c.. Book, 78
Ditson (G. L.), Circassia, 53
Dix (J. A.), a Winter in Madeira, 53
Doane (G, W.), Sermons, 4
Domat (J.), Civil Law, 14
Dods (J. B.), Immortahty Triumphant, 4, 77
Spirit Manifestations Examined, 77
Douglas (J. S.), Intermittent Fevers, 21
Dow (jun.). Short Patent Sermons, 68
Dowling (J.), Eomanism, 4
Downing (A. J.), Architecture of Country
Houses, (i3
Fruits and Fruit Trees of
America, 63
96
INDEX.
Downing (A.. J.), Rural Essays, 63
Drake, Diseases of the Interior Valley, 17
Second Series, 17
(S. Gr.), Biography of the Indians, 46
- Indian Captivities, 46
Draper (J. W.), Text-book of Chemistry, 35
Text book of Nat. Philos., 35
Drury (A. H.), Light and Shade, 68
Duer (J.) ,Law of Marine Insurance, 14
on Law of llepresentations, 34
Duncan (A.), Land Surveyor's Guide, 63
(W. C ), Life of John the Baptist, 4
. Dunglison (R.), Human Health, 17
— Human Physiology, 17
Medical D'etionary, 17
New Remedies, 17
Practice of Medicine, 17
• Therapeutics. 17
Dunlap (SV.), Rise of the Arts of Design, 75
Daponcean, on the American Languages, 38
— (P. S.), Chinese System of Writing,39
Du Pul (J.), Prophecies of the Apocalypse, 4
Durfee (J.), Complete Works, 14
D wight (H. G-. O.), Christianity Revived, 4
(M. A.), Grecian Mythology, 35
(N.), the Congress of 1776, 46
Lives of the Signers, 46
. (T.), Theology Explained, 4
E.
Earle (P.), Bloodletting, 17
Institutions for the Insane, 17
Eastman, on Topographical Drawing, 63
(M,). American Aboriginal Portfolio, 68
Aunt Phillis's Cabin, 69
Chicora, 69
(M. H.), Romance of Indian Life, 68
Eberle (J ), Diseases and Physical Education, IS
' on the Materia Medica, 17
on the Practice of Medicine, 18
Eckermann — Fuller, Conversations with
G-oethe,69
Eddy (D. C), Heroines of Missionary Enter-
prise, 4
Eckfeldt and Dubois, Coins, Bullion, 59
Gold and Silver Coins, 59
Edmonds and Dexter, Spiritualism, 77
Educational Tracts, 33
Edwards (B. B.), Writings, 5
(J.), on Freedom of Will, 31
(Jon.), Charity, and its Fruits, 5
on the Freedom of the Will, 5
' New Testament, with Notes, 5
(Jon. jun.). Works, 5
(J.), Family Testament and Commen-
tary, 5
Edwards (President), Works, 5
Effingham (C ), the Virginia Comedians, 69
EUet (C. ) , the Mississip})i and Ohio Rivers, 63
(E. F.), Domestic History of the Revolu-
tion, 46
Nouvellettes of the Musicians, 76
Pioneer Women, 46
_ Women of the American Revolu-
tion, 46
(M-3.). Watching Spirits, 5
Elliot's Myiteries, 77
EUiot (F. R.), Fruit Book, 63
(S.), History of Liberty, 46
Elliott (J.), Debates, 14
Ellis (G. a.), Organ and Church Music, 5, 76
El Mukattem, Lands of the Moslem, 58
Emerson ( F . ) , North American Arithmetic, 35
Emmons (N.) Works, 5
Emory, Military Reconnaissance, 53
Encyclopaedia Americana, 69
of Religious Knowledge, 5
Ephemeris, the American, 25
Eschenburg and Fishke, Manual of Classical
Literature, 35
Espy (J. P.), Philosophy of Storms, 27
Esquirol (M.), on Insanity, 18
Esrey (W. P.). Anatomy and Physiology, 21
Essay on the Primitive Church Offices, 5
Essays, Theological, from the Princeton
Review, 5
European Settlement in America, 46
Everett (E.), New York Hist. Soc. Address, 4d
Orations and Speeches, 69
Evidences of Christianity, 5
Ewbank (T.), HydrauUcs, 63
Fabens (J. W.), Camel Hunt, 69
Story of Life on the Isthmus, 53
Fable for Critics, 69
Family Illuminated Bible, 5
Fanny Fern, Fern Leaves, 69
Shadows and Sunbeams, 69
Farnham (T. J.), Life, &c. in California, 53
Fay (T. S.), Novels, &c., 69
Federalist, the, 14
Felton (C. C), Selections from the Greek His-
torians, 35
Fenelon and Guyon, Spiritual Congress, 5
Ferris (B G.) History, «&c., of the Latter-
Day Saints, 77
Fetis (F. J.), Music Explained, 76
Feuchtwanger (L.), on Gems, 63
Field (M.), City Architecture. 63
Finney (C. G.), Revivals of Religion, 5
Fishbough (W.), Macrocosm, 77
Fisher (R. S.), Book of the World, 53
Gazetteer of Maryland, 78
of their. S.,78
— Indiana, 78
— Progress of the U. S., 69
Stat'stical Gazetteer of
United States, 59
Flagg (E.), Venice, 46
(J. B.), Ether and Chloroform, 18
Fletcher (J.), Lessons on Slavery, 59
Flint (J.), Sermons, 5
(T.), Indian Wars, 46
Novels, &c., 69
the
Follen(C.), Works, (;9
(Mrs.), Sketches of Married Life, 69
Folsom (G.), Letters of Hernando Cortes, 46
Foote ( A. H . ) . Africa and the American Flag, 53
Forbes (J.). Homoeopathy, Allopathy, 21
Foresti (E. F.), Crestomazia Italiana, 43
Forrest (W. S.), History of Norfolk, 47
Sketches of Norfolk, 53
Forry (S.), Climate of the United States, 18
Fosgate(B.), Sleep Psychologically considered,
18
Fowler (J. A.), Analysis of Dramatic Expres-
sion, 33
(O. S.), a Home for .411, 6S
Fox (J.), Natural History of the Teeth, 18
Franchere (G. ), Voyage to North-west Coast, 53
Franklin (B.), an Autobiography, 47
Life, Autobiography, 47
Memoirs of, 47
Select Works, 47
Works, 47
Freedley (E. T.), Treatise on Business, 59
Freemason's Monthly Magazine, 83
Fremont (J. C), Expedition to the Rocky
Mountains, 53
INDEX.
97
French (B. ¥.), Collections of Louisiana, 47
Freund (W.), Latin-English Lexicon, 39
Frost (J.), Border Wars, 47
Heroic Women, 47
History of California, 47
Indian Wars, 47
Pictorial History of Mexico, 47
Frothingham (N. L.), Serntions, 5
Fry (W. H.), on Artificial Fish-breeding, 63
Furuess (W. H.), Gems of German Verse, 69
Furniss (W.), Land of the Caesar, 47
a
Gaillard (T.), History of the Eeformation, 5
Gallatin (A.), Indian Vocabulary, 38
Gallery of Illustrious Americans, 47
Gait (j. M.), Insanity, 18
Practical Medicine, 18
Gan-Eden ; or, Pictures of Cuba, 53
Gardner (D. P.), Medical Chemistry, 18
Gay and Girardin, Celebrated Saloons, 69
Gayarre (C), Louisiana, 47
the School for Politics, 69
Gems from American Poets, 69
Gerhard (W. ^y.), Diseases of the Chest, 18
Gesner (A.), Resources of Nova Scotia, 53
Gesenius (W.)) Hebrew-English Lexicon, 39
Giddings (J. H.), Speeches on Slavery, 59
Giles (H.), Christian Thought on Life, 5
Discourses on Life, 69
— Illustrations of Genius, 69
Lectures and Essays, 69
Gillespie (W, M.), on Eoad-making, 63
Gilman (C), Oracles for Youth, 36
-from the Poets, 69
Giraud (,T. P.), Birds of Long Island, 27
Giseke (R.)> the Rose of the Parsonage, 69
Gliddon (G. R.), Ancient Egypt, 42
. Types of Mankind, 27
Gluge (G.), Atlas of Pathological Histology, 18
G-obat (S.), Journal on Abyssinia, 5
■Goddard ( B. T.), Anatomy, &c., of the Human
Teeth, 18
<Todey's Lady's Book, 83
-Goethe's Essays on Art, 69
Iphigenia in Tauris, 69
Goethe and Schiller, 69
GoUmann (W.), Homoeopathic Guide, 21
Goodell ( W.), Slavery and Anti- Slavery, 59
the Old and the New, 5
Goodrich (C. A.), Select British Eloquence, 69
View of all Religions, 5
(C. B.), Science of Government, 14
(C. H.), Travels in N. and S. Am., 53
(S. G.), les Etats-Unis d'Amerique,
63, 59
- — History of all Nations, 47
-Poems, 69
Gorrie (P. D.), Churches and Sects, 5
Episcopal Methodism, 5
Hist, of Meth. Episc. Ch., 5
Lives of Method. Ministers, 5
Gouge (W. M.), Fiscal History of Texas, 47
Gould (A. A.), MoUasea and Shells, 27
(N. D.), Church Music in America, 5, 76
Goulding (F. R.), Robert and HaroM, 33
Grace Greenwood, Haps and Mishaps of a
Tour in Eurone, 69
Recollections of Childhood, 36
History of my Pets, 3f)
Greenwo h1 Leaves, 69
• Poetical Works, 69
Graham's American Monthly Magazine, 83
Gray (A.), Botanical Text-book, 27
Botany, Phanerogamia, 27
Gray (A.), Genera of Plants, 27
Manual of Botany, 27
(J. F.), the Stcite and Homoeopathy, 21
and Adams, Elements of Geology, 27
Greeley, (H.), Art and Industry, 63
Green (H.), Diseases of the Air-passages, 18
•Pathology of Croup, 18
-(J.), Diseases of the Skin, 18
Greene (G. W.), Lessons in Italian, 43
Greenleaf (J.), History of the Churches, 6
(S.), Law of Evidence, 14
Greenough (FT.), Memorial of, 47
Gregg (J.), Commerce of the Prairies, 59
Greppo. Hieroglyphic System of Champol-
iion, 39
Griffin (E. D.), Sermons, 6
(F.), Junius Discovered, 47
(G. G.), the Gospel, own Advocate, 6
Griffith (R. E.), Universal Formulary, 18
Griffiths (J. W.), on Marine Architec, 56,57,63
GriUparzer, Correggio, 69
Griscom (T. H.), Uses and Abuses of Air, 63
Griswold (A. V.), Memoir of the Life of, 6
(C. D.), the Isthmus of Panama, 53
(R. W.), the Female Poets of Am., 69
Poets and Poetry of Am., 69
the Prose Writers of Am., 69
(R-)j Scenes in the Saviour's Life, 6
Gross (S. D.), Diseases of the Urin. Bladder, 18
Pathological Anatomy, 18
Wounds in the Intestines, 18
Guenther (E. A.), Horn. Veter. Medicine, 21
Guernsey (E.), Hom. Domestic Practice, 21
Guide from Montreal and Quebec, 78
to Montreal, 78
Quebec, 78
Gummere (J.), on Astronomy, 27
Gunnison (T. W.), the Mormons, 77
Gurley {R. R.), on the State of Liberia, 59
Gurowski (C. A.), Russia as it is, 47
Guyot (A.), Comparative Geography, 53
the Earth and Man, 63
Meteorological Tables, 28
Mural Maps, 81
H
Hackett (H. B,), Commentary, 6
Hahnemann (S.), Chronic Diseases, 22
Materia Medica Pura, 22
Organon of Hom. Med., 22
Haldeman (S. S,), Monograph of the Limni-
ades, 28
Hale (H ), Ethnography and Philology, 39
(S. J.), Complete Dictionary of Poetical
Quotations, 69
Household Receipt Book^ 63
Northwood, 70
(Mrs.), Woman's Record, 47
Hall (B. R.),FrankFreeman'sBarber'sShop,70
(E. B.), Memoir of Mary L. Ware, 6
(E. H.), the Puritans, 6
(J.), Legends of the West, 70
Palaeontology of New York, 28
the West, 59
Htilleek (F), Poetical Works, 70
Hamilton Papers, 14
(S.), History of the National Flag, 47
(W. T.), the " Fnend of Moses," 6
Hammond (S. H.), Hills, Lakes, 53, 70
Handbook ot" Anglo-Saxon Derivatives, 39
Orthography, 39
Root- words, 39
' of Engrafted English Words, 39
OilPainting, 75
Handy (W. R.}, Text-book of Anatomy, 18
9
98
INDEX.
Harbaugh (H.), Heaven, 6
Heavenly Home, 6
Recognition, 6
on the Future Life, 6
Harland (M.), Alone, 70
Harrington (J.), Sermons, 6
Harris (C. A.), Dental Surgery, 18
Diet, of xMed. Terminology, 18
(T. W.), Insects of New England, 28
Harrison (Gr.)5 Laws of Latin Grammar, 35
. (J.). Theory of the Nervous System, 18
(J. P.). Materia Medica, 18
Harry Harso'i, 70
Marsiia (T. W.), Nature, &c., of Sin, 6
Hart (A. M.), Hist, of Mississippi Valley, 53
Valley of the Mississippi, 47
(J. F.), the Female Prose Writers of
America, 70
Hartley (R. M), Essay on Milk, 64
(S.), Lessons at the Cross, 6
Hartmann (F.), Acute and Chronic Diseases, 22
Diseases of Children, 22
on Homoeopathic Remedies, 22
Hartshorn (J.), Commercial Tables, 59, 60
Harvey (W. H.), Nereis-Boreali-Amer., 28
Hasting (J.), Minor Surgery, 18
Hastings (T.), History of Forty Choirs, 76
on Musical Taste, 76
Haswell (C. H.), Engineer's Pocket-Book, 6-t
Hatfield (E. F.), St. Helena and the Cape, 6
(F. G.), Amer. House Carpenter, 64
Haupt (II.), on Bridge Construction, 64
Hivergal (W. H.), Hundredth Psalm Tune, 76
Hawes ( L\), Reasons, 6
Hawks (F. L.), Egypt 6
Hawthorne (N .), the Blithedale Romance, 70
-the House of the Seven
G-ables, 70
- Scarlet Letter, 70
^the Snow Image, 70
Tanglewood Tales, 37
-True Stories from History
and Biography, 70
Twice-told Tales, 70
- Wonder-Book, 36
Hening (Mrs. E. F.), African Mission, 6
Henle (J.), Pathology, 18
Henningsen (C. T.), Past and Future of Hun-
gary, 47 ^
Henry (C. S.), History of Philosophy, 31
Hentz (C. L.), Aunt Patty's Scrap Bag, 70
Linda, 70
Marcus Warland, 70
Rena, 70
Herbert (H. W.), Captains of the Old World, 47
Captains of the Rom. Rep., 47
Chevaliers of France, 48
the Deerstalkers, 70
Knights of England, France,
and Scotland, 70
Persons and Pictures, 48
My Shooting-Box, 70
the Quorndon Hounds, 70
Hering (C), Domestic Physician, 22
Herndon (M. E.), Louise Elton, 70
(W. L.), Exploration of the Amazon
Valley, 53
Hernisz (S.), Conversation in English and
Chinese, 39
Hickey, United States Constitution, 14
Hickock (L. P.), Empirical Psychology, 31
Rational Psychology, 31
System of Moral Science, 31
Hildreth (R.)> Despotism in America, 60
History of the United States, 48
Hillard (G. S.), Six Months in Italy, 70
Hines (G.), Oregon, 6
Plains of the Pacific Oregon, 53
Hay ward (G ), Phvsiology, 18
^ (J.), Gazettepr of the U. S., 60, 73
Use of Sulphuric Ether, 18
Hazen (E.), Popular Technology, 64
Headley (J. T.), Adirondack, 70
Guard of Napoleon, 47
Letters from Italy, 70
Life of Oliver Cromwell, 47
Miscellanies, 70
Napoleon and his Marshals, 47
the Old Guard, 47
T- Sacred Mountains, 6
Sacred Scenes, 6
Second War with E glaid, 47
Sketches and Ramb es, 70
' — Washington and his Generals,
47
(P. C), Life of the Empress Jose-
phine, 47
Women of the Bible, 6
Heap (G. H.) , Central Route to the Pacific, 53
Hedge (P. H.), the Prose Writers of Ger-
many, 70
Heloise, 70
Hempel (C. J.), on Eclecticism, 22
Horn. Domestic Physician, 22
Organon of Specific Ilom., 22
on the Use of Arnica, 22
Henck (J. B.), Railroad Eng-neering, 64
Hengstenberg (E. W.), Christology, 6
Egypt, 6
History of Democracy in America, 60
the Presbyterian Church, 6
Royal Dauphin, 48
Hitchcock, Address before the Geologists, 28
on the Geology of Massachusetts, 28
.— (E.), Elementary Geology, 28
Final Report, 28
OutHne of Geology, 28
Religion of Geology, 6, 28
-Religious Lectures, 6
Hobart's (J. H.) Works, 6
Hodge (C), Epistle to the Romans, 6, 7
Hodason (W. B.), Notes on Northern Africa, 53
Hortendahl (C. F.), Cholera, 22
Hoffman (Charles F.), Greyslaer, 70
Poems, 70
(P-)> Nutcracker, 36
(M.), Law of the Prot. Ep. Church, 7
Holbrook (J. E.), Jforth Am. Herpetology, 28
Holcombe's Cases in Commercial Law, 15
Digest of Decisions, 14
Law of Debtor, 15
( W. H.), Scient. Basis of Horn., 22
Holgate (J. B.), American Genealogy, 48
Holmes (A.), Annals of America, 48
(D.), the Wesley Offering, 7
(M. J.), Tempest and Sumshine, 70
(0. W.), Astrsea, 70
, Poetical Works, 70
Holt (D.) Views of Ilomceopathy, 22
Holy Bioie for Students, 7
Homer's Iliad, 35
by Owen, 36
• Odyssey, by Owen,
Homergue, the Silk Culturist, 64
Homes of American Authors, 70
Statesmen, 48
Homoeopathic Cookery, 22
Examiner, 22
Hooker (W.), Doctrines of Homoeopathy, 22
Hopkins (J. H.), End of Controversy, 7
History of the Confessional, 7
- (S. H.), Works, 7
1
INDEX.
99
Hopper's (I. T.) Life, 48
Hoppin (J. M.), Notes of a Theol. Student, 7
Horn's Overland Guide to California, 78
Horner (S. S.), Guide in Extracting Teeth, 19
(W. E.), Pathological Anatomy, 19
Practical Anatomy, 19
Special Anatomy, 19
Horwitz (O.), Brushwood, 70
Houssaye (A.), Philosophers and Actresses, 70
Hovey (C. M.), the Fruits of America, 28
Howe (F.), Oriental and Sacred Scenes, 53
Howse (T.), Grammar of the Cree Lang., 38
Hubbart (S, C), Surgical and Mechanical
Dentistry, 19
Huason (H. I^ .), Lectures on Shakspeare, 70
Hufeland (C. W.), Enchiridion Medicum, 22
Hug, Introduction to the New Testament, 7
Hughes (W. C), Miller's Companion, 64
Huidekoper <F.), Belief of the First Three
Centuries, 7
Hull (A. G.), Life of TTahnemann, 22
Humphrey <S. D.), Handbook of the Da-
guerreotype, 64
Humphrey's Daguerrian Journal, 83
Humphreys (F.), the Cholera, 22
Diseases of the Sexual Sys-
tem, 22
Dysentery, 21, 22
Hunt's Merchant's Magazine, 83
Hunter (J.), Venereal Disease, 19
(J, D.), Manners of Indian Tribes, 48
Huntington (B.), View of the Fine Arts, 75
(J. v.), the Forest, 70
Hydriaties ; a Manual of the Water Cure, 22
Iconographic Encyclopaedia of Science, Lite-
rature, and Art, 70
lUinois, Map of the State of, 79
Indiana, Map of the State of, 79
IngersoU (C. J.), Sketch of the Second War, 48
Ingraham(T. H.), Captain Kyd, 71
Inskip (J. S.), Methodism Explained, 7
Iowa, €oltotf 8 Township Map of, 79
Irving (Luc), Receipts in Cookery, 64
Irving's (Washington) Works, 71
Ives (L. S.). Obedience of Faith, 7
J
Jackson (A.) Life of, 48
' Life and Services of, 48
— — Memoirs of G eneral, 43
(C. T.), First Geological Eeport, 28
Jacobus (M. W.), Notes on the Gospels, 7
Jahns, Biblical Archaeology, 7
Jahr (G. H. G.), Clinical Guide, 23
Diseases of the Skin, 23
Homoeopathic Practice, 23
New Manual, 23
Jahr and Gnmer, Homceop. Pharmacopeia, 22
Possart, Homceop. Mat. Medica, 22
Janney (S.), Life of G. Fox, 7
Life of W. Penn, 7
Jarves (J. J.), Hist, of Hawaiian Islands, 48
Scenes in the Sandwich Islands, 53
Jay (J. C), Catalogue of Shells, 28
(W.), Writings on Slavery, 60
Jeffers (W. N., jvin.), Naval Gunn?ry, 57
JetFerson (H.), Manual of Pari. Practice, 60
(T.), Memoirs, 48
< Notes on the State of Virginia, 53
Writings, 48
Jenkins (J. S,),Livesof American Generals, 48
Lis^es of the Governors, 48
War against Mexico, 48
Jenks (K. W.), the Brachial Telegraph, 64
Johns, (M.), Clinical Phrase-book, 19
Johnson (A. B.)j the Meaning of Words, 39
(B. P.), Great Eshilntion of 1851, 64
(L. D.), Memoria Technica, 33
(T. T.), California and Oregon, 54
Sights in the Gold Kegion, 48
• (W. E.), Manufacture of Iron, 64
Eeport on Coals for Steam
Navigation, 60
Jomiui (Baron de), Art of War, 56
Campaign of Waterloo, 48
Jones (A.), Electric Telegraph, 61
Psalms of David, 7
. (J. B.), Freaks of Fortune, 71
Life and Adventures
of
Country Merchant, 71
Joslin (B. F.), Cholera, 23
Law of Cure, 23
Principles of Homoeopathia, 23
Jouffroy, Introduction to Ethics, 32
Jourdam (M.), Diseases of the Mouth, 19
Journal of the Ac. of Nat. Soc. of Philad,, 28
American Oriental Soc, 39, 40, 83
Education, 83
the Franklin Institute, 83
Ehode Island Institution, 33
Judd (S,), Life and Character of, 7
the Church, 7
Judson (Ad.), Memoir of, 7
English-Burmese Dictionary, 41
(Misses Anna H. & Sarah B.), Lives of, 7
(E.), Kathayam Slave, 71
My Two Sisters, 71
. (F. F ), Alderbrook, 71
. (Sarah B.), Memoir of, 7
54
Kane (Dr.), U. S. Grinnell Arctic Exped., 54
Karen New Testament, 41
Kendal (G. W.), Texan Santa Fe Expedit.
Kendall and Nebel, War with Mexico, 48
Kendrick (A. C), Greek Ollendorf, 35
Kennedy (T. P.), Swallow Barn, 71
Kenrick (P.), Four Gospels Translated, 7
Kent (J.), Commentaries on Law, 14
abridged, 14
Kentucky and Tennessee, Map of, 79
Keyser (E.), Eeligion of the Northmen, 7
Kidder (D. T.), Mormonism, 77
(D. P.), Sketches of Brazil, 54
Kingsbury (J.), on Failures in Teaching, 33
5 (P. K.), on Artillery and Infantry, 56
Kingsford (W.), Plank Eoad in the U. S., 64
Kip (W. J.), Catacombs of Eome, 7
Double Witness of the Church, 7
Early Conflicts of Christianity, 7
Jesuit Missions, 7
Kirkbride (T. J.), Hospitals for the Insane, 19
Kirkham (S.), English Grammar, 35
Kirkland (C. M.), Book for the Home Circle,
the Evening Book, 71
Garden Walks with the
Poets, 71
the Helping Hand, 71
Western Clearings, 71
Kir wan, Eomanism at Home, 7
KKpstein (L. F.), Analecta Angio-Saxonica, 41
Anglo -Saxon Grammar, 41
Natale 6. Gregorii Papae, 41
Study of Modern Lang., 41
Knapen (D. M.), Mechanic's Assistant, 64
Knickerbocker, 83
Knight (II. C), Memoir of Hannah More, 7
(T.), English and Tamil Dictionary, 41
Knorr (J.), the Two Eoads, 71
100
INDEX.
Know Nothing, the, 74
Knox (J. P.), Account of St. Thomas, 54
Knowlton, Notes on Gunpowder, 58
Koeppen (A. L.), the World in the Middle
Ages, 48
Kollock (3. K.), Pastoral Reminiscences, 7
Kossuth and his Generals, by De Puy, 48
Life of, by Headley, 48
in New England, 48
Kraitsir (C), Glossology, 41 ■.
Significance of the Alphabet, 41
Kreussler (E.), Therapeutics of Acute Dis-
eases, 23
Krummacher, Last Days of EHsha, 71
Kiihner, Elementary Greek Grammar, 33
(R), Grammar of the Greek Lang., 35
Kurten (P.), Soap Mauufacturing, (j4
Lamplighter, the, 71
Laugdon (M.), Ida May, 71
Laporte, (Count dej, French Exercises, 43
Guide, 43
Grammar, 43
Reader, 43
Larkin (J.), Brass & Iron Founders' Guide, 64
Lamed (S.), Life and Eloquence of, 7
Laroche (R.), Pneumonia, 19
Larrabee (W. C), Wesley and his Coadjutors, 7
Laurie (T.), Dr. Grant and the Mountain Nes-
torians, 8
Lawrence (M. W.), Light on the Dark River, 8
Laws in relation to the Erie Canal, 58, 59
relating to India, 15
Lawson, Meteorological Register, 28
Lazarus (M. E.), Homoeopathy, 23
Seminal Losses, 23
Lea (J.), Family of Naiades, 28
Leavitt (W.), Method to find the Longitude, 57
Le Conte, Coleoptera of Lake Superior, 28
Descriptions of New Coleoptera, 28
Insects, 28
- on the Pselaphidae, 28
• Synopsis of the Donacia, 28
Lectures on the Evidence of Christianity, 8
Lee (D. K.), Master Builder, 71
(Dr.), Life of the Apostle St. Peter, 8
(C. A.), Human Physiology, 35
(E. B.), Memoirs of J. Buckminster, 8
(H. F. ), Familiar Sketches of Sculpture, 76
Memoir of Pierre Toussaint, 49
(Mrs.)., the Huguenots in France, 49
Legare (H. S.) , Writings of, 71
Leibnitz (G. W, v.), Life of, 49
Leidy (J.), Flora and Fauna, 28
Le Normand, Memoirs of Josephine, 48
Lesdernier (E. P.), Voices of Life, 71
Leslie, (Miss), Behaviour Book, 71
Lester (C. E.), My Consulship, 71
Letts (J. M.), California Illustrated, 54
Leverett (E. P.), Latin Lexicon, 41
Lewis (H.), Mississippi Valley, 54
— (T.), Plato against the Atheists, 8
(W. H.), Confession of Christ, 8
v'^ermons for the Christian Year, 8
Leybourn (J.), the Soldier of the Cross, 8
Lieber (F.), on Civil Liberty, 60
' Constitution for Girard College, 33
Laws of Property, 60
Legal Hermeneutics, 60
. . - — Manual of Political Ethics, 60
(O. M.), the Assayer's Guide, 64
Life and its Aims, 71
Linden (A.) , Thildren's Trials, 37
Lippincott's Cabinet Histories, 49
Lippineott's Gazetteer of the U. States, 78
Little Ferns, 37
Little Pilgrim, 83
Little (J. A.), AutoT)iography of, 8
Livermore (A. A.), Discourses, 8
— Paul's Epistle to the Ro-
mans, 8
Livingston, Penal Code for Louisiana, 15
(E.), System of Penal Law, 15
— (J.), Law Register, 15
Loewig(C.), Organic and Physiological Che-
mistry, 28
Long, Ancient Architecture, 64
Long Island, Map of, 79
Longet (F. A.), Physiology, 19
Longfellow (H. W.), Ballads, 71
Belfry of Bruges, 71
the Estray, 71
Evangeline, 71
the Golden Legend, 71
Hyperion, 71
Kavanagh, 71
Outre-mer, 71
l^oems on Slavery, 71
Poetical Works, 71
Poets and Poetry, 71
the Seaside, 71
Spanish Student, 71
Voices of the Night, 71
the Waif, 71
Loomis (E.), on Algebra, 35
Elements of Analytical Geo-
metry, 35
Elements of Geology, 28
Geometry, 35
Progress of Astronomy, 28
• Table of Logarithms, 35
Trigonometry, 35
Lord (D. N.), Exposition of the Apocalypse, 8
(E.), Epoch of the Creation, 8
(J. C.), Progress of Civilization, 60
Loring (J. b.), the Hundred Boston Orators, 49
Lorrain (A. M.), the Square-rigged Cruiser, 57
Lossing (B. J.), History of the Fine Arts, 76
Pictorial Field Book, 49
Louis Napoleon, by H. W. de Puy, 49
Lowell (A. C), Education of Girls, 33
(J. R.), the Biglow Papers, 72
Complete Poetical Works, 71
Sir Launfal, 72
Lowrie {J. C), Manual of Missions, 8
Lunt (G.), Lyric Poems, 72
Lynch (W. F.), Naval Life, 72.
Report on the Expedition to
the Dead Sea, 5 L
Lyrics from the Wide Wide World, 76
M.
Macaulay (W. H.), Kathay, 54
M'Calla(W.), Cleansing the Sanctuary, 8
M'Clintock (J.), Methodist Ministers, 8
and Crooks, First Book in
Latin, 35
M'Clure (A. W.), the Translators Revived, 8
M'Connel (J. L.), Western Characters, 72
Macfarlane (C. E.), History of Steam Naviga-
tion, 64
M'Gregor (E. R.), Figures and Symbols, 8
M'llvaine (C.P.), Evidences of Christianity, 8
- Sermons, 8
- (J. H.), Tree of the Knowledge, 8
M'Intii e (J.) Astronomy, 35
M'lvitosh (M. J.), Evenings at Donaldsoi^
Manor, 37, 72
Qonqi^est, 37
INDEX.
101
M'latosh (M. J.), Juvenile Tales, 37
. Praise aud Principle, 37
Maekay,(Ii. W. S.), ^Stranger's Guide to Canada,
78
Mackej (A. G.)> Lexicon of Freemasonry, 76
M'Queen (H,)» Orator's Touchstone, 33
Madison Papers, 49
Magandie (P.), Physiology, 19
Magoon (E. L.), Living Orators, 49
Orators of the American Eevo-
lution, 49
Proverbs for the People, 8
Republican Christianity, 8
Mahan (D. IT.), on Advanced Guard, 56
■' Civil Engineering, 64
on Field Fortification, 56
Industrial Drawing, 64
— on Permanent Fortifications, 55
- (M.), Exercise of Faith, 8
Maine, Township Map of the State of, 79
Malan's Homoeopathic Family Guide, 23
Mann (H.), on Education, 33
Thoughts for a Young Man, 8
Manners (Mrs.), Pleasure and Profit, 37
Mansfield (E. D.), American Education, 33
— the Mexican War, 49
Manual of Commercial Correspondence, 60
— — ' of Devotions for Families, 8
— — of the System of Discipline, 33
Mapleson (T. W. C), Heraldry, 49
Maps of Arkansas, by Emory, 83
of Oregon, by Fremont, 82
Marban (P.), Arte de la Lengua Moxa, 38
Marco Paul's Voyages, 54
Marcou (J.), Geological Map of the United
States, 28, 82
Marcy (E. E.), Homoeopathy and Allopathy, 23
^ Hom. Theory of Medicine, 23
Marshall, Farmer's Handbook, 78
(J.), Writings, 15
Marvel (Ik.), the Battle Summer, 49
Dream Life, 72
_— .^ Fresh Gleanings, 72
Fudge Doings, 72
Reveries of a Bachelor, 72
Marx (A B.), Musical Composition, 76
Mason (C), Structure of the Governments, 15
(E.), a Pastor's Legacy, 8
(F.), Synopsis of a Karen Grammar, 41
-— — (J.), Complete Works of, 8
(L.), Musical Letters from Abroad, 76
Masonic Mirror, the, 77
Register, 83
Massachusetts, Colton's Railroad Map of, 79
System of Schools, 33
Materia Medica of American Provings, 23
Mathematical Miscellany, 32
Mather (C), Magnalia Chx-isti Americana, 8
Matthes (F.), Letter to VV. Hooker, on Homoeo-
pathy, 23
Matthews (C), Various Writings, 72
— — ^ (Corn.), Pen and Ink Panorama of
Xew York, 78
Matthias, (M.), Rules of Order, 60
Mattison (H.) Spirit-rapping Unveiled, 77
Maury's Dental .\rt, 19
— (A.), Memoirs of a Huguenot Family,72
(M F.) the Amazon, 54
Paper on the Gulf Stream, 57
Treatise ou Navigation, 57
May (C.),the American Female Poets, 72
— — (E. J.), Sunshine of Greystone, 37
Mayer (13.), Mexico, 49
Maygrier (J. P.), Midwifery Illustrated, 19
Medical Examiner, 83
Meditatus, Poems, 72
Meehan (T.) on Ornamental Trees. 61
Meigs (C. D.), Childbed Fevers, 19
Diseases of Young Children, 19
Obstetrics, 19
Women's Diseases, 19
Mellen (G.), Geographical Book of the U. S., 51
Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts,
&e., 28
Memphis Medical Recorder, 83
Meuzels (Wolfgang), German Literature, 73
Mercersburgh Quarterly Review, 84
Merchants' Almanack, 1855, HO
Metcalf (J. W.) Homoeopathy, 23
Methodist Preacher, 26 Sermons, 8
Mexico, Codigo de Commercio de, 60,
Map of the Republic of, 79
Mezzofanti's System of Learning, 43
Michaux(F. A.), North American Sylva, 28, 29
Michigan, Map of, by J. Farmer, 79
Mifilin (S. W.), Methods of Location, 64
Miles (J. W.), Philosophical Theology, 8
Miller (H.), Human Parturition, 19
Millington (T.), Civil Engineering, 65
Mills (A.), Literature of Great Britain and
Ireland, 72
Milne (A. D.), Uncle Sam's Farm Fence, 72
Milton's (J.), Paradise Lost, 72
Poetical Works, 72
Miner (T. B.), Poultry Book, 65
Minnesota, Map of the Territory of, 79
Minifle (W.), Geometrical Drawing, 66
Alining Magazine, 84
Missions, Report on Foreign, 10
Missouri, Colton's New Map of, 79
Mitchell's Guide to California, 79
to Canada, East, 79
to lorida, 79
to New York, 79
to Texas, 79
- large Map of the United States, 81
-of the World, 82
29
- Maps of the States, 80
- Traveller's Guide through the U, S., 78
- Universal Atlas, 8 i
- (O. M.) Planetary and Stellar Worlds,
(T. D.), Materia Medica, 19
Molina (D. I. I.), on Araueanian Language, 38
Monette (J.), History of the Mississippi
VaUey, 49, 54
Montgomery (C), Eagle Pass, 72
Monthly Law Reporter, 84
Moore (C, W.), Masonic Trestle Board, 76
(J. W.), Encyclopaedia of Music, 76
Moran (B.), the Footpath and Highway, 54
Mordecai (A.), Experiments of Gunpowder, 56
Moreau (F. J.), Midwifery, 19
Morfit (C.), Chemical Manipulations, 29
Perfumery, 65
Soap and Candles, 65
Treatise ou Leather-dressing, 65
Morgan (L. H.), League of the Ho-de-uo-
Saunee, 49
(W.). Indigestion, &c., 23
Mormons ^The), or, the Latter-day Saints, 77
Morrell (C. G.j, Rheumatism, 19
Morris (0 ), Scarlet Fever, 19
Morse's North American Atlas, 82
Morton (S. G.), Anatomy, 19
Crania Americana, 29
Egvptiaca, 29
(W. T. G.), Report to Congress re-
specting Ether, 19
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, 8
Mosquera (T. C. de). Geography of New
Grenada, 54
Memoria, 54
Moudat (V.), Sterility, 19
102
IKDEX.
Mountford (W.), Thorpe, 72
Movsatt (A. C), Autobiography of an Actress,
72
Mpongvve Grammar, 41
Mu<,^^e (T.), Alraja, 72
Muiligan (J.), Structure of the English
lian;j;uage, 33
Muuk (E.), Gi-eek and Roman Metres, 36
Muusell (J.), Annals of Albany, 49
Typographical Miscellany, 49
Murdock (Dr.), New Testament from the
Syriac, 8
Modern Philosophy, 33
Mure (B.), Materia Medica, 23
Murphy, iieview of Chemistry, 2y
and Jeffers, Nautical Routine, 57
My Play is Study, 37
Myrtle (L.), Cap Sheaf, 72
(x\I,), Myrtle Wreath, 72
N.
Napoleon Bonaparte and Sir H. Lowe, 49
Dynasty, 49
Nash (J.), the Progressive Farmer, 65
(f . A.), on Agricultural Chemistry, 29
National Preacher, American, 8
Natural History of New York State, 29
Neander (A.), Epistle of St. James, 9
First Epistle of St. John, 9
Epistle of Paul, 9
Life of Jesus Christ, 9
Neidhard (C), Homoeopathy in Germany, 23
Neil (W.), Epistle to the Ephesians, 9
Nelson (D.), Cause of Infidelity, 9
Nevin (J. W.), Biblical Antiquities, 9
on Mystical Presence, 9
New Bond of Love, 77
New England, Map of, 79
New Hampshire, Colton's Railroad Map of, 79
New Mexico, Reports of the Sec. of War on 54
New Testament, in the Choctaw Language, 38
Ojibwa Language, 38
New Themes, for the Protestant Clergy, 9
Condemned, 9
News Boy, the, 72
Newcomb (H.), Guide to Christian Character, 9
Young Lady's Guide, 37
Newman (J. B.), Fascination, 77
Natural History of Man, 29
Newton (J.), Mathematical Principles, 32
New York City Directory, 60
Daguerrotyped, 79
Handbook of, 79
Journal of Medicine, 84
Map of City and County of, 80
Map of the City of, 80
Map of, 79
Map of the State of, by Burr, 80
Medical Gazette, 84
in a Nutshell, 79
Plan of the City of, 80
Quarterly, 84
Statistical Map of the State of, 80
Teacher, 33, 84
N^'choU (R.), Poems, 72
Nicoret, Basin Map of the Mississippi R., 82
Nolte (V.), Fifty Years in both Hemispheres, 72
Nordheimer (J.), Hebrew Chresto aalhy, 41
Hebrew Grammar, 41
Norman (B. M.), Ruined Cities of Yucatan, 54
Norris (S.). Handbook for Locomotive En-
gineers, 64
Norton's Literary Gazette, 84
Norton (A.), on Genuineness of Gospels, 9
__ Qji Doctrine of Trinitarians, 9
Norton ("W. A.), Treatise on Astro..omy, 29
North America, Map of, 80
and South Amei'ica, Map of, 80
American Review, 81
HomoeopaLhic Journal, 23, Si
Northend(C.), Obstacles to Success of Schools,
33
Teacher and Parent, 33
Nott (J. C), on Biblical and Physical Hist., 29
Chronology, 29
Physical History of the Jovrish
Race, 29
Novalis, 72
Noyes (E.), Truth of the Bible, 9
(G. R.}, Hebrew Prophets, 9
Psalms, 9
Proverbs, 9
Nutcrackers and SugardoUy, 37
Nuttad (T.), Manual of Ornithology, 29
Nystrom (J. H.), Mechanics and Engineering,65
(T. W.), on Sirew PrcpeUers, 65
o.
O'CaUaghan (E. B.), Documentary History of
New York, 19
Oehlschlager (T. C), German Pocket Dic-
tionary, 43
Ohio, Colton's Railroad Map of, 80
Okie (A. H.), Addro: s before the Rhode Island
Historical Society, 24
Old House by the liiver, 72
Old Sights >Aith New Eyes, 72
Oldfieid (T.), " To Daimonion," 77
O.in (S.), Greece and the Golden Horn, 64
Life and Letters of, 9
Works of, 9
Oliver (D.), Physiology, 19
Olendorff's Grammar to learn English, 43
Key to ditto, 43
Method of Learning French, 43
Method of Learning German, 43
Key to ditto, 13
Method of Leai'ning Italian, 43
Xey to ditto, 43
Method of Learning Spanish, 43
Key to ditto, 43
Metodo, Frances, 43
Key to ditto, 43
Metodo, Ingles, 43
Key to ditto, 43
Olmsted (D.), Compendium of Astronomy, 29
Letters on Astronomy, 29
- (J. M.), Noah and his Time, 9
Onderdonk (H. U.), Sermons, 9
Opdyke (G.), on Political Economy, 60
Original Letters from Washington to Reed, 60
Ormsby (W. L.), Bank-note Engraving, 60, 65
Osgood (F. S.), Poetical Works, 72
(S.), God with Men, e
Overman (P.), Manufac. of Iron, Steel, &c., 65
Moulder's Guide, 65
on Metallurgy, 65
Mineralogy, 65
Mechanics for the Millwright, 65
Owen (D. D.), Geolog Exploration of Iowa, ^9
• (J. J.), Greek Reader, 36
- (R. D.), Public Architecture, 65
Wisconsin, Geological, 29
P.
Page (D. P.), Teaching, 33
L-'aine (M.), Materia Medica, 19
Painting, its Rise, 76
Palfrey (J. G.), Jewish Scriptures, 9
INDEX.
103
Palfrey (J. G. ), Judaism and Christianity, 9
Palmer (Mrs. P.). Way of Holiness, 9
Paneoast (J.), Operative Surgery, 19
Parisiau Sij^hts seen through American Spec-
Uj- tacles, 72
Park (E,), Discourse at Stuart's Funeral, 9
Parker (J.), Sermons, 9
(It. G.), Aids to English Composition, 36
Exercises in English Composi-
tion, 36
Parley (P.), Dick Boldero's Adventures, 37
Cheerful Cherry, 37
Tales about America, 37
— Tales about England, 37
Winter Wreath, 37
Parsons (S. B.), the Kose, 65
Passion Mowers, Poems, 9, 72
Patent Office lieports, 60, 65
Pathfinder, the. Railway Guide, 79
Paulding (J. K.), Novels, 72
the Puritan and his Daughter, 72
Paxton (P.) J a Stray Yankee in Texas, 72
Payne (R. M.), Geral Mileo, 72
Payson (E.), Memoir and Sei'mons of, 9
Peabody (A. P.), on Christian Doctrine, 9
(W. P.O.), Sermons, 9
Pearls of American Poetry, 72
Peirce (B.), Tables of the Moon, 29
JElementary Treatise on Sound, 36
■—• — — (C. H.), Examination of Drugs, 29
Pelouze and Fremy, iS'otions of Chemistry, 29
Perce (E.), Gulliver Joi, 72
Perthes (F, M.), Life of John Chrysostom, 9
Peters (J. C.)j on Apoplexy, 24
Diseases of Females, 24
Peterson's Ladies National Magazine, 84
(K. E ), Familiar Science, 36
Pliarmacopoeia of the United States, 20
Phelps's Traveller's Guide through the U.S., 79
Philadelphia in 1852, 79
Homoeopathic Journal, 84
Journal of Homoeopathy, 24
Phillips (D.), Evans's Life, 9
Photographic Journal, 84
Photography in the United States, 65
Pickering (C.), Geog. Distribution of Man, 30
Kaces of Men, 30
— (F.) , Collection of Araer. Phrases, 41
(j.jj on the Indian Languages, 38
. Orthography for the Indian
Language, 38
Pickett (A. J,), History of Alabama, 49
Pickings frnm the Portfolio, 73
Pidgeon (W.), Antiquarian Researches, 42
Pierce's Life, by Andrews, 49
Bartlett, 49
— ' (B.), Hist, of the Harvard Univer., 49
Pierson (H W.), Missionaries of America, 9
Piggot (A. S.), Chemistry and Metallurgy, 20
Piper (R. U.), Operat. Surgery Illustrated, 20
Planter, the, 73
Plato's Phge^lo, 32
I'lumer (W. S.), Grace of Christ, 9
Poe (E. A.), Works, 73
Politics for American Christians, 10
Popkin (J.), Memorial of, 10
Porter (G. L.), Pebbles from the Lake Shore, 73
Potter (A.), Political Economy, 60
the Principles of Science, 65
— School and Schoolmaster, 34
(E, R.), Report on Schools of Rhode
Island, 34
Poussin (G. T.), the Power of the U. S., 54, 60
PoweU (T.), Living Authors of England, 73
Prayer-book of the American Church, 10
Presbyterian Looking for the Church, 10
Prescott (W. H.), Biographical Miscellany, 50
— Conquest of Peru, 50
Mexico, 50
Reign of Ferdinand & Is., 50
Price, Memoir of Philip and Rachel, 10
Priest (J ), Antiquities in the West, 42
Prime (S. T.), Death of Little Children, 10
Primitive Church Oilices, 10
Prince (W. R.), History of the Vine, 65
Princeton Review, b4
Proceedings of the American Association for
Advancement of Science, 30
for Education, 33
Philosophical Society, 30
Boston Society of Natu-
ral History, 30
Prophecies of Isaiah, in Mohawk Language, 38
Pro- Slavery Argument, 60
Public Statutes at Large, 15
Pulpit Reporter, Sermons, 10
Pulte (J. H.), Homoeop. Dom. Physician, 24
Woman's Medical Guide, 24
Putnam's Monthly Magazine, 84
Quarterly Homoeopathic Journal, 24, 84
Quackenbos on Enghsh Composition, 36
E.
Rachel Kell, 73
Rae (J.), New Principles on Political Ecou., 60
Kamsay (A. C), the Other Side, 50
Ramsey (J, G. M.), Annals of Tennessee, 50
Randall (S. S.), School System of N. York, 34
Randolph (T. T.), Cabin and Parlour, 73
Rapou (A.), Typhoid Fever, 24
Rau (G. L.), Organon of the Healing Art, 24
Ranch (F. A.), Psychology, 32
Ravenel (H. W.), Fungi Caroliniani Exsiccati,
30
Ravenscroft (Bishop), Works, 10
Read (T. B.), the Female Poets, 73
Poems, 73
Redfield (F. W.), Comparat. Physiognomy, 30
Reese (J, J.), Analysis of I'hysiology, 20
Medical Formulary, 20
Regnault (M. V.), Elements of Chemistry, 30
Regulations for the Navy Dress, 57
Reinhard (F. V.), Plan of the Founder of
Christianity, 10
Rellstab (L.), Romance of War, 73
Report of the Board of Education, 34
on the Canal Frauds, 58
Fishes, Reptiles, 30
Mormons to the United States
Government, 77
Schools of Rhode Island, 34
of the Superintendent of Schools in
Connecticut, 34
on the System of Education at N. Y.,34
• United States Commerce, 59
Republican Court, 50
Rhenius (C T. E.), Tamil Grammar, 41
Richards (J.), Menial Pbilosophy, 32
Sermons, 10
- (T. A.), Summer Stories, 73
Richardson (T. G.), Human Anatomy, 20
Richter (J. P. F.), Flowers, Fruit, 73
Life of, oO
Walt and Vult, 73
Riddell (R.), the Scientific Stair-builder, 65
Riggs (E.), Armenian Grammar, 41
Chaldee Language, 10
Manua of the Ciialdee Lang,, 41
104
INDEX.
Uiggs (E.), Notes on the Bulgarian Graiimiar,41
Kiley's (J.)j Shipwreck, 54
Eing (II.), the " Little Bills," 24
Ringgold (C), Charts to the Bay of Calif., 67
Eipley (H. J.), Acts of the Apostles, 10
Ripley (H. J.), the Four Gospels, 10
- Sacred Rhetoric, 10
(R. 8 ), the War with Mexico, 50
Ritch (J. W.), the American Architect, 65
Rivero and Tschudi, Peruvian Antiquities, 42
Roberts (S.), My Childhood, 37
Robinson (E.), Biblical Researches, 10
— Grreek and Enghsh Lexicon to
the New Testament, 10
- Harmony of the Gospels,
Harmony of the Gospels,
English, 10
Greek, 10
(J. H.), Religion of Manhood, 32
(H. N.), on Surveying, 57
(S.), Hot Corn, 73
Rockwell (J. A.), Spanish and Mex. Law, 15
Rockytansky's Pathological Anatomy, 24
Rodman (E.), a Grandmother's Recoilections,73
Roelker (B.), Constitutions of France, 15
Roe (A. S.), James Mountjoy, 73
Rogers (G. W.), Shipwright's Own Book, 57
RolUn (C), Ancient Hist, of the Egyptians, 50
Ross (J. H.), the Spirit World, 78
What I saw in New York, 54, 79
Route-book through the United States, 79
Rowland (H. A.), Maxims of Infidelity, 10
Roy (J.), History of Canada, 50
Ilistoii-e du Canada, 50
Riickert's Therapeutics, 24
Rueckert (T. J.), Apoplexy and Palsy, 24
Diseases of the Stomach, 24
Diseases of the Eye, 24
Headaches, 24
• Inflammation of the Brain, 24
Nervous Derangement, 24
Nervous Diseases, 24
Ruffin (E ) , on Calcareous Manure, 65
Ruflfher (H.), Father of the Dtsert, 10
Ruofi's Repertory of Homoeopathic Med., 24
Rupp (J. D.), Religious Denominations in the
United States, 10
Ruschenberger (W. S. W.), Lexicon of Terms
in Natural History, 30
Rush (J.), Philosophy of Human Voice, 34
Veterinary Homoeopathy, 24
Russell (W.), Pulpit Elocution, 10
University Speaker, 36
Sabine's American Loyalists, 50
Sandwich Island Notes, 54
Santarem (Viscount), Vespucius and his
Voyages, 54
Sargent (F. W.), Bandaging, 20
(L M.), Temperance Tales, 73
Saunders (F.), New York in a Nutshell, 79
Savarin (B.), Physiology of Taste, 73
Sawyer (L. A.), Mental Philosophy, 32
Organic Christianity, 10
Saxe (J. G.), Poems, 73
Saxton (L. C), Fall of Poland, 50
Say, American Entomology, 30
Schaefer's Veterinary Homoeopathy, 24
Schafi' (P.), History of the Apostolic Church,
10
Principles of Protestantism, 10
What is Church History, 10
Schauffler (W. G.), Last Days of Christ, 10
Scheie de Vere, Comparative Philology, 41
Scheie de Vere, Spanish Grammar, 43
Scherril's Manual of Homoeopathic Prescrip-
tion, 24
Schimmelpfennig (A.), War between Turkey
and Russia, 50
Schlimi)ert (M.), Wind-Spirit, 37
SchiUer's William Tel', translated by Peter, 72
Schmucker (S. M.), Errors of Modern Infi-
delity, 10
School Laws of Rhode Island, 34
Schoolcraft (H. R.), Expedition to the Sources
of Mississippi, 54
— Indian Tribes, 50
Notes on the Iroquois, 50
Scenes in the Semi- Alpine
• Thirty Years with Indian
Region, 54
Tribes, 50
Schroeder (J. F.), Maxims of Washington, 73
Schubert (G. H.), Mirror of Nature, 37
Schwarz (Rabbi J.), Geography of l'alestine,10
Science of Mechanism, 6o
Scientific American, 84
Tracts, edited by J. Holbrook, 28
Scott (General), and his Staff*, 50
Sculpture, 76
Seabury (S.), Continuity of the Engl. Church, 10
Seaman (E. C), on the L'rogress of Nations, 60
Sears (B.), Essays on Ancient Literature, 36
Sedgwick (C. M.), Hope Leslie, 37
the Linwoods, 37
Poor Rich Man, 37
. (Miss), Tales 73
Seemann (B,), Nomenclature of the American
Flora, 30
Seward (W. H.), Works, 61, 73,
Shady Side, the, 73
Shakspeare's Works, 73
Sharp (Martha T.), Memoir of, 10
Shea (J. G.), Discovery of Mississippi Valley,
55
Shelton (F. U.), Up the River, 73
(F. W.), Crystalline, 73
Shew (J.), Children's Diseases, 20
Hydropathic Family Physician, 20
Hydropathy, 20
Midwifery, 20
ShimeaU (R. C), End of Prelacy, 10
Siamese New Testament, 11
Sichel, Spectacles, 20
'Sidney, J ife of Algernon, 50
Siebold and Stannius, Compar. Anatomy, 30
Sigourney (L. II.), Olive Leaves, 73
. Poem^s, 73
Scenes in my Native Land,
73
- Select Poems, 73
- Water Drops, 73
- th ; Western Home, 73
Siljestrom (P. A.), Educational Institutions of
the United States, 34
Silliman (It.), Visit to Europe, 55
Simms (G.), Lily and Totem, 50
(W. G.), Marie de Berniere, 73
Norman Maurice, 73
Poems, 73
Sword and Distaff", 73
Wigwam and Cabin, 73
Simonds (W.), Clinton, 37
Simpson (J. H.), Military Reconnaissance, 55
Simple Hans, 37
Singer (J. M. & Co.), Sewing by Machinery, 66
Sketches of New England Scenery, 55
Slavery in the Southern States, 61
Slick (J.), High Life in New York, 74
Sloan (J.), the Model Architect, 66
INDEX.
105
Slovenly Kate, 37
Peter, 37
Small (A. E.), Manual of Horn. Practice, 24
Smith, Operative Surgery, 20
(E. P.), Political Economy, 61
(H.), Anatomical Atlas, 20
(H. ), Minor Surgery, 20
(J.), History of Virginia, 50
(J. C), Guide through the U. S. 79
(E. S.), Topographical Drawing, 66
(S.), Way Down East, 74
(T. V. C), Pilgrimage to Egypt, 55
1 (W. H.), Canada, Past, 55
(W. L. G.), Life at the South, 74
and Choules, Origin of Missions, 11
Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, 30
SneUing (H. H.), Photography, 66
Songs for the Little Ones, 37
Sophocles, Ajax, by J. B. Gray, 36
Antigone, by Wolsey, 36
(E. A.), Greek Grammar, 36
Romaic Grammar, 41
South America, Map of, 80
Carolina, Map of, 80
Southern Quarterly Review, 84
States, Map of the, 80
Southworth (E.), Discarded Daughter, 74
Virginia and Magdalene, 74
Sparks (J.), Letter to Lord Mahon, 51
Reply to Lord Mahon, 50, 51
Spencer (J. A.), the Christian Instructed, 11
(J. S.), a Pastor's Sketches, 11
— ; {1\), Conversion, 11
Spirit of Missions, 84
Spooner (L.), Trial by Jury, 15
(S.), Anecdotes of Painters, 76
Biograph. Diet of Painters, 76
Sprague (C ), Poetical and Prose Writings, 74
(J.), Genera of Plants, 30
(W. B.), Women of the Bible, 11
Spring (G.), Bethel Flag, 11
Glory of Christ, 11
Memoirs of Hannah L. Murray, 11
Obligations to the Bible, 11
Power of the Pulpit, 11
Works, 11
Springer (J. S.), Forest Life, 74
Squier (E. G.), Antiquities of New York, 42
Serpent Symbol, 42
Travels in Central America, 42
and Davis, Monuments of the Missis-
sippi VaUey, 42
Stansbury (H.), Expedition to the Valley of the
Great Salt Lake, 77
Stanford (J.), Aged Christian's Companion, 11
Stapf (E.), Addition to the Materia Medica, 24
Statesman's Manual, 15
Statistics of the United States, 61
Statutes of New York, 15
Stearns (W. A.), Commemoration of D.
Webster, 11
(E. J.), Notes on Uncle Tom's Cabin, 61
Steele (E. R.), Sovereigns of the Bible, 11
Stephens (H. M.), Home Scenes, 74
(J. L.). Incidents of Travel, 55
Travels in Central America, 55
— — Travels in Egypt, 55
— Travels in Greece, 55
Sterns (T. F.). Justification by Faith, 11
Stewart (J.) Diseases of Children, 20
Stiles (W. H.), Austria in 1848-1849, 51
Stille (A.), General Pathology, 20
Therapeutics. 20
Stimpson, Shells of Nev?- England, 30
Stockton (T. H.), Sermons for the People, 11
Stoddart (R. H.), Poems, 74
Stoddart (R. H.), Adventures in Fairy Land,
a7, 74
Stockhart (J. A.), Chemical Lectures, 30
Principles of Chemistry, 30
Stone (J. S.),'the Mysteries Opened. 11
Stork (T.), Children of the New Testament, 11
Storrow (C), Treatise on Waterworks, 66
Stories and Poems. 37
Story (J,), Commentaries on the Constitu-
tion, 15
Conflict of Laws, 15
Equity Jurisprudence, 15
Pleadings, 15
- Exposition of the Constitution, 15
- Law of Agency, 15
Bailments, 15
Bills of Exchange, 15
Partnership, 15
Promissory Notes, 15
- Miscellaneous Writings, 16
- Selection of Pleadings, 15
(W. W.), Cases in the Circuit Court, 15
on the Law of Contracts, 16
- liife of Joseph Story, 51
Stow, Missionary Enterprise, 11
Stowe (C. E.), Religious Element in Education,
34
(Mrs.), Sunny Memories, 74
Uncle Tom's Cabin, 74
Strain (J. G,), Cordillera and Pampa, 55
Strauss, Stream of Time, 82
Strickland (\Y. P.), American Bible Soc, 11
(W.), on Canals and Railroads, 66
Strong (J.), Harmony of the Gospels, 11
Student's Bible, 11
Studley (Mrs.), What do I Want Most ? 37
Stuart (A. W.), Lives of Ann and Sarah
Judson, 11
(C. B.), Naval Dry Docks, 57, 66
Naval and Mail Steamers, 57
Engines of the U.S. Steamers,57
View of the U. S. Steamers, 57
(M.), on the Apocalypse, 11
on the Book of Daniel, 11
on the Book of Proverbs, 11
Canon of the Old Testament, 11
on Ecclesiastes, 11
- Grammar of the New Testament
Dialect, 11
-Interpretation of Prophecy, 11
- Miscellanies, 11
SUs (G.), Cockel and Scratchfoot, 37
SuUivan (T. R.), Sermons on Christian Com-
munion, 11
Summerfield (J.), Sermons, 11
Sumner (C), White Slavery in the Barbary
States, 61
(C), Orations and Speeches, 74
(T. H.), Method of finding a Ship's
Position, 57
Sunday School, 84
Sunny Side, the, 74
Swedenborg (E.), Compendium of Writings, 11
Swett (J. M.), Diseases of the Chest, 20
Sydney (J. F.), American Cottage ArchiteC'
ture, 66
Table Talk, 74
Tables of Exchange on London, 61
Talbet (G, H.), French Pronunciation, 43
Talvi, the Exiles, 74
Languages of the Slave Nations,
- Life's Discipline, 74
Tamil Dictionary, Manual of the, 4l
106
INDEX.
Tanner (H. S.), Canals and Eailroads of the
United States, 66
Tappan (H.), University Education, 34
- (II. P), on Edwards's " Freedom of
Will," 32
Century, 51
Personages of the Nineteenth
Step from the New World, 55
Tarbell (J. A.), Pocket Homceopathist, 24
Sources of Health, 25
Tariff of Goods Duties, edited by Ogden, 60
of the Duties of the United States, 61
Taylor's Life, by Montgomery, 51
Taylor (B.), Book of Romance, 74
Lands of the Saracens, 55
Life and Landscapes from Egypt,
55
Poems, 74
Poems of the Orient, 74
Views A-foot, 55
(C.)» Apostolic Baptism, 12
(Gr.), Indications of the Creator, 12
(R. C), on Coal, 61
Tefft (B. F.)> Kossuth and Hungary, 51
Temme, Anna Hammer, 74
Teste (A.), Homoeopathic Materia Medica, 25
Texas, Map of, 80
Thayer's States Maps, 80
Theory of Effect, 76
Thistleton (Hon. E.), How I came to be
Governor, 74
Thomas (C), Farmingdale, 74
(Cr)> Pennsylvania, Historical, 51
— Pennsylvania, History and Geo-
graphy, 55
(J. J.), Farm Implements, 66
(R.)» Hist, of the American Wars, 51
Thompson (J. P.). Memoir of D. Hale. 51
- Photog. Views of Egypt, 55
- (T.), Coin Chart Manual, 61
- Counterfeit Detector, 61
Thomson (J. L.), History of the United
States Wars, 51
Thoreau (H. D.), Walden, 74.
Three Epistles of St. John, in the Delaware
Language, 33
Thucydides, Peloponnesian War, by Owen, 36
Tieknor (G ), History of Spanish Literature, 74
Tiffany (O., jun.), the Canton Chinese, 55
Tocqueville (A. De), on Democracy in Ame-
rica, 61
Toliver (E.), Our Folks, 37
Tolon (M. T.), Spanish Redder, 43
Torrey and Gray, Flora of North America, 30
Totten (B.J), Naval Text-book, 57
(J. G.), Hydraulics, 66
Tower (F. B.), History of the Croton Aque-
duct. 66.
Tracy (J.), Foreign Missions, 12
Trail, Encyclopaedia of Hydropathy, 20
Trail (R. T.), Hydropathic Cook Book, 66
Transactions of the American Acad, of Arts, 30
— Ethnological Society,
30, 41, 42
Geologists' Assoc. 30
Institute, 66
- Gaological Society, 30
- Literary Society, 30
- Medical Association, 20
- Philosophical Society, 30
Trautvsine (J. C), Laying out Circular Curves,
66
Calculating Cubics, 66
Treasures in Song, 37
Treatise on the Law of Repulsion, 12
Trego (C. B,), Pennsylvania, Geography, 55
Trescot (W. H.), Diplomacy of the RevoL,61
Trials of an American Housekeeper, 74
Troubat (J.), Law of Partnership, 16
Trow's New York City Directory, 61
Trusta ([!.), Peep at Number Five, 74
Tell Tale, 74
Tschudi (J. J. v.). Die Kechua-Sprache, 38
Tucker (D. H.) , Midwifery, 20
Tuckerman, Lichenes of New England, 30
(H. T)., Artist Life, 76
ture, 74
Characteristics of Litera
Italian Sketch Book, 74
Poems, 74
Sicily, 74
Tuomey & Holmes, Fossils of the Kiawah, 30
Turnbull (L.), on the Electro-Magnetic Tele-
graph, 66
(R.), Christ in History, 12
and M'Rea, on Railway Accident?, 68
the
Turner (S. H.), Epistle to the Romans, 12
St. Paul's Epistle to
Hebrews, 12
Tustin (S.), Doubting Communicant, 12
Tuthill (L. C), Braggadocio. 37
Queer Bonnets, 37
Tyng (S. H.), Christ is All, 12
Christian Titles, 12
Israel of God, 12
a Lamb from the Flock, 12
Law and Gospel, 13
Sermons, 12
Tyson (P. T.), Geology of California, 31
u.
Uncle Sam's Library, 37
Union Bible Dictionary, 12
United States Coast Survey, 57, 58, 82
Exploring Expedition, 55
Illustrated, 55
Map, 80, 81
Official Charts, 57, 82
Review, 84
Universe, the, no Desert, 32, 78
Upham, Mme. de la Mothe Guyon, 12
(T. C), Interior Life, 12
Life of Faith, 12
Religious Maxims, 12
on the Will, 32
Upjohn (R.), Rural Architecture, 66
Van Amringe (W. F.), Theory of the Natural
History of Man, 31
Vandenhoff (G.), Art of Elocution, 36
Vanderburgh (F.), Appeal for Homoeopathy, 25
Van Deusen (J & M.), Spiritual Delusions, 77
Van Doren (H.), Mercantile Morals, 61
Van Santvoord (G.), Lives of the Chief Justices,
51
Velazquez, Introduction to Spanish, 43
Spanish-English Dictionary, 44
Spanish Reader, 43
Velpeau (A. A. L. M), Diseases of the Breast, 20
— — Midwifery, 20
Operative Surgery, 20
Venezuela, Congress, 61
Vidal (A.,'de Cassis), Venereal Disease, 20
Vidi, Mr. Frank, the Underground Mail-
Agent, 71
Vignoles (C), Observations upon theFloridas,
Vincent (J), Pretty Plate, 37
Vinet (A.), Homiletics, 12 i
Pastoral Theology, 13
INDEX.
107
Virgilius, with Notes, by Bowen, 36
Vocabulaire Caraibe, 38
Vocabulary oi the Jargon Language, 38
w.
Wainwright (J, M.), Order of Family Prayer,12
Our Saviour, 12
Women of the Bible, 12
Pathways, 12
Walls and Talks of Amer. Farmer in Eng., 66
Wallis (S. T.), In-^titutions of Spain, 51
Glimpses of Spain, 55
Ward (E. C), ^ew Lunar Tables, 31, 58
(F. de W.). India and the Hindoos, 12,51
(J. H.), Course of Ordnance and
Gunnery, 58
Ware, Aurelian, 74
Julian, 74
Zenobia ; Fall of Palmyra, 74
Waring (E., jun.). Agriculture, 66
Warner (J. F.), Lessons in Music, 76
Warren (J. C), Preservation of Health, 20
— Surgical Observations on
Tumours, 20
(J. E.), Vagamundo, 74
Warrington (J.), Obstetric Catechism, 25
Washington" 8 Mother and Wife, 51
(G.), Writings, 51
. Correspondence, 51
Life, by J. Sparks, 51
Washington and Adams, 51
Watson (K. C), Camp Fires of the Revol., 51
_. Nights in a Blockhouse, 74
(J. p.), Diet, of Poetical Quotations, 74
Wayland (D.D.), Pohtical Economy, 61
I (F.), Intellectual Philosophy, 32
— Moral Science, 32
- abridged, 32
Whipple (E. P.), Essays and Reviews, 75
Lectures on Literature, 75
. Washington, 75
Whiston, Constitution of the Apostles, 13
White Slave, the, 75
White (G.), Historical CoUec. of Georgia, 51
(R. G.), Shakspeare's Scholar, 75
Memoirs of Samuel Slater, 67
Whitney, Metallic Wealth of the U. S., 31
(S. W.), Restiicted Communion, 13
Whittier (J. G)., Chapel of the Hermits, 75
— Margaret Smith's Journal, 75
Old Portraits, 75
Whittier (J. G.), a Sabbath Scene, 75
Songs of Labour, 75
Why should I be a Pastor, 13
Wickes (T.), Apocalypse, 13
Wilbur (H.), the Biglow Papers, 75
Willard (E.), Abridged Hist, of the U. S., 52
History of the United States, 51
- Occasional Discourses, 12
Tv\entv-one Sermons, 12
Weaver (G. F.), Hopes and Helps, 37
(G. S.), Mental Science, 32
Webber (C. W.), 1'ales of the Southern
Border, 74
Romance of Nat. Hist., 74
Spiritual Vampmsm, 78
Wild Scenes, 74
Weber (M. T.), Plates of the Muscles, 20
and Warner, Musical Composition, 76
Webster's (D.), Speeches, &c., 51
Memorials of, 51
(N,), Dictionary of the Eng. Lang., 42
Williams (H. D.), Voices from the Silent
Land, 13
(J. J.), the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, 55
(S. W.), Lessons in Chinese, 42
(T. W.), the Middle Kingdom, 13, 55
(W.), Eng. and Chinese Vocabulary, 42
Guide-book to the U. S., 79
(W. R.) , Discourses and Essays, 13
Development of Christian
Character, 13
on the Lord's Prayer, 13
Miscellanies, 13
Williamson (J.), Inland SeasotN. Amer., CI
(W.), Diseases of Females, 25
WiUis (N. P.), Fun Jottings, 75
Hurry graphs, 75
Lile Here and There, 75
- Peneillings by the Way, 75
People I have met, 75
Poems, 75
- Summer Cruise in the Medi-
Weir (J.), Simon Kenton, 75
the Winter Lodge, 75
Weiss (J.), Discourse on D. Webster, 12
Weld (H. H.), Sacred Poetical Quotations, 12
Women of the Scriptures, 12
Wellmont (E.), Substance and Shadows, 75
Wemyss, Chronology of the Amer. Stage, 75
Wensley : Story without a Moral, 75
Wesselhoeft and Grau, Cases, Hydropathic, 25
West (C C), Cincinnati, its Annals, 79
(N.), Analysis of the Bible, 13
Western States, Map of the, HI
West Indies, Topographical Map of the, 81
Wetherell (E.), Queech}^ 75
. the Wide Wide World, 75
Wette (De), Human Life, 31
Theodore, 31
Wharton (F.), State Trials, 16
Wheaton (H.), International Law, 16
. Law of Nations, 16
Wheeler (G.), Rural Homes, 66
(J. H.), Historical Sketches of New
Carolina, 51
terraneau, 56
Trip to the Tropics, 55, 56
Wills, Epistles to the Seven Churches, 13
(S.), Christian Ordinances, 13
Scriptural Expositions, 13
Wilmer (W. H.), Episcopal Manual, 13
Wilson's Directory of New York, 79
Wilson (A.), American Ornithology, 31
(W, D.), Church Identified, 13
Winer (G. B.), Chaldee Grammar, 42
Greek Idioms, Grammar, 13
Grammar of the Bible, Chaldee,13
Wines (E. C), on the Laws of the Hebrews, 13
Winslow (C. F.), Cosmography, 32
Winter Evening Story Book, 37
Winthrop (E, W.), Characteristics of Pro-
phetic Symbols, 13
(J.), History of New England, 53
(R. C), Speeches, 75
Wisconsin, Map of, 81
Wise (J.), Aeronautics, 67
(J. M.), History of the Israelites, 13
Wislizenus (A.), Tour to Northern Mexico, 56
Wisner (W.), Life of a Pastor, 13
Woehler (F.), Analytical Chemists' Assoc, 31
Wood (G. B.), Practice of Medicine, 21
(W. B.), Personal Recollections, 75
(G. B.) and Bache (F.), the Dispensa-
tory, 21
Woodbury (L.), Writings, 75
(W. H.), Method of Learning
German, 44
Woods (L.), Works, 13
AVorcester (E. J.), English Universal Diet., 42
World of Arts and Industry, 67
108
INDEX.
Wormoley (M. E.), Amabel, 75
Wright (A. S.), American Receipt Book, 67
Wyman (M.), Treatise on Ventilation, 67
Wythes (J. H,),CariositiesoftheMicroscope,31
Microscopist, 31
X.
Xenophon's Anabasis, edited by Owen, 36
Y.
Youmans (E. L.). Class-book of Chemistry, 31
Young Americans Abroad, 37
z.
Zoological Garden, 37
Thomas Harrild. Printer, Silver Street, f^ulcon Square, London.
^?;' ^H^i*V^^< jM-i^>^R:';>fi^^P''*;-'i
14 DAY USE
RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED
LIBRARY SCHOOL LTSRASCI
This book is due on the last date stamped below, or
on the date to which renewed.
Renewed books are subject to immediate recall.
MAHi9iy6G
11r
m/mnos^
OCT 6 iy83
UNIV. OF CALIF.. BERl
TTTTPi:
^Mian
NOV ! '^ 1983
LD 21-40m-4,'64
.(E4555sl0)476
General Lib
University of Ck.
Berkeley
iB 47903
THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY