ENTOMOLOGY STATION 3/ UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE LIBRARY Book number St4B Suppl. 1846 429404 (5^ C^ppl . ILLUSTRATIONS fc/uT OF B R I J J S H ENTOMOLOGY; OR, A ^popsis! cif $ntiignioas! inserts: CONTAINING THEIR GENERIC AND SPECIFIC DISTINCTIONS; AN ACCOUNT OF THEIR METAMORPHOSES, TIMES OF APPEARANCE, LOCALITIES, FOOD, AND ECONOMY, AS FAR AS PRACTICABLE. BY JAMES FRANCIS STEPHENS, F.L.S. MEMBER OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETIES OF LONDON AND PARIS, ETC. EMBELLISHED WITH COLOURED FIGURES OF THE RARER AND MORE INTERESTING SPECIES. SUPPLEMENT. " In his tam parvis tamque fere nullis quoe ratio ! quanta vis ! quam inextricabilis perfectio !" — Plin. " Finis Creationis Telluris est gloria Dei, ex opera Naturse, per Iloniinem solum." — Li line. LONDON : HENRY G. BOIiN, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 1846. fz^j ^oY ADDRESS. A CYCLE of nineteen years has been completed, since the ap- pearance of the first number of these Illustrations ; within which period no less than 72 distinct works on Entomology, forming 112 volumes, have emanated from the British press (exclusive of reprints, and of works on Bees). Of these more than half (41) are arranged in conformity with the views developed in this work, or my Systematic Catalogue ; — the remainder being chiefly devoted to the description of foreign Insects, to particular groups of Insects, or being elementary treatises on the subject. From these facts, and from what is shewn in the note below,* and hereafter stated, it would appear that my labours have contri- buted materially towards the advancement of Entomology in this country. That the exertions of Dr. Leach, and of Messrs. Kirby and Spence, however, greatly conduced towards instilling a taste for this department of Zoology, and its consequent progression, need scarcely be insisted upon in this place ; but the foundations of a building are of little avail, unless the building itself be erected : — it has been my endeavour to attempt the stupendous enterprize, so far as relates to the indigenous species of insects ; but, alas ! vainly. Nevertheless, I have succeeded in partially rearing the temple, and my success may be rendered manifest by the following brief recapitulation of my labours. Previously to 1818, the total number of species of insects described, or recorded, as British, was 3673 ; in that year about 500 additional species were inti'oduced in Samouelle's Compendium, from my cabinets ; and subsequently about 100 more, in the first two volumes of Curtis's Genera, chiefly from my manuscripts ; making * About 300 copies of the Illustrations, 412 of my Systematic Catalogue, and 1220 of Diy Nomenclature, have been disposed oi" within the period in question. ADDRESS, altogether less than 4500 antecedent to the appearance of my Systematic Catalogue, in July, 1829, in which 10,1 IG species are indicated as indigenous. In the Illustrations I have described 7165 species, and charac- terized 1114 genera — a greater number than has hitherto been introduced into any single Avork on Entomology (the nearest approach to that number being Schonherr's Curcuhonidse, in which 7141 species, and 631 genera, are detailed), — and about 5000 species, and at least 500 genera, remain to be described ; a task I had hoped to have accomplished, but circumstances wholly beyond my control have totally frustrated that intention, and the work has now passed into other hands, and been brought to a conclusion ; notAvithstanding a very considerable portion of the manuscript has been long prepared. The attempt to describe all the indigenous species of insects, has been scouted as a physical impossibility, which is true to a certain extent, as no human labours can be perfect ; nevertheless, it is evident that an approach may be made towards the attainment of the object: how far I have effected the same may be illustrated by calling attention to the comparatively few species that have been discovered belonging to the portion of this Avork already published, notAvithstanding the great increase in the number of practical collectors. I may also add, that in my Systematic Catalogue, after abathig the unnamed species indicated therein, and the doubtful ones, the real number named is 8959, and in Mr. Curtis's Guide, 1st edition, which registers 10,420, after a similar process, there remains only 8966 ! A tolerable proof that I had made some approxi- mation towards the actual number, inasmuch as the Guide took full two years to complete, after the appearance of my Catalogue,* In the 2nd edition of the Guide, 12,003 species are enumerated, • Boisduval, in his Species General des L^pidopteres, p. 140, in speaking of my Ca- talogue and Curtis's Guide, says — '* L'ouvrage de M. Stepliens etant posteiieur de quel- ques mois a celui de M. Curtis," &c. In answer to whith it is most essential for tbe interests of truth and of science to state, that the first 20 columns only of the Guide— (15 thereof made up from these Illustrations, as far as then completed) — were published on the Ist of June, 1829, (>iot i« il/aic/;, as it would appear by the date at the end of tlie Preface), n/ifeiior (0 the api)earance of my Catalogue in Jh/j/ following ; the Lcpidop- lerouH portion of the Guide not appearing till towards the end <>f 1830. ADDRESS. upwards of 2000 of which, amongst the Ilymcnoptcra and Diptcra, arc not British. Since the publication of the last number of this work in Januarj^ 1837, I have been unwearied in my endeavours to obtain a com- plete census of our indigenous species, and have proceeded to a considerable extent in working up an amended edition of my Catalogue (or Nomenclature), by patiently re-examining the re- ferences to every species and synonym, attaching the actual date when possible to every reference, and re-arranging my collection on a novel pi ai, to correspond exactly with every name, both specific and synonymical : a proceeding which the possession of the largest collection of British Insects, and probably the most extensive Entomological Library (about 1500 volumes), have ena- bled me to perform with some prospect of success, especially now that my time is solely at my own disposal. This Nomenclature it was my full intention to print with the continuation of the Illus- trations ; whether, however, it may now ever see the light is pro- blematical : it will not be my fliult should it not, for no person has more sincere cause to regret the abrupt termination of this work than myself, having not only devoted the greater portion of a not very short life towards its prosecution, at a cost of nearly £10,000, in the formation of my Collection and Library, and in the expense of publication ; but as a consequence of loss of time in defending my copyright in 1832-3, my prospects were for ever blighted, by the inconsiderate prejudices of an implacable and tyrannical in- dividual : thus compelling me, in the decline of life, to embrace the first opportunity that presented itself, of relieving myself of the thraldom of office, and of retiring in comparative penury therefrom I Contrasted therewith, I have now in conclusion the pleasure sincerely to return my thanks to my Subscribers generally, for their support, and more particularly to the following gentlemen, — amongst whose names will be found those of the persons most eminently distinguished for their respective attainments in the various branches of natural science, in this country, — for their recent exertions on my behalf. VI ADDRESS. C. C. Babinoton, F.L.S., F.G.S., Sec. Camb. riiil. S. W. Baikd, M.D., Brit. Mus. Jxo. Barlow, Sec. R.S., F.R.S., &c. Edw. Barnard, F.L.S. Tiios. Bell, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c. Prof. Zoology, King's Coll. J. J. Benxett, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c. Fras. Boot, M.D., F.L.S., &c. J. BosTocK, M.D , F.R.S., &c. J. S. BOWERBANK, F.R.S., &C. W. J. Brodekip, F.R.S., &c. Rt. Browv, V.P L.S., &c. Walter Btciiaxan, F. L. S., F.R.S., &c. Wm. Bucklaxd, F.R.S., Sec. Rd. Cuambers, F.L.S. Jno. Geo. Childrex, F.R.S , Sec. Bracey Clark, F L.S., Sec. Ch. R. Darwin, F.R.S., &c. L. W. DiLLWYX, F.R.S., &c. Edw. Doubleday, F.L.S., &c. Hy. Downes, Com. R.N., F.L.S., &c. W. F. Evans, M.E.S. F. J. Farue, M.D., F.L.S., &c. Edw. Forster, V.P.L.S., &c. J. D. E. Foutnum, M.E.S. Jno. Gould, F.R.S., &c. Geo. Grant, M.D. Robt. E. Gii.vNT, M.D., F.R.S. L. & E. Prof. Zool. University Coll. Geo. R. Gray, F.L.S., &c. Jxo. E. Gray, F.R.S., &c. J. S. Henslow, M.A., F.L.S., Prof. Botany, Cambridge W. J. Hooker, F.R.S., &c. F. W. Hope, F.R.S., &c. Thos. Horsfield, M.D., F.R.S., &c. Wm. Kirby, F.R.S., &c. Ch. Konig, F.R.S., &c. \Vm. Norton Lloyd, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c. Edw. Newman, F.L.S. RicHD. Owen, Hunterian Profes- sor Royal Coll. of Surgeons, F.R.S., &c. J. J. S. Parry, F.L.S. J. F. RoYLE, M.D., F.R.S., Prof. Mat. Med. &c.. King's Coll. W. W. Saunders, F.L.S., S.A„ &c. R. H. Solly, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c. G. B. Sowerby, F.L.S., &c. Wm. Spence, F.R.S., &c. Geo. T. Staunton, Bart., M.P., F.R.S., Sec. Ch. Stokes, F.R.S., Sec. W. H. Sykes, Lt. Col., F.R.S., &c. A. TuLK, M.R.C.S. Geo. R. Waterhouse, Brit. Mus. J. O. Westwood, F.L.S, Sec. Ent. S., &c. Adam White, Brit. Mus. Wm. Wood, F.R.S., &c. Wm. Yarrell, F.L. & Z.S. Eltlidin Cottarjr, Foalci/ liiKid. Knniiiigton, Scj'fcmhcr, 1840. I'l.JIXII. J' PWett-yrood dtl. C£ Waffsia//:sc .7;,J.x-V i., .7 rS-A>/L^n.i Ju.:.- 3j.133S. ILLUSTRATIONS OF BRITISH EIMTOMOLOGY. MANDIBULATA. HYMENOPTERA. Family V. ICHNEUMONIDiE, Leach. Plate XXXIX. fig. 3. Phytod'ietus segmentator. Pir. Niger, marginihus segmentorum alhidis ; pedibtts rnjis aniicorum trochanferibus ct coxis Jlavis, posticorum taisis et tihiaruin apice iiigris. (Long. Corp. 24 3| lin. Exp. Alar. 7 lin.) Phy. segmentator, Gravenliorsf, ii. 944.— Steph. Nomen. 2 edit. Black, with the margm of the ahdominal segments whitish ; legs red, slender, with the trochanters of the anterior and the coxeb yellow, the tarsi of the posterior, and the apex of the tibise black : — the male has the face yellow, and the posterior coxae and trochanters varied with black and yellow : the female has the face marked with yellow, and the hinder coxse red. Apparently rare : taken in the vicinity of London. Plate XXXIX. fig. 2. Schizopyga annlis. ^ Sc. Nigra, dbdomine rufo, margiyie segmentorum 1 — 3 anoqne nigr^s ; pedibus riijis, nigro maculatis ; aculeo subexserto. (Long. Corp. 3—3^ lin.) Sell, anahs, Gravenliorst, iii. \3Q. — Steph. Novien. 2 edit. Black : mouth and antennae beneath pale testaceous : abdomen with the basal segment black, with its sides and back red, 2nd and 3rd segments red, the edges black, two following wholly red, the rest black : legs red, the tips of the four hinder thighs and tibiae black : hinder tarsi black, the base of the joints testaceous : female with the o\ipositor slightly exserted. Taken at Darenth, in June. Mandibulata— Supplement, August, 184G. b 2 MAXDTBULATA. — HYMIINOPTEBA. Plate XXXIX. fig. I . Hhyssn Persuasorla. $ Rii. Niyra albomacidata, segvienlis intermediis maculis duabus latera- libus albis ; pedihitsfuhis, posticis tibiis tarsisque fuscis : — mas. facie alba; fern. 07-bitis oculorum albis, aculeo corpore longiore. (Long. Corp. () — 13 lin.) Ich. persuasorius, Linne. — Rh. persusoria, Steph. Cat. No. 4012. Black, spotted with ycllo-R-ish white: intermediate, and sometimes the basal segments of the abdomen with a yellowish-white spot on each side : lees fulvous, the hinder tibiae and tarsi fuscous. 31ale with the face white ; female with the orbits of the eyes white, the ovipositor longer than the body. The figure represents the male of this rare species of the natural size : the crossed lines having been erroneously annexed thereto, in lieu of being attached to the figure of Schizopyga analis. Taken at Weybridge ; Coombe Wood ; near Kimpton, Hants : and York : but rare. Plate XXXYI. fig. 4. Arotes albidnctus. $ Ar. Niger segmento primo albidomarginato, femoribus fibiisque ante- rioribus sitbtus testaceis. Mas. facie flava, antennis subtus fulvis ; fern, annulo antennarum albo. (Long. Corp. 6 — 7^ lin.) Ar. albicinctus, Gravenhorsf, Ich. iii. 148. — N. S. tarsahs, Steph. Cat. No. 40nf). Black : the basal segments of the abdomen edged with white ; the anterior tbighs and tibiae testaceous beneath. INIale with the edges of the 2 basal segments of tbc abdomen, and the tips of all the tarsi white, antennae reddish beneatli : female with tlie tijis of the binder tarsi, and a ring in the iiiiildle of (lie antennre wbito. Many years since, I once observed this fine, and apparently rare, insect, Hying in plenty at Darrnth Wood in June; J fortunately secured a pair. It is the only species of the genus. ICIINEUMONID.E. Phltc XL. fig. 4. Enicospilus combust us. Sp. 1. Eiii. merdarms. —2'estaccus, ocuUfi abdomiuisque apice fuscis. (Long. Corp. 6 — 10 lin.) Op. merdarius, Gravenhorst, iii. GOH.—Sfeph. Nomen. 2d edit. Testaceous, with tlie eyes and the two or three terminal segments of the abdomen fuscous : ovipositor black. Sp. 2. Eni. ramidulus, Litmc.—Steph. Cat. No. A^ .—Testaceas, ab- dominis apice niijro. (Long. Corp. G — 10 lin.) Testaceous, with the two last segments of the abdomen wholly black. Sp. 3. Eni. combustus, Plate XL. fig. A. — Gravenlwrst,\n. 70l.—Steph. Nomen. 2d edit.—{Testaceus, thorace et abdominis apice nirjris. (Long. Corp. 9 lin.) Testaceous, with the thorax and the two last segments of the abdomen and a spot on the back of the first, black. The above, which arc all the species of this genus, are found, but rarely, in gardens within the metropolitan district. BRACONIDiE. Plate XXXVn. fig. 2. Microgaster tibialis. Ml. Niger, tibiis testaceis ; alis denigratis. Fern, acuko ubdoviinis dimidio hreviore. (Long. Corp. \\ lin.) Mi. tibiahs? Nees. I. A. i. 168.—Steph, Nomen. 2d edit. Deep black ; antennae short robust ; anterior femora at the apex, and the tibiee testaceous, posterior brown ; anterior tarsi testaceous with brown tips : wings deep smoky black, with the stigma darker : ovipositor half the length of the abdomen. Found in meadows during the summer ; widely dispersed. 4 MANDIBULATA.— IIYMENOPTEKA. Plate XXXVII. fig. 1. Microgaster ! basulls. Ml. Niger, abdominis basi, pedibusque rnjis ; alls hyalom, stiS(;ew/^ Cat. No. 4010. Deep, shining, black : abdomen somewhat linear, its basal segment with 2 sharp ridges : legs red, the anterior coxae and trochanters and hinder tibifc and tarsi black, the middle of the latter white : hinder thio-hs with a single sharp tooth near the tip beneath. Female, with a wliite ring in the middle of the antennae. I possess a fine pair of these remarkable insects, taken I believe in South Wales ; and in the collection of the Entomological Club arc several examples, of both sexes, whicii, if I mistake not, were captiuvd nu;n- Leominster, by Mr. Newman. /7.XOI 77 I.O Wg^twood,. del . C-B. rra^scar^ Zona^n Piibhsked f>y. ^.TSti^i^enj MayJl /AV F/ xijr C CWa^sCcr^ ■ CIIALCIDID.K. "^ CHALCIDIDiE. Plate XLIV. fig. 3. lluUichella armnta. IIa. Nigra, piibescens femoribus posficis sithtus sxibhidentatis, niyris ; scutello elongato, hifurcato ; pedibus anterioribiis ferrtigineu, femo- ribus iihiisque in medio fuscis . (Long. Corp. 2 —2^ lin.) Ch. armata. Panzer. — Steph. Cat. No. 5318. Black, pubescent : scutellum elongate, its apex bifurcate ; hinder tliigbs black, somewhat bidentate beneath ; anterior legs rust-coloured, thighs and tibiae brown in the middle. Male, with the anterior legs without the brown colour. Found in June, at Ripley, among hazels. Plate XLIV. fig. 1, Eucharls adscendens. Eu. Viridi-icnea, niiida; scutello integro. (^Loug. Corp. 2| lin.) Cy. adscendens, Fabricius Mant.'i. 251. — Eu. adscendens. — Steph. Cat. No. 5324. Brassy-green, very glossy, punctured, glabrous ; scutellum elevated, ovate, obtuse ; legs pale testaceous, with the base of the femora and the claws fuscous. Male, with the scutellum acute, and the hinder femora dusky. Found in South Wales, near Swansea, in June. 6 MANDIBULATA. — liyMENOPTEKA. EURYTOMIDiE. Plate XLV. fig. 3. Eurytoma Abrotani. $ Eu. Nigra, antennis maris antrorsimi sinuatis ; tihiis anticis tarsisque omnibus testaceis : feminse, geniculis solis tarsisque pa //«(/<*•, alis hyalinis. (Long. Corp. 1—3 lin.) Eu. Abrotani, lUiger.—Stejyh. Cat. No. 5326. Black, punctured ; slightly pubescent ; wings hyaline : male with the anterior tibiae, knees and tarsi testaceous ; antennae pilose and sinuated anteriorly : female with the knees and tarsi alone whitish. Common in hedges about London. SPALANGIIDiE. Plate XLV. fig. 1. CrocepJuda corni(jera.$ C. Nigra, caput fulvum, oculis verticique 7iigris, antennis basi fulvis ; collare lateribus ajiticis j)eclibusque fulcis. (Long. Corp. 1^ lin.) C. cornigcra, Wesinood. — Steph. Cat. No. 5351. Black ; head fulvous, with the eyes and crown black ; base of the antennae, sides and part of the collar, and legs also fulvous ; thorax punctured ; abdomen glossy ; wings hyaline, anterior with a small black spot before the middle, and a large dusky one near the apex. Taken at Ripley in July 1827. rr\i.v \ ^ TORYMin.T:. 7 TOllYMID/E. Plate XLV. fig. 2. Mcgast'iijinus dorsalis. 9 Me. Viridis, Jlavo variegatus ; abdomince ceneo, oviductu corporc hre- viore, alis subhyalinis, macuhi fused. (Long. Corp. 1 — 1^ lin.) Icli. dorsalis, Fahricius. — Coll. bipimctatis. — Steph. Cat. No. 5352. Green, abdomen brassy ; tnale with the head in part yellow ; antennae brown ; the scape green, with the base and beneath yellow ; legs more or less yellow, or pale straw ; the apex of the tarsi brown ; wings somewhat hyaline, with a large brown stigma : female with the head yellow, green between the eyes, abdomen yellow beneath, the disc brassy-brown. Common on oaks near Hertford and Ripley, in the autumn. Plate XLV. fig. 4. Callimome varians. Ca. Viridis; nitens: abdomine apice ceneo^ oviductu coj'pore pauUo longiore, pcdibus Jiavis, feinoribus supra viridibus aut (sneis ; alis subfuscis. (Long. Corp. If — 2jlin.) Ca. varians. Walker.— Steph. Nonien. 2d edit. Green, shining ; eyes and ocelli red ; thorax behind and beneath brassy- green ; abdomen with the basal segment green, tinted with copper, the apex brassy ; ovipositor rather longer than the body ; legs yellow, the thighs above, and sometimes the posterior tibise clouded with green or dusky -brass. Taken near Loudon, in the autumn. 8 MANDIBULATA. — HYMENOPTRRA. Plate XLIV. fig. 2. PrrUainpus micaiis. Pk. Viridi-ceneus, suhobscurus, scrobicidato-pnnctatis ; thoracis dorso ci/preo aurato ; abdomine ater ; fronte hypostoviateque transversim stri.olads. (Long. Corp. 1| — 2lin.) Pe. micans, Dahm. Act. Holm. 1820. p. 73. Dullish brassy-green, coarsely pimctured : thorax above golden copper : abdomen deep black, glossy : front and hj^ostome transversely striated : thio-hs brassy-green, the extreme tip testaceous : tibi{3e and tarsi pale testaceous. Male of a bluish tint. Hinder tibiae (as in the figure) sometimes clouded with fuscous. Extremely abundant in June, on new oak paling, about Cara- berwell, found in company with Lyctus oblongus and Tillus unifaciatus, which last is also at times to be found there in plenty, between the 10th and 21st June, in sunny weather. Plate XLIV. fig. 4. Cratowus viegnceplialu-i. C. Atcr tibiis hiteis, copite mnximo reluso. (Long. Corp. 1 lin.) Cynips megacephala, Fabrichis. — Cr. megacephalus, Steph. Cat. No. .'■..323. Deep, obscure, bluish-black : abdomen glossy : legs black, tibiae and tarsi yellow : head very large and broad, bidentate in front : wings clouded with fuscous. Four posterior tibiae sometimes clouded with brown. Found occasionally on new palings near London. Sp. 2. Ce. nigripes, Steph. MSS. atcr, pedibus toto nigris, alls hyalinis. Smaller, with the legs and tarsi wholly black : wings hyaline. 'I'akcii ill till' garden at the Hermitage, South Lambeth. pi.jLn. 4a n \ V V K X ENCYRTID/R,— EULOPHID^. 9 ENCYRTID^. Plate XL VI. fig. 4. Eiieyrtus punctipes. J En. Albo-canescens ; antennis nigris, alho annulatAs ; capite thoraceque testaceis, hoc griseo squamosa ; abdominis ilorso medio tibiarumque annulis nigris : alls hyalinis. (Long. Corp. J lin.) En, punctipes, Dahm. — Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Whitish-ash : antennae black, annulated with white : head and thorax tes- taceous, the latter rather densely clothed with griceous scales : middle of the abdomen above, and rings in the tibiae, black : wings hyaline. Male with the antennae pale fulvous. Found on lime-trees near London, during the summer : also in Wales and the north of Ireland, EULOPHIDiE. Plate XL VI. fig. 1. Eulophus cinctipes. ^ Eu. Viridis, thorace scutelloque purpureis, abdomine nigro, pedibus Jlavis posterioribus nigro cinciis. (Long. Corp. 1 lin.) Eu. cinctipes, Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Green, shining ; collar and scutellum purple : abdomen linear, black : legs yellow, middle thighs with a black ring towards the base, and hinder pair with the apex black : middle and hinder tibise with their tips broadly black : antennae pale fuscous. Found in the spring, near London. Mandibulata— Supplement, August, 1846. c 10 MANDIBULATA.— HYMENOPTERA. Plate XLVI. fig. 3. Cirrospilus Walkeri. Ci. Flavus, macula thoracis, abdominisque apice viridi-ieneis, tibiis intermediis apicibus nigris. (Long. Corp. \\ liu.) Ci. Walkeri, Steph. Nomen, 2d edit. Yellow ; ocelli black ; eyes fuscous j an irregular blotch on the thorax, and the metathorax and scutellum brassy-green ; abdomen yellow, its tip greenish-black ; sides of thorax yellow, with a greenish apex : legs yellow, the apex of the middle tibiae and tips of the hinder tarsi, black. Found in June, near London. PROCTOTRUPIDtE. Plate XLVI. fig. 2. Diajjria conica. $ Di. Antennisapicem versus incrassatis,clard subsexarticulata,nigrd, scapo pedibusque pedis, tibiis pallidioribiis ; abdomine conico-acuminato. Mas. antennis corpore longioribus fuscis, scapo pedibusque rujis, Jlagelli articuUs elongato-ci/lindricis verticillato pilosis, secundo basi extrorsum distincie emarginato ; ano obtuso. (Long. Corp. 1 J — If Im.) Ich. conicus, Fabricius. — Di. conica, Steph. Cat. No. 5601. Black : Female with the antennae thickened towards the apex, the club black, and obscurely six-jointed, the base and the legs pitchy, the tibiae ])alcr ; abdomen conic-acuminate. Male with the antennae longer than tbe body, fuscous, the scape red, the joints elongate-cylindric, verticil- late pilose, the second joint distinctly notched towards the base : anus ol)tUS('. Not uncommon in the vicinity of London in the summer. GONATOPIDiE. — SCELIONIDjE. 11 GONATOPIDiE. Plate XLVII. fig. 2. A nteon flavicorne. Au. Nigrum nitidum, fronte albo-sericed ; ore albo ; antennis (femirue) thorace hrevioribus apice c7'assioribus et pedibus testaceis : metathorace leviter cancellato. (Long. Corp. 1|— 2 lin.^ Dr. fla\icornis, Dolman. — Go. flavicornis, Steph. Catal. No. 56/3. Black, and shining : forehead with a whitish pile ; mouth white, antennae of the female rather shorter than the thorax, thickened at the apex, and, with all the legs, pale testaceous ; metathorax sUghtly cancellated. Found near London, in woods and shady places, in July. SCELIONIDiE. Plate XLVII. fig. 3. Teleas Procris. Te. Ater, apterus, pedibus piceis, antennis mari Jiliformibus. (Long. Corp. I lin.) Te. Procris, Walker. Ent. M. Hi. 366. — Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Black, punctured, shghtly pubescent ; wingless ; legs pitchy, the knees, tips of the tibiae and the tarsi reddish ; abdomen with the basal segment, and the greater portion of the 2nd deeply striated. Common in grassy places about London. 12 MANDIBULATA. — HYMENOPTERA. LARRIDiE. Plate XLVII. fig. 4. Miseophus bicolor. Ml. Niger. Fern, ahdomine basi rufo. (Long. Corp. 3 lin.) Mi. bicolor, Jurine.—Steph. Catal. No. 4919.* Black, finely punctured ; mandibles reddish ; abdomen with the basal segment entirely, and the base of the second red, remaining segments with their edges slightly pitchy. Male totally black. Taken at Coombe Wood, and near Weybridge, in June and August. Plate XLII. fig. 3. Dinetus pictus. Di. Lfpvis, niger, thorace maculato, ahdomine ferrugineo fasciis trihus Jiavix, ano nigricante. M&s. f route Jiavd, antennis cochleatim retortis. (Long. Corp. 3— 3i hn.) Cr. pictus, Fabriciis. — Di. pictus, Steph. Catal. No. 4920. Smooth; black: thorax with an interrupted transverse band on the collar, the tegida, tubercles, and a streak across the scutellum yellow ; abdomen with the three basal segments reddish, the 2nd and 3rd having an ovate yellow spot on each side near the margin, the three following segments black, with the edges of the .Mh and 6th yellow ; apex of the anterior femora and tlbise outwardly yellow. Male with the head yellow in front ; antcnntc twisted : 4 anterior legs yellow. Rare : taken in June near Windsor. /'/>f/< XIJ "2". Wagstaif. s^- J.r>, Jt/r'!un3. ^arjl T33S SFHEGIDiE. 13 SPIIEGIDiE. Plate XLI. fig. 1. Aporus bicolor. $ Av. Ate?', abdominis segmentis tribus saturate rubris. (Long. Corp. 2i— 3^ liu.) Ap. bicolor. Spin. Ins. Lig. ii. 34. — Steph. Catal. No. 48G2. Deep opaque black ; the 3 anterior segments of the abdomen dull deep red, or rust-coloured. Male with the anterior portion of the face, except- ing the clypeus, metathorax, coxse and trochanters clothed with a dense silvery pubescence ; with the margin of the first, and base of the second abdominal segments deep pitchy-red. Rare : found in Dorsetshire, and in South Wales, near Swansea^ in June ; and at Weybridge, in August. Plate XLI. fig. 2. Pompilus notatus. Po. Niger ; antennis thorace paullo longioribus, abdominis segmento secundo supra fascia rubrd scepe obsoletd, pedibus partim nigris, partim rubris. (Long. Corp. 3f lin.) Po. notatus, Rossi.— Vo. formosns.— Steph. Catal. No. 4884. Black : antennae slender, rather longer than the thorax ; mandibles reddish at the tip ; abdomen with a broad red band at the base of the 2nd segment, sometimes obscure ; anterior femora within, with their tibiae and tarsi, the intermediate femora at the tip and their tibiae, and also the hinder femora dull-red ; wings hyaline, slightly clouded with brown at the tip. Very rare ; taken in June near Ripley. 14 MANDIBULATA. — HYMENOPTEEA. Plate XLII. fig. 1. Dolichurus cornicuhis. fDo. Ater, nitidus, immaculatus. (Long. Corp. 3— 4i lin.) Po. corniculus, Spinola.—Do. ater, Steph. Catal. No. 4894. Deep glossy black, immaculate ; the extreme margin of the abdominal segments reddisli-pitcli. Very rare, at least in the east of England ; found by Dr. Leach near Ashburton, Devon. Plate XLI. fig. 3. Sphex flavipennis, $ Sp. Niger, fronte aurea, abdomine rufOf petiolo apiceque atris, tarsis ferrugineis. (Long. Corp. 7^ lin.) Sp. flavipennis, Fahricius. — Steph. Catal. No. 4896. Black, pubescent : forehead with a golden pubescence ; with the apex of the basal segments, and the whole of the 2nd and 3rd segments red, margin of the rest pitchy ; tarsi rust-coloured. Taken, I believe, in Norfolk ; apparently very rare. li.JLJJ ■Vtfn^aod. eUl C £ K^iMssa-fiC Sc- fokmicidt:. 15 Plate XLI. fig. 4. Miscus campestris. <^ Ml. Niger, metathorax in medio depresso et a latere oblique striato, abdominis segmento secundo et tertio rufo. (Long. Corp. 7—9 liu.) Mi. campestris, Van de Linden Hym. i. 92. — Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Black, pubescent : metathorax with a faint longitudinal depression, with slanting lateral striae : abdomen with the apex and the band, the whole of the second and the base of the third, segments red. In the male there is a black patch on the back of the second segment. Found in Dorsetshire, and in the New Forest: and in the greatest profusion on the heaths near Weybridge, Surrey, in June and July. FORMICID^.. Plate XLII. fig. 2. Ponera contracta. +Po. Elongata, subcylindrica, fusco-hrunnea ; antennis pedibusque lu- tescente brunneis. (Long. Corp. If — 2 lin.) Fo. contracta, Latreille. — Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Elongate, nearly cylindric, deep brown glabrous and shining : antennae short, reddish-brown ; mandibles pitchy-red : abdomen with the second segment separated by a stricture from the first, its margin as also that of the others pitchy-red : legs brownish-yellow or ochreous. Females with very indistinct eyes ; neuter without eyes, and wingless. Found in the neighbourhood of Chelsea and Pimlico, in June. In the collections of Messrs. Westwood and Ingpen. 16 MANDIBULATA — HYMENOPTERA. APID^. Plate XLIII. fig. 1. Nomada Kirbyella. No. Nigra, apicibiis antennarum, tibih, tarsisque rufis ; ahdomini segmento 2o, 3o-que macula laterali alhida, 4" — 6o fasciis ahbre- viatis transversis ochreis. (Long. Corp. 6} lin.) No. Kirbiella, Steph. Catal No. 5070. Head and clypeus, wholly black ; the latter with a dense silvery pubes- cence : maxillse yellow : antennae red, scape black, the basal joint with a short black streak behind : thorax black, tubercles and tegulse red : trochanters, coxse, and femora black, the extreme tip of the latter, tibiae, and tarsi red : abdomen tawny red, the basal segment half black, 2nd with a round cream-coloured spot on each side, 3rd with a smaller one, 3 following with short, transverse, ochreous bands ; beneath wholly red. Taken by myself, near London. Plate XLIII. fig. 2. Osmia xanthomeJana. Os. aterrima, villosa, thorace, abdominisque basi, lanuginoso fulves- centibus. (Long. Corp. 4^—6^ lin.) Ap. xanthoraelana, Kirby.— Steph. Catal. No. 5058. Black ; deeply punctured, and pubescent : female with the head clothed with black hair, the thorax above with reddish-brown, and beneath with black ; legs also clothed with black and tarsi beneath with dark brown : abdomen with the 2 basal segments clothed with reddish brown, the rest thinly clothed with black, inside the under surface densely so. Male with the face clothed with white hairs, inclining to ochreous towards the crown ; thorax above with fidvous and beneath with hoary, as well as the legs : abdomen above also clothed with fulvous, with the 6th seg- ment notched, the 7th incurved and bidentate. Taken at Birch and Darenth woods ; also near Liverpool and Bristol, and near Ryde in the Isle of Wight, in May and June. /'/ Xfjn Xant^'K.Jit2-lu/u^ /-> ^'. /^SCf/iAt/^,^. u- ec'. -J / ■ /d.:'C ANDUENID^E. 1/ Plate XLIIl. tio;. 3. Bombus cognatus. Bo. Hirsuto-Jlavencens, abdominis hasi vigricante, iiedihus piccis. (Long. Corp. 7—8 lin ) Bo. cognatus, Steph. Cutal. No. 5130. Black : head sparingly clothed with long whitish hairs in front : thorax densely covered with bright ochreous yellow hairs : abdomen clothed with long dusky hairs on the 2nd segment, and with pale ochreous oi;rs on the rest, legs pitchy, clothed on the femora with whitish, and on the tihiiB and tarsi, with pale ochreous hairs. Closely allied to Bo. jNIuscorum, of which the examples I possess may be immature specimens. Taken on Leigh Down, near Bristol. ANDRENIDiE. Plate XLIIL fig. 4. Andrena bucephala. An. Niger, glabriuscula, tlhiis tar.sSsqne rvfescentibus ; capite magna. (Long. Corp. .5 lin.) An. bucephala.— iS^fi/)^. Nomen. 2d edit. Black: head very large and broad, sparingly clothed with longish ochreous hair in front: thorax with a few scattered hairs on the sides and behind: abdomen shining, glabrous, the margins of the segments pitchy, and the anal one tawny : femora black ; tibifc tawny, the anterior pair with the front dusky ; tarsi tawny ; wings iridescent ; stigma tawny. This may be only a veiy highly developed male of the Andrena longipes of Shuckard ; but I have seen no connecting link, in re- gard to the magnitude of the head, which in the present insect is enormous. Found in June, near Bath. Man DII5ULATA.— Supplement, August, 1810. '^ 18 MaNBTBULATA — HYMENOPTERA. CYNIPIDiE. Plate XLVII. fig. 1. Avacharis Evchnroides. An. Ater, mit ceneo-ater ; jyetiolo abdominis dimidio longiore ; ■pediJmsJfacis ; aiisalbo-Umpidis. (Long. Corp. 1 — U lin.) All. Eucharoides, Bahnan.— Steph. iSlomen. 2d edit. Black or brassy black : legs yellow ; coxse and trochanters black ; tarsi dusky at the tip : wings limpid, scales and nervures rust-coloured, the longitudinal nerve yellow at the base, the outer transverse nerve stout and pitchy : petiole above half the length of the body. Found near London; in Windsor Forest, and in the Isle of AVight, in June and September. STREPSIPTERA. STYLOPID^. Plate XLVII. fig. 4. Stylops MellttcE. St. Aterrima; alis subrotimdatis, lacieis, costa niyricante ; pcdilms piceis, t arsis anterioribus riifescentibtis. (Long. Corp. 1| lin.) St. Melittse, Kirby 31. A.— Steph. Cat ah No. 578i). Intense black ; wings somewhat rounded on the hinder margins ; milk white, stained with dusky towards the costa, which is deep black : legs pitchy, with the 4 anterior tarsi reddish : abdomen pale on its edges. Found, very rarely, near London ; and in Suffolk ; in the spring. The insects included in this genus are all of the utmost rarity near London ; but under favourable circumstances, and in some localities, numerous examples have been observed and captured. — It would ap- pear from the diversity in the form of the wings and other minor cha- racters, that there were several distinct species : I have, however, been unsuccessful in obtaining more than two, viz. Melittse and Dalii. The following are the indigenous species recorded, aIz. : — Sp. 1. Melittse /lirfty. — Barham : Clapham. 2. Kirbii Leach. — Devonshire. 3. Haworthi *.S^e/>/;e».<. — Chelsea. 4. Spencii Pichcring. — Ilammersmitb. t). Dalii Curtis. — E})ping and Dorset. The St. tenviicornis Kirby is the t}^ie of a distinct genus, called Elen- ciiL'S by Curtis, and synonymous with his El. Walkeri, of which I once brushed a specimen from off some high grass near Hertford in July. One other species, viz. Halicto|)bagus Curtisii, closes the account of the ascertained British species of this singular order of insects. j'rszru / } ^'^^^' / y. 0- Tl^e^ciyoffd- /lei. Sc'fuicn.IiiJK'/jk^a: tv J.r. SO'fi/u'/is. Jpn/ .>0^/SJff. JS.Wud'ood dd. £i'n.iJ3n..fttb. by J.V. Sttfikeihs. .>.•> 3%-. fS31 I If) HAUSTELLATA. D I P T E 11 A. CULlCIDiE. Plate XLIII. fig. 1. Culex conciiimis. Cu. I'^usco-hi'unneus, thoracejnsco cittato, abdonnuc aiujulis ^)-que albis^ femorihus basi subtiis aJIndo. (Long. Corp. 2\ liu.) Cu. concinnus, Steph. Catal. No. 7Cr)0. Deep fuscous-brown : thorax with a broad longitudmal fuscous streak ; abdomen with 5 white bands ; and with triangular spots of the same on each side beneath ; pleurae also dotted with white ; legs fuscous, with the base of the femora beneath whitish : wings pale fuscous, iridescent, spotless ; halteres lurid-ochreous. Found in July, in Scotland. T I P U L I D .E. Plate XLII. fig. 2. ChironoiHUS luriduhis. ^ Cil. Virldis, thorace viltis obscuris ; a!is hi/alinis pnncto n'ujro. (Long. Corp. 2|^ lin.) Tip. viridula, Fabricius — Ch. Airidulus, Steph. C't. No. 7086. Bright green : thorax with obscure brownish streaks : legs very pale yellowish-green, with the tips of the femora, tibiae, and joints of the tarsi black ; wings hyaline, with a faint black dot. A very pretty and abundant species of this numerous genus, which contains above 100 indigenous species. 20 HAUSTELLATA. Plate XLII. fig. 1 Corethra plunncornis. Co. Ocliraceo-fiisco, thorace rittd lateral? pedihmqnc albidh. (Long. Corp. 2i— 3i liu.) Ch. plumicornis, Fabricius.— Steph. Catal. No. 7655. Ochreous-biown ; pilose, thorax darker on the back, the sides each with a broad white streak ; abdomen ochreous-brown, the edges of the seg- ments pale ; legs ochreous-white ; wings hyaline ; halteres white : antennae brown, with ochrcous-brown hairs. Common about Ripley, in June and July, in marshy places; found also in other parts within the metropolitan district. Plate XLII. fig. 3. Ceratopogon palustris. $ Ce. Ater, halteri/ms jjcclibvaqne piceis. (Long. Corp. l^lin.) Ce. palustris, Lutreille—Steph. Catal. No. 778/. Deep black ; thorax glossy ; abdomen opaque ; legs and halteres brown ; wings greenish, with the nervures obscure. Abundant in marshy places, throughout the metropolitan dis- trict, during the summer. /V. 1-2. lX)Kf.savi>od dtl . L otuUntSubUslucl. 'by ./. B. SUfihem. zp- I'il>. IBSt. TIPULID.i:. 21 Plate XLII. tig. I. Diomyzn piilchrn ? Di. Afra, scutcllo concoJore ; ahdominc J'asciis interrupt is aureis. (Long. Corp. Ij liu.) Las, piilclu'a, Bfcigcn Dip. vii. p. 207? — Di. pulclira? Steph. Nomcn. 2d edit. Black ; thorax opaque, and, with the scutellum, obscure and concolorons ; abdomen with a broad golden or silvery band at the base, and the rest of the segments with an interrupted narrow marginal band of the same ; thighs yellow ; tibiae and tarsi black; wings hyaline, anterior edges dusky. Not common ; found in the windows, occasionally, in the sum- mer, at the Hermitage, South Lambeth. Plate XLIIL fig. 2. Eriopteryx 1 Stujina. $ Er. ? Cinerea ; pedibus Jiavicantibus ; aJis ohscuris stiywate fused; antennis nodosis, verticillato pilosis. (Long. Corp \\ lin.) Er. ? Stigma, Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Dull ash-coloured, obscure : legs yellowish, tibise and tarsi dusky ; mngs brownish, with a distinct darker stigma ; antennae densely -black, the joints very distinct and swollen, and furnished vdth whirls of hair. Not very common ; found, in the spring, near London ; at Ripley, &c. 22 IIAUSTELLATA. Plate XLIII. fig. 3. Limnobia xanthoptera. Li. Ferruginca ; thorace glabra, nitido, Uneis duabus longitudinaJibus atris ; abdomine maculis dorsalihus fuscis ; alls flavicantihus, lined transversali vndulatd atrigdque pullide fuscis. (Long. Corp. $ o ; 2 7 lin.) Li. xanthoptera, Meigen. — Steph. Cat. No. 7930. Ferruginous; head inclined, the nose and palpi dusky; thorax glabrous, shining, with two, sometimes interrupted, deep black lines, and occa- sionally with one or two spots of the same behind ; abdomen with a trigonate brown spot on the back of each segment ; tips of the thighs black ; wings bright yellow, with a waved brown stripe over the transverse nervures, and one or two spots of the same hue on the margin : — or sometimes (as in the figure), the waved streak is shortened, and forms a sort of stigmal spot only. Rather uncommon ; found at Hastings, in Devonshire, and at Harrietsham, in Kent, in June. Plate XLIIL fig. 4. Symplecta ? marginata. Sy ? Cinereo-fusca, abdominis incisuris pallidioribus, alis fumosis, nervis satu7afioribus ; pedibus pilosis. (Long. Corp. 4 lin.) Sy. ? marginata, Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Dark ashy-brown ; with the edges of the abdominal segments paler ; legs pale brown, densely clothed with long hairs, especially the femora and tibiae ; wings dark-brown, with the nervures da;ker, the transverse ones edged with a deeper shade. Not common ; found occasionally in mndows, in London, espe- cially towards Burton Crescent, where I have repeatedly taken specimens. n. 44^. .£.OJru»'ood dd. J.on£fln.Fuh. fy J^ JttfiJt^t^ . Jrf Afvil. 1832. TIPULTD.K. 23 Plate XLIV. fig. 1. Bolitopliiln cincrcn. Bo. fusco-cinereii ; aJis wDnaculatis ; pcdlOus Jlav i cant i bus. (Long. Corp. 23 lin.) Bo. cincrea, 3Iei(jen. — Steph. Nomen. 2d edit. Griseous-browu ; palpi, lialteves and legs pale reddish ; wings slightly obscured, stigma indistinct. Rare ; taken at Camberwell, in July. Plate XLIV. fig 3. Macroccru phnleruta. Ma. Cerca, nigro maculata, alls fascia abhreviatd apiccque fuscis. (Long. Corp. 2^ Hn.) Ma. phalerata, Bleigen?- Steph. Cat. No. 8021. Ochreous ; antenna? brown, yellowish at the base ; thorax with 3 faint black stripes ; abdomen with a row of black dots on each side ; wings with a cloud at the base, a short broad band in the middle, and the apes brown. Taken occasionally in woods, at Dulwicli, in June and July ; also at Coombe Wood. 24 IIAUSTELLATA. Plate XLIV. fig. 2. Myceiophila 1 Zonata. My. 1 Flavescens, abdominis dorso maculis quadratic magnis fnscis ; an- tennis crassis, ochraceis, apicibus fuscis. (Long. Corp. 2 lin.) N G. zonatus, Sleph. Catal. No. 8037. Ochreous-yellow : eyes black : thorax glabrous, and very glossy : bright ochraceous, with a faint darker line : abdomen with a large quadrate patch occupying nearly the entire surface of each segment above, and leaving a narrow belt-like space at their base : legs pale ochraceous, the tarsi rather darker. Found at Dover, Coombe Wood, and Ripley, in June: not common. Plate XLIV. fig. 4. Mycetophila omnia. My. Fulva, antennis fuscis, busi lutea, pedibus Jlavis, alls lutescenlibus maculd magnd medid, aliisque minoribus antapicali fuscis, (Long. Corp. 3 lin.) My. ornata, Sfrph. Catal. No. 8051. Bright fulvous : eyes black : antennae brown, their base luteous : abdomen with the margins of the segments ochrcous : legs pale yellow ; wings also yellowish, with a large blackish blotch in the middle, and 3 or 4 smaller ones jdaced irregularly near the apex. Taken in old gardens near London, but very rarely. 7f . -fS. ej-.Ti^j-^'Zif ■ ^:, ■/././?./-,/",<• w/i'/ ,yv J.JTSie/'Ai^'^.^^Ji^ify'fM astijd.t:. — emptt)-t;. 25 ASILIDiE. Plate XLV. fig. 1. Dasypogon Diadema. $ Da. Niger; abdomine punctis laterallbus obscure alhidis : Mas. alis fuliginosis, pedibus 7iigns : Fern, abdomine fascia testaced, pedibus rufo-ferrugineis, alis sub-hyalinis. (Long. Corp. 10 — 11 lin.) Da. Diadema, Fabricius — Steph. Catal. No. 8158. Black, with a bluish tint : face white : 2d joint of the antenna? and base of the 3d ochreous : abdomen with faint whitish spots on each side from the 2d to the 5th segments : halteres yellowish ; wings brown, with Adolet reflections ; legs black. Female (of which sex I have not seen a British example) with the 4th and 5th segments of the abdomen, and the legs testaceous ; wings slightly tinted with brown. Found, but very rarely, in June, near Swansea, in Glamorgan- shire. EMPIDiE. Plate XLV. fig. 3. Hemerodromia inonostigma. He. Albida, abdomine vittu dorsali sinuatd nigrd, alis hyalinis ; puncfo marginali nigra. (Long. Corp. 2 lin.) He. monostigma, Hoffmansegg. — Steph. Catal. No. 8261. Whitish, tinged with ochreous : front griseons : thorax dusky above ; ab- domen with an irregular dusky band down the back ; legs pale yellow, with the terminal joint of the tarsi dusky : wings hyahne with a black marginal dot or stigma. Not uncommon in the vicinity of London, in woody places, in May. Haustellata. — Supplement, August, 184G. e 26 HAUSTELLATA. DOLICHOPIDiE. Plate XLV. fig. 4. Psilopus platypterus. Ps. viridi-cBneus,capite albo, pedibus pallidis. Mas. alisamplis; tarsis intermediis apice atro alboque. (Long. Corp. 2\ lin.) Dol. platypterus, Fabricius. — Ps. platypterus. — Steph. Catal. No. 8327. Brassy-green, with a griseous pile : face and front white ; antennae ochre- ous, the 3rd joint obscure ; abdomen, with long scattered hairs ; legs pale yellow, intermediate tarsi of the male with the 3rd and 4th joints white, the 5th black ; hinder tibiae sometimes with a dusky ring : wings very broad in the male. Abundant in marshy places near London, during the summer. RHAGIONID.E. Plate XLV. fig. 2. Atherix marginata. At. Atra ; abdomine fasciis albis ; alia fusco fasciatis : pedibus nigris. (Long. Corp. 4 lin.) Bib. marginata, Fabricius. — At. marginata, Steph. Catal. No. 8389. Deep black ; thorax clothed with a whitish pile : segments of the abdomen narrowly edged with white ; legs black : wings brown with white spots. Very rare near London ; but not uncommon in the vicinity of rivers in the west of England, especially near Asliburton, in June. n.4h: .^^ ' ANTHRACIDiE — STRATYOMIDiE. H ANTHRACIDiE. Plate XL VI. fig. 4. Anthrax Pandora. An. Atra, puhescens, alls fusco-niyrls maculis fenestratis ; apice mar- gineque -postico jyrofundc sinuato-hijalinis. (Long. Corp. 3^ liu.) Ant. Pandora, Fabricius ? — Steph. Catal. No. 8438. Deep black, clothed with tawny metallic hairs, which become blackish on the sides and mider part of the thorax : wings blackish, with the apex and hinder portion hyaline, the transparent portion deeply waved : the darkened part with several irregnlar hyaline spots. On the abdomen are some famt traces of interrupted silvery bands. Taken near Dover, in July. STRATYOMIDiE. Plate XLVL fig. 1. Clitellaria Ephippium. Cl. Nigra ; thorace sanguineo spina laterali. (Long. Corp. 4-5 lin.) St. Ephippium, Fabricius.— CX\. Ephippium, Steph. Catal. No. 84/5. Deep black : front with two spots of white hairs : thorax blood-red, clothed with a dense pile ; its sides armed with a strong spine ; scutellum with two stout, sharp recurved spines : wings brown-black. Very rare ; taken in June in Coombe wood, whence I possess a fine pair. 28 HAUSTELLATA. : XYLOPHAGIDiE. Plate XLVI. fig. 2. Actina fihwlxs. Ac. Thorace a-neo-viridi ; abdomine nigra; spinis scutelli pedibusque Jlavis; tibiis posticis clavath, fuscis. (Long. Corp. 2\ lin.) Be. tibialis, Meifjen.—Steph. Catal. No, 8488. Metallic green ; face with whitish hairs ; a small white dot at the base of the antennse ; spines on the scutellum yellow ; abdomen black, of the female yellow beneath ; legs yellow ; hinder tibiae and tarsi thickened and brown : wings brown, stigma black. Not very common, in hedges, within the metropolitan district. Plate XLVI. fig. 3. Subula maculata. ? Su. Ater, thorace Jlavo macxdato, abdominis segmentis margine Jiavis. (Long. Corp. 4 lin.) Xyl. maculatus, Fabricii Ant. 65 t—Sleph. Nomen. 2d edit. Black ; palpi and antennae beneath tawny-yellow ; thorax with its tubercles, a slender interrupted transverse line, a larger spot on each side near the insertion of the wings and the lateral margin yellow ; scutellum yellow : abdomen with a large yellow spot on the sides of the second segment, and the margins of the rest also yellow ; legs yellow, the tips of the hinder thighs and tibise, and of all the tarsi, black. Taken in June in the New Forest, but seemingly very rare. Ti ^7 - S. rt'i^'r-ir' j. ..y^^^»...-..^-v»?■.•y•^'A. svKPiiiD.'t;. 29 SYRPIIID.E. Plate XLVII. fig. 1. Syrphus Lucorum.$ Sy. Thorace nigricante, ferrugineo hirsuto ; ahdomine nigra, segmcnto V"". albido ? ; alisfascid detnidiatd /used : Mas. segmento l'"". utrinque macula albidd. (Long. Corp. 4|-5 lin.) Musca Lucorum, Linnc.—Sy. maculipenuis, Stepli. Catal. iVo. 8^512. Black: face white, with a black belt: thorax with a metallic hue, autl clothed with tawny hairs : scutellum reddish : abdomen of a steel-black, the basal segment of the male mth a fulvous or whitish patch on each side, of the female wholly whitish, or ochreous : knees and base of the tibise ochreous : wings hyaline, with a large dusky spot in the middle of the costa. Not uncommon in woods, especially in Coombe and Darenth woods, in June. Plate XLVII. fig. 3. Eristalis fumipennis. Er. Niger ; thorace riifo hirsuto, scutello riifo, ahdomine atro, anticc maculis ditahus ferrugineis, pedibus anterioribus tarsisque omnibus fuhis,j)Osticis nigris, tibiis basi rufo: alis infuscatis. (Long. Corp. 6 lin.) Er. fumipennis, Steph. Catal. No. 8650. Black : thorax clothed with a red pubescence : scutellum red ; abdomen black, the basal segments with a large ovate rusty spot on each side, the remaining segments slightly edged with ochreous : 4 anterior legs and all the tarsi fulvous ; posterior legs black, with the tibiae red at the base ; antennae red, I possess one specimen, but I am not awai'e of its locality. 30 HAUSTELLATA. Plate XLVII. fig. 2. Helophilus Frutetorurn. He. Thorace Jlavo , vittis tribus atris ; ahdomine atro,fasciis interrup- tisjlavis; antennis ru/is. (Long. Corp. 4^ — 5 lin.) Syr. Frutetorurn, Fahrlcius. — He. Frutetorurn, Steph. Catal. No. 8664. Head, front and antennse tawny yellow ; thorax yellow with three black streaks ; scutellum brown ; abdomen black, the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th segments each with an interrupted yellow streak, and a spot of the same on the dorsal edge of each, 5 th segment yellow : anterior legs yellow, the base of the thighs black ; hinder thighs black, with the apex yellow ; tibiae tawny, with a faint ring and the tip black. Found in plenty in Battersea Fields in June. Plate XLVII. fig. 4. Spilomyia femorata. Sp. Nigra, villosa, pedihus rnjis, femorihus apicefuscis. (Long. Corp. 6 lin.) Mu. femorata, Litmc.—Sp. femorata, Steph. Catal. No. 86/4. Black : face with whitish down : antcnnoe brown ; thorax with a greenish tinge, and clothed with rusty hairs ; abdomen clothed with tawny hairs ; legs red, the ti})s of the femora brown : hinder thighs robust : wings clouded with brown. Rare, or at least local, found in June and July, in the New Forest. Fi j IV/t/'vW, J,cI CONOPID.B. 31 CONOPIDyE. Plate XLVIII. fig. 1. Zodion cinereum. Zo. cmereuniy facie Jlavd, antennis nigris apice rufis. (Long. Corp . 3 liu.) Myo. cinerea, Fahricms. — Zo. cinereum, Steph. Catal. No. 8/04. Ash-coloured : face pale yellow ; forehead and antennse at the apex dull red ; thorax with dusky hairs ; abdomen with a few dusky spots, its apex black : legs brownish-ash ; wings slightly yellowish. Not common, taken in June, at Darenth wood. Plate XLVIII. fig. 3. Myopa testacea. ISIy. Ahdomine testaceo cinereo maculato ; fronte fused ; alls fuscanis, medio puncto nigro. (Long. Corp. 3 — 3^ lin.) Co. testaceus, imne.— My. testaceus, Steph. Catal. No. 8/10. Testaceous : face with a brown spot on each side, towards the eyes, beneath the antennse ; abdomen testaceous, spotted with ash-colour ; legs testaceous, ringed with brown; T\'ings brownish, with a black spot in the first hinder cell. Found in June, at Richmond. 32 HAUSTELLATA. (ESTRIDiE. Plate XLVIII. fig. 4. Gasterophilus salutiferus. 9 Ga. Ater, thorace fulvescente, ahdomine atro basi albo (postice in mare rufo), femoribus atriSy barbatis ; alis immaculatis, casta Jlavescente. (Long. Corp. 5 lin.) (Es. salutiferus, Clark. — Ga. salutiferus, Sieph. Catal. No. 8727. Black : head clothed with bright tawny hairs ; thorax stout, clothed with pale orange pubescence, with a blackish spot at the base of the wings, most evident in the male: abdomen black, thickly clothed with pale yellow pubescence, on the basal segment, with black on the 2nd, and with pale orange on the remainder in the male, but with ash-coloured in the female ; legs black, thighs covered with long black hairs ; wings not spotted, but with the base and outer margin yellowish-brown. Taken at Coombe wood, in July. MUSCIDiE. Plate XLVIII. fig. 2. Gonia auriceps. Go. thorace nigricante ; abdomine rufo, vittce dorsali, anoqtie nigris ; maculis albis ; capite fulvo. (Long. Corp. 4 lin.) Gon. auriceps, Meigen. — Steph. Catal. No. 8737. Head tawny-red, with a golden pile ; antennae deep brown, the second joint yellow ; palpi testaceous ; thorax dusky, with 4 black stripes, the 2 intermediate shortest ; abdomen red, its tip and a dorsal streak black, its sides with irregular white blotches ; scales white ; legs black. Not common; taken at Coombe and Darenth wood, in the early part of the summer. INDEX. Page P.ige Actina tibialis 28 Ilalticbella armata . 5 Anacharis Eucbaroides 18 Ilelcon aiiiiulicornis . . 4 Andrena Bucepbala 17 Helopliilus Frutetorum . 30 Anduenid^. . 17 Ilemerodromia monostigma . . 25 Anteonflavicorne 11 HYMENOPTERA , 1 ANTiinAcin.'F. 27 Ichneumonid;e 1 Anthrax Pandora . 27 LiUUID* 12 Apib/e 16 Limnobia xanthoptera 22 Aporus bicolor . 13 IMacrocera pbalerata 23 Arotes albicinctus 2 Megastigmus dorsalis 7 AsiI.ID.'E . 25 Microgaster basalis . 4 Atherix raarginata Bolitopbila cinerea 26 23 . • 1 ■ 1 - 3 . 12 Miscopbus bicolor Bonibus cognatus 17 Rliscus campestris . 15 Bracomd.e 3 MUSCID.E , 32 Callimome varians 7 Mycetopbila ornata . . 24 Ceratopogon palustris 20 Zonata . . 24 Cerocepbala cornigera 6 Myopa testacea 31 Chalcidid.i, 5 Nomada Kirbyella 16 Chironomus viridulus 19 Qilstridje 32 Cirrospilus Walkeri 10 Osmia xantbomelana • 16 Clitellaria Ephippium 27 Perilampus micans , 8 CONOPID.T, 31 Phytodietus segmentator 1 Corethra pluraicornis 20 Pompilus notatus 13 Cratomus megacephalus 8 Ponera contracta 15 Culex concinnus 19 Proctotrupid.e 10 CULICID.* 19 Psilopus platypterus . 26 CvNIPID.E 18 RlIAGIONID* 26 Dasypogon Diadema . . 25 Rhyssa persuasoria . 2 Diapria conica 10 SCELIONID* . . , . 11 Dinetus pictus 12 Schyzopyga analis 1 Diomyza pulchra 21 Spalangiid.'e . 6 DIPTERA 19 Sphegid.'e . 13 DOLICHOPID* 26 Sphex flavipennis 14 Dolichurus corniculus 14 Spilomyia femorata . 30 Elencbus tenuicornis 18 Stratyomid.?: 27 Empida . . . . 25 STREPSIPTERA . 18 ENCYRTIDiE . 9 Stylopid*; 18 Encyrtus punctipes , 9 Stylops Dalii 18 Enicospilus combustus 3 Haworthi 18 3 Kirbii 18 3 _ ._ Melittae 18 Eriopteryx stigma 21 18 Eristalis furaipennis . 29 tenuicornis . 18 Eucharis adscendens . 5 Subula maculata? 28 EuLOPHID.t 9 Symplecta'? marginata 22 Eulopbus cinctipes 9 Syrphid.e 29 Eurytoma Abrotani . 6 Syrphus Lucorum 29 EuUYTOlIIDiE 6 Teleas Procris 11 FORMICID* 15 TiPULID.t 19 Gasteropbilus salutiferus 32 ToRYMID.l, . . . . 7 GONATOPID^E . 11 Xyi.opiiagiu.i^. 28 Gonia auriceps 32 Zodioa (inercum 31 Halictopbagus Curtisii 18 FIN IS. 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Ss BURROWS' ELGIN MARBLES, with an His- torical and Topographical Account of Athens 8vo. illustrated ivilh 40 outline plates, extra ctoih, (pub. at £1.) reduced to 6s 6(i 1837 CARTER'S ANCIENT ARCHITECTURE op ENGLAND, including the Orders during the British, Roman, Saxon, and Norman Eras ; also under the Reigns of Henry III. and Edward III ; illustrated by 103 large copper-plate en- gravings, comprising upwards of two thousand sjiecimens, shewn iu jilan, elevation, section, and detail, by John Buitton, Esq. royal folio, hf, bd. morocco, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £4. 4s . 1837 "One of the most useful books the architec- tural STUDENT C.\N POSSESS. " Mil I'uGiN SAYS OF Cahtf.r, " We nk'er shall LOOK UPON HIS LIKK AGAIN." CARTER'S ANCIENT SCULPTURE and PAINTING now RFMAIMNG IN EnOLAND, from the earliest period to the Reign of Henry A'^III. consisting of Statues, Basso-relievos, Sculptures, iic. 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( pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to I8s 1824 CATLIN'S Illustrations of the Manners, Customs, and Condition of the NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS: in a Series of Let- ters and Notes, written during Eight Years of Travel and Adventure among the Wildest and most Remarkable Tribes now existing, 2 vols. impl. 8vo. fifth edition, containing 360 en^raiiiif^s from the Author's Origindt, Paintings, extra cloth, emblematically gilt, (pub. at £2. 12s 6rf) reduced to £1. 10s 1845 CATLIN'S Nkw Wouk. The NORTH AMERI- CAN INDIAN PORTFOLIO, containing Hunting Scenes, Amusements, Scenery, and Costume of the Indians of the Rocky Moun- tains and ['rairics of America, from Drawings and Notes of the Author made during Eight Years' Travel among 4" of tlie wildest and most remote tribes of Savages in North America. A Series of 25 magnificent litiiographic Plates, printed in tints by Day and Haghe ; accom- panied by full and interesting letterjiress de- scriptions ; impl. i'olio, hf bd. mor. £5. 5s 1845 the same, with ihe plaifs beautifully coiouitLi), in the style of drawings ; mounted on tinted cards ; enclosed in a handsome portfolio, £10. 10s " A unique work ! a work of extraordinary interest and value; we nied iiol recotnmend it to the world, lor it is bejoud all \ir»iie."—Athena;um. CAULFIELD'S Portraits, Memoirs, andCharac- TKRs, of REMARKABLE PERSONS, from the Reign of Edward III, to the Revolution, 3 vols, royal 8vo. 109 curious plates, illustrating Granger, &,c. bds. (pub. at £4. 4s) reduced to £1. 8$ . 1813 the same, Large Paper, 3 vols. 4to. bds. (pub. at £f). 61) reduced to £2. 2j BOOKS ON THE FINE ARTS, ARCHITECTURE, ETC. CHAMBERLAINE'S IMITATIONS of DRAW- INGS from the Great Masters, in the Royal Collection, engraved by linrtolozn and others, irapl. {o\.10 plates, hf. bd. mor. richly gilt back and gilt edges, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £.5 5s CHRISTIAN SOUVENIR, edited by the Rev. T. Dale, 8vo. embelliibed with 12 large and extremely beautiful plates, elegantly bound in gilt cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 10s 6d 1842 CLAUDE'S LIBER VERITATIS, a collection of 300 engravings in imitation of the original Draw- ings of Claude, by Earlom, 3 vols, folio, elegantlij hf. bd. morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £31. 10s) reduced to £10. 10s COESVELT'S PICTURE GALLERY, with an In- troduction by Mrs. Jameson, royal 4to 90plates beautiJuUy engraved in outline, India Phoofs. hf. jn()rfa(ilns, and Hesiod, have long been Ihe admiration of Europe ; of their simplicity and beauty the pen ia quite incapable of conveying an adequate impression." Sir Thomas Lawrence. FLAXMAN'S ACTS of MERCY.— A Series of Eight beautiful Compositions, in the man- ner of Ancient Sculpture, engraved in imitation of the original Drawings, by F. C. Lewis, obi. fol. hf. bd. mor. (pub. at £2. 2s) red. to 16s 1831 FLAXMAN'S Eight Illustrations of the LORD'S PRAYER, drawn on stone, by R. Lane, royal 8vo. reduced to 3s 1835 FLAXMAN'S LECTURES on SCULPTURE, as delivered by him at the Royal Academy, with a brief Memoir of the Author, 52 plates ; new edition, enlarged, 8vo. cloth, (pub. at £2. 2s> reduced to 16s . 1838 FUSELI'S LIFE, LECTURES on PAINTING, &c. the former written, the latter edited, by John Knowles, Esq. F.R.S. 3 vols. 8vo. port, extra cloth, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to 15s 1831 the same, 3 vols. 8vo. elegantly bound in tree-marbled calf, marbl. edges, by Clarke, £1. 8» " Fuseli's Lectures have been stamped as the noblest criticism extant on Art." — New Monthly. GALLERY of ENGLISH and FOREIGN POR- TRAITS; published by the Society of Useful Knowledge, 7 vols. impl. 8vo. \QQ fine portraits^ engraved on steel, with Memoirs, extra cloth, top edges gilt,' (puh. Sit £7. 7s) reduced to £3. 13s 6d 1833-7 the same, 7 vols, half morocco, gilt edge$ (pub. at £9.) reduced to £5 GELL and GANDY'S POMPEIANA, or the Topography, Edifices, and Ornaments of Pom- peii, Original Series, containing the Result of tha Excavations previous to 1819, 2 vols, royal 8vo. best edition, with upwards of 100 beautiful line engravings by Goodall, Cooke, Heath, Pye, S^c. i» the original style of boarding, (pub. at £7, 4s) reduced to £3. 3s . 1824 This charming book has long been very scarce, and only procurable by chance, and at a large price. The present copies (only a small number) have been locked up since the time of publication, in the possession of the author, who had determined that the work shoald not be sold under the full price. BOOKS ON THE FINE ARTS, ARCHITECTtrRE, ETC. 5 HAMILTON'S VASES.— Collection of Engravings GIL BLAS, translated by Smollett ; PicroniAL ED.TiON, illustrated by upwariis of 500 l)eatitijul wood engravings, after the celebrated designs of Gigoux, 2 vols, royal 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. 4s . 1836 " li is impossible to notice without unreserved ad- miration, this beautiliil edition. It will be, without doubt, THE EDITION OF GIL BLAS', there is a spirit and force in the i;roups of figures which have rarely been excelled." — Athen(eum. GILPIN'S WORKS ON THE Plv..TURESQUE in Landscape Scenery and Gardening, viz. I. Nor- thern Tour — 2. Southern Tour. — 3. Western Tour— 4. Eastern Tour— 5. Scottish Tour — 6. River Wye — 7. Forest Scenery — 8. Five Essays — 9. Essay on Prints, Picturesque Travel, Landscape Painting, &c. — together 12 vols. 8vo. ivith 187 aquatinta engravings, bds. (pub. at £10. 10s) reduced to £3. 3s 1808, &c. " No man should write a tour, or fashion a garden, •without reading the works of Gilpin. His object was to examine the face of nature by the rules of pictu- resque beauty : to adapt the description of natural scenery to the principles of artificial landscape, and to open the sources of those pleasures which are derived from the comparison ; and his design is executed with the hand of a master." — Price on the Picturesque. GOETHE'S FAUST, Illustrated by Retzsch, in 26 beautiful outlines, royal 4to. gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 10s 6d This edition contains a translation of the original poem, with historical and descriptive notes. GOODWIN'S DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE, a Series of New Designs for Mansions, Villas, Rectory-Houses, Parsonage-Houses ; Bailiff's, Gardener's, Gamekeeper's, and Park-Gate Lodges : Cottages and other Residences, in the Grecian, Italian, and Old English style of Archi- tecture, with estimates, new edition, with 12 sup- plementary plates, 2 vols, royal 4lo. 96 plates, cloth, (pub. at £5. 5s) reducedsto £2, 12s 6d 1835 ■ the same, with the plates coloured, cloth, (pub. at £8. 8s) reduced to £4. 4s G R I N D L A Y'S (Capt.) VIEWS in INDIA, Scenery, Costume, and Architecture, chiefly on the Western side of India, atlas 4to. consisting of 36 most beautifully coloured plates, highly finished in imitation of drawings, with descriptive letter-press, richly hf. bd. morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £8. 8s 1830 This is perhaps the most exquisitely coloured volume of landscapes ever produced. " A work of the highe^t class — its illustrations ex- ceedingly beautiful — they are admirable specimens of art." — John Cull. GULLIVER'S TRAVELS, by Dean Swift, Pic- torial Edition, with Notes, Life of the Author, &c. by Dr. W. C. Taylor, royal 8vo. illustrated by upwards of 400 beautiful woodcuts, cloth gilt, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 12s . 1841 HANSARD'S ILLUSTRATED BOOK of ARCHERY, being the complete History and Practice of the Art ; interspersed with numerous Anecdotes, forming a complete Manual for the Bowman. 8vo. illustrated by 39 beautiful line- engravings, exquisitely finished by Engteheart, Portbury, S)C. after Designs by Stephaiioff', gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. lis 6d) reduced to 10s 6d — — the same, India proofs, gilt cloth, (pub. at £2. 12s 6d) reduced to 15s — — the same, India proofs, morocco extra, full gilt, £1. 5s "The pictorial embellishments are some of the moit beaatiful we have ever seen." — Art Union. from Ancient Vases, mostly of pure Greek Workmanship, now in the possession of Sif William Hamilton, with Letter-press in English and French, 3 vols, super-royal folio, containing upwards of 200 fine targe engravings, cipitally executed in Outline by Tischhein, Director of the Academic of Faintiyig ws Naples ; stiff covers, with leather backs, (pub. at £15. 15s) reduced to £2. 2s . Naples, 1791 HEATH'S CARICATURE SCRAP BOOK, on 60 Sheets, containing upwards of 1000 Comic Subjects after Seymour, Cruikshank, Phiz, and other eminent Cai'icaturists, oblong folio, bound in cloth, with humorous devices in gold, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to 15s This clever and entertaining volume is now en- larged by ten additional sheets, each containing nume- rous subjects. It includes the whole of Heath's Om- nium Gatherum, both Series; Illustrations ot Demon- ology and Witchcraft; Old Ways and New Ways; Nautical Dictionary; Scenes in London ; Sayings and Doings, &c. ; a series of humorous illustrations of Pro- verbs, &c. As a large and almost infinite storehouse of humour it stands alone. To the yonng artist it would be found a mo*t valuable collection of studies; and to the family circle a constant source of unexceptionable amusement. HEATH'S Belgium, Picturesque and Roman- tic, in a Tour by Thomas Roscoe, roy. 8vo. con- taining 16 beautiful line-engravings, embossed cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at £1. 4s) 12s 1841 HOGARTH'S WORKS ENGRAVED by HIM- SELF, 153 fine plates, (including the two well- known " suppressed plates,") with elaborate letter- press descriptions, by J. Nichols, atlas folio, elegantly hf. bd. morocco extra, full gilt back and gilt edges, with a secnt pocket for the suppressed plates, (pub. at £50.) reduced to £7. 7s 1822 The copies now offered for sale consist of an old stock fonnd in the publisher's warehouse, iu very fine condition, and are greatly superior to those which have of late years been seen in the market. Beside the two suppressed plates, every purchaser will be entitled to a small snuff-box engraving of the same character, which is not yet in any of the Hogarthiau collections. It will not be sold separately. HOLBEIN'S PORTRAITS of the Court of Henry the Eighth, a Series of Eighty exquisitely Beautiful Plates, engraved by Bartolozzi, Cooper, and others, and printed on tinted paper in imitation of the original and very highly finished Drawings preserved in the Royal Col- lection at Windsor, with Historical and Bio- graphical Letter-press by Edmund Lodge, Esq. Norroy King of Arms, F. S. A. etc. published by John Chamberlaine, Esq. late Keeper of the Royal Collection of Drawings and Medals, impl. 4to. elegantly hf. bd. turkey morocco, full gilt, edges gilt all round, with glazed paper to the p/a(es,( pub. at £15. 15s) red. to £5. 15s 6rf 1812 HOLBEINS PORTRAITS of the COURT of HENRY THE EIGHTH, the large edition, with eight additional and ujjpublished portraits of the French Court, likewise engraved fcy Barto- lozzi ; proofs, beautifully finished in coloured tints; MOUNTED on stout DliAWING PAPER, ruled with GOLD LINES, atlas folio, hf. bd, morocco extra, gilt edges, (pub. at £52. 10s) re- duced to £14. 14s another similar set, with an addition of a duplicate set of uncoloiired engravings, proofs, in- cluding the eight additional portraits, 2 vols, folio, splendidly bound in morocco extra, (pub. at ^ £73. 10s) reduced to £31. 10s '^^ A similar set to the present, but without the exiw French portraits, was lately sold by public auction ftff fifty guineas. BOOKS ON THE FINE HOPES Historical Essay on ARCHITECTURE, 2 vols. roy. 8vu third i'(//t;o(i, with General Index, 99 plites, cloth, {jiuh. at £2.) red. to £1. 8s 1840 HOPE'S COSTUME of the ANCIENTS, illus- trated in upwards of 320 beautifully engraved Plates, containing representations of Egyptian, W Greek, and Roman Habits and Dresses, 2 vols, royal 8vo. new edition, tnilh nearly 20 additional flates, /'(is. reduced to £2. 5s 1341 All indisjieiisable bciok to artists. HOWARD (Frank) on COLOUR, as a Means of Art, being an adaptation of the Experience of Professors to the Practice of Amateurs, illus- trated fcj/ 18 coloured p/utfs, post 8vo, extra cloth gilt, 8s . 1838 In this able volume are shewn the ground colours in t»hich ihe most celohrated painters worked, it is very valu.able to the connoisseur as well as the student in painting and water colour drawing. " A pretty book, which we may recommend asgiving the keys of harmony iu which ditierent artists wroui;ht." — AthencBum. HUGHSON'S LONDON amd WESTMINSTER, describing all the Public Buildings, &ic. 2 vols, in 1, r2mo. npivards of \00 neat topographical engravings, bij ."itorer and Greig, extra cloth gilt, (pub. at £1. "8s) reduced to 9s 1817 HUNT'S Examples of TUDOR ARCHITEC- TURE, adapted to I\Iodern Habitations, roy, 4to. 37 plates, half morocco, (pub. at £2. 2s) re- duced to £1. 4s 1836 HUNT'S Designs for PARSONAGE HOUSES, Alms Houses, &c. royal 4to. 21 plates, half morocco, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 14s 1841 HUNT'S Designs for GATE LODGES, Game- keepers' Cottages, &c. royal 4to. 13 plates, half morocco, (pub. at £1. ls)reducedto 14s 1841 HUNT'S Arcliitettura Campestre ; or_ Designs for Lodges, Gardeners' Houses, Sec. in the Italian style, 12 plates, royal 4to. half morocco, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 14s 1827 ILLUSTRATED FLY-FISHER'S TEXT BOOK, a Complete Guide to the Science of Trout and Salmon Fishing, by Theophilus South, Gent. (Ed. Chitty, -Barrister) with 23 beautiful en- gravings on steel, afterPaintings by Cooper, Newton Fielding, Lee, ^ others, 8vo. richly bound in extra green cloth, emblematically tooled in gold on back Sf s'fies (pub. at £l.lls6(i) reduced to 10s 6rf 1845 '." The riy-Fisher's Text Book is a splendid volume, obviously written by a practical as well as a theoretical an"lcr, and is, moreover, an oriijinal treatise." ILLUSTRATIONS of the Royal Progress to Scotland in 1842, 4to. embellished with 13 ex- trenielii beautiful bteel engravings by IVillmore, &;c. and 34 fine wood engravings by Landells, &;c. extra gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s 6d Edinb. Constable, 1844 . the same, India proofs, extra gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. lis 6rf) reduced to 9s ILLUSTRATED COMMENTARY on the Scrip- ture.H, see Divinity. ITALIAN SCHOOL of DESIGN, consisting of 100 Plates, chiefly engraved by Bartolozzi, after the original Pictures and Drawings of Guercino, Michael Angelo, Domenichino, Annibale, Lu- dovico, and Agostino Caracci, Pietro da Cor- »ona, Carlo Maratti, and others, in the Collection of her Majesty, impl. 4to. half morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £10. 10s) reduced to £3. 3s 1842 JACKSON^S HISTORY ok WOOD-ENGRAV- ING, including a Treatise on Wood Engraving ARTS, ARCHITECTURE, ETC. v KENDALL'S GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE, 8vo. 23 plates by Storer, cloth, (pub. at 15s) reduced to 5s . 1842 KENNION'S EXAMPLES of TREES in LAND- SCAPE, with Essays shewing the Propriety and Importance of Characteristic Expression ia this branch of Art, and the means of producing it, with many large additional plates, in all 60 large engravings of the various Trees grown in Great Britain, including numerous details and elemen- tary Lessons on their Foliage and Branches, impl. 4to. extra cloth boards, (pub. at £3. 13s 6d) reduced to 18s 1815 Very useful for drawing schools. KNIGHT'S (Henry Gaily) ECCLESIASTICAL ARCHITECTURE of ITALY, from the time of Constantine to the Fifteenth Century, with an Introduction and Text, impl. folio, FIRST SERIES, Containing forty beautiful and highly interesting views of Ecclesiastical Buildings in Italy, several of which are expensively illuminated in gold and colours, elegantly half bound morocco, £5. 5s ' 1843 the same, second and concluding Series, centaining 4 1 beautiful and highly interesting views of Ecclesiastical Buildings in Italy, arrangea m Chronological Order, with descriptive letter-press, impl. folio, hf. bd. morocco, £5, 5s 1844 KNIGHT'S (Henry Gaily) SARACENIC and NORMAN REMAINS, to illustrate the Nor- mans in Sicily, impl. folio, 30 large and very beaU" tiful engravings, several of which are coloured, coni sisting of Picturesque Views, Architectural Re- mains, Interiors and Exteriors of Buildiiigs, witk descriptive letter-press now first added, half morocco, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £3. I3s 6d 1840 Of all the numero'is Lithographic folios of Architec- tural and Scenic subjects which have of late made their appearance, this is not only one of the best executed, but also the most interesting, especially to the lovers of Architecinre, on account of Ihe accuracy of drawing, which is evident in every detail, and the judgim-nt used in the selection of objects. Too many irivellers have passed over this interesting ground without dis- covering its riches in the Architecture of the Middle and Saracenic ages. KNIGHT'S PICTORIAL LONDON. 6 vols, bound in 3 thick handsome vols. impl. 8vo. illustrated by 650 wood engravings, extra cloth, gilt hacks, vem elegant, (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to £2. 12s 6d 1841-44 the same, 6 vols, in 3, elegantly hf. bd. mo- rocco extra, gilt backs and gilt edges, £3. 13s 6d KNIGHT'S Antiquities of the British Museum, containing 1 12 engravings of all the 7nost remark- able Statuary and Sculpture, Egyptian An- tiquities, Vases, &c. with letter-press on the reverses, iSnuntcd on cjrds, foolscap 8vo. in a cloth case, Uttered, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 4s 6d LAUDER'S (Sir Thomas Dick) MEMORIAL of the ROYAL PROGRESSES in SCOTLAND in 1842, a thick and splendid vol. 4to.pm6e//is/ie(Z with 50 most beautiful engravings on steel and wood by the first artists, elegantly bound in gilt cloth, {published b\] Roxjal Authority), (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £ 1.1s " Ed in burgh, 1843 the same, large paper, royal 4to. India PROOFS, (very few printed), gilt cloth, (pub. at £4. 4s) reduced to £1. 16s LAWRENCE'S (Sir Thos.) Life and Correspon. dence, by Williams, 2 vols. 8vo. fine portraits, ■ ■ -■" 1831 c/o(/i, (pub. at £1. 12j) reduced to 16s IKstorical and Practical, with upwards"of 3()0 , LUMISDEN'S ANTIQUITIES of ROME and it.s Environs, ■ 4to. ili.i.'strated by above fiftt beautiful wood-cut illustrations, including fac- iknilesfrom the works of Albert Durer, 1 large vol. , impL 8vo. half bound morocco, £2. 12s Qd 1839 (COPPERPLATE engiia vines, clcih lettered,{^\ib. at £3. 3s) reduced to £1. Is . 1812 I BOOKS ON THE FINE ARTS, ARCHHECTURE, ETC. L'ESI'At.NK ARTHTiyUE it MONUMEN- TAI.I-. ; V'ues I'l Descniitions des Sites et des IMoii'iiiireis artistiqiips !h.s plus notables de I'Es- p!i'.;iie, 2 vols, iiupl folio, complete in 24 parts, co'iii)' isiii^ 9(5 tai fie anil eitrenietif hfautijul litho- giitiihic pUilea oj the most interesting sijecimens of 6/ii(ii(>/i AiicniTKCTi'iiK and Oiinamint of the ]\Jii>L>f.i- Aces, (,pub. at £25. 4ii) reduced to f 14 I4s I'ar. 1843-45 • the same, 2 vols, splendidly hf.bd, moiocco, gitt eiiges .£ Its. 16s Ml. HmIiii iKiviii); bought a large qnanlily of the above celfbr.iU'd work uii advaiitiigeoiis terms, is eii.iblid u> i>iler them ^t the low piiie allixed. The iiiipie.^'ioii." are in the finest |)0»sible stale. LO>;DON. -WILKINSON'S I.ONDINA IL- LL'STU.A I'A ; or Graphic and Historical Illus- trations of the most iiiteri'Sting and Curious Architectural ftlonuments of the City and Suburbs of F.,ondon and Westminster, e.' g. IMonasterics, Churches, Charitable Fuundations, Palaces, Halls, Courts, Processsions, Places of early Amusements, Theatres, and Old Houses, 2 vols, inipl. 4to. containing 207 coppcr-plale rn- graiings, with Historical and De.scriptive Letter- press, hf. hd. morocco, uncnt, the top edges gilt, vpub. at £26. 5s)reduced to £5. 5s 1819-25 ■ the same, large paper, 2 vols, elephant 4to. hf. hd, morocco, vncut, the top edges gilt, (pub. at £37. 16s) reduced to £6. 6s The most interesting and curious graphic work of Old London extant. LYSONS' GLOUCESTERSHIRE ANTIQUI- TIES, 110 Etchings (many of which are coloured) of Churches, Castles, Old Houses, Ruins, Tombs, Effigies, Sculpture, Stained Glass, Seals, &c. ice. with Letter-press De- scriptions, 1 vol. royal folio, half morocco, (pub. at £6. Qs) reduced to £2. 5s 1803 LYSONS' MAGNA BRITANNICA, or County History of Great Britain, 10 vols, in 8, 4to. plates, hoards, (pub. at £27. 4s) reduced to £5. LYSONS' ENVIRONS of LONDON, being an Historical Account of the Towns, Villages, and Hamlets in theCountiesof Surrey, Kent, Essex, Herts, and Middlesex, within Twelve Miles of that Capital, including the Middlesex Parishes, interspersed with Biographical Anecdotes, 5 vols.4to.p/(((es,(pub.at£10. 10s)red.to£2.10s the same, Large Paper, 5 vols, royal 4to. (pub at £15. 15s) reduced to £3. 3s MARRYAT'S(Capt.) poor JACK,illustratedwith 46 beautiful wood-cuts, designed hu Si anfikld, 8vo. D^i7tc/of/i,(pub. at I4s)reducedto ijs 1842 MARTIN'S CIVIL COSTUME or ENGLAND, from the Conquest to the present period, from Tapestry, BISS. 6cc. roj'al 4to. 61 plates, beauti- fully illuminated in gold and colours, richly bound in cloth, with the Arms of Prince Albert gilt en the sides, £2. \2s 6d . 1842 MAXWELL'S LIFE of the DUKE of WEL- LINGTON, 3 handsome vols. 8vo. embellished with numerous highly finished line engravings by Cooper and other eminent artists, consisting of hatile pieces, portraits, military plans, and maps ; besides a great number of fne wood engravings ; elegayit in gilt cloth, (pub. at £3. 7s) 'red. to £1. 16s 1841 the same, Large Paper, India proofs, gilt cloth, (pub. at £5.) reduced to £3. 3s "Mr. Maxwell's Lifeof the Duke opWrllinc- TON HAS no RIVAL. It is tVec IVoin H.illery and bombast, succinct and masterly. The type and mechanical exe- cution are admirable; tlie plans of battles and sieges iiHiiurons, ample, and useful; the portraits many and faithtu! ; the battle pictures animated and brilliant ; and ihe viv;netle3 of costumes and inariucrs worthy of Horace Veruet hinisilt."— Times. MEVRICK'S PAINTED ILLUSTRATIONS oi* ANCIENT ARMS AND ARMOUR, a Critical Inquiry into Ancient Armour as it existed ia Europe, but particularly in En-land, from the Norman Comiucst to tlie Reign of Charles II., with a Glossary, &c. by Sir Sam'iel Rush Mey- rick, LL.D. F.S.A. &c., new and gieatly im- proved edition, corrected and enlarged through- out by tlie Aiithorhiinself, witli the assistance of Literary and Antiquarian Friends, (Albert Way, &c.) 3 vols. imj)!. 4to. illustrated by more than 100 plates, splendidly illumnated, mosthf in gold and silver, etliihiting some of the finest hpecimens eiistivg in England, also a new plate of the Tour- nament of Lochs and Keys, neatly hf. bd. morocco, gilt eitra, full gilt hachs and edges, (pub. at £21.) rediJced to £10. 10s 1844 the same, 3 vols superhly bound in crimson turhey morocco, emhlematicallij tooled oji the hack, broad gold borders, and gilt edges, by ll'right, Sii Walter Scott justly describes this collection as "the l.NCOMPARADl.E AIlMOUItV." "This mo-t superb Archaological work is animated with numerous novelties, curious and liisii.rical disqtii- finoiis, and brilliant and recondite learning — Learn- ing g'jing lo Court in the lull, ricli costume of the Order of the Gart reduced to £1. 5s 1843 the same, hf. bd. morocco, full gilt, £1. 8s PICTORIAL HISTORY of GERMAiN Y during the Reign of Frederick the Great, including a complete History of tlie Silesian Campaigns and the Seven Years' War, by Francis Kug- ler, illustrated by Adolph JMenzel, royal 8vo. u-ith above 500 wood-cuts, extra cloth, gilt, (pub. at £1. 80 reduced to 12s 1845 PICTORIAL GALLERY of RACE-HORSES, containing Portraits of all the Winning Horses of the Derby, Oaks, and St. Leger Stakes during the last Thirteen Years ; and a History of the principal Operations of the Turf, illustrated by Portraits of some of its most distinguished Members. By Wildrake, (Geo. Tattersall, Esq. ) One large handsome volume, royal 8vo. containing 75 beautiful illustrations, chiefly steel engravings of Horses, after Pictures by Cooper, Herring, Hancock, Aiken, &;c. engraved by Scott, Cook, and other eminent Artists; also full-length characteristic portraits of celebrated living Sports- men (" Cracks of the Day") by Seymour ; scarlet cloth, elegantly gilt on back and sides with appro- vriate devices, (pub. at £2. 2s) red. to 18s 1844 PICTORIAL FRENCH DICTIONARY, royal Bvo. illustrated by 760 wood-cuts, extra cloth, richly gilt, lOsQd . Tilt, IMl PICTURESQUE TOUR of the RIVER THAMES, in its Western Course, including particular Descriptions of Richmond, Wind- sor, and Hampton Court. By John Fisher Murray. Ulustrated by upwards of 100 very highly -finished wood engravings by Orrin Smith, Branston, Landells, Linton, and other eminent artists ; to which are added several beautiful copper and steel plate engravings by Cooke and others, one large handsome volume, royal 8vo. elegantly boundin gilt cloth, (j>\ih, at £1. 5s) re- duced to 10s 6d . 1845 PINELLI'S ETCHINGS of ITALIAN MAN- NERS AND COSTUME, including his Car- nival, Banditti, &c. 27 plates, impl. 4to. hf. bd. morocco, I5s . Rome, 1840 PINELLI'S and COOKE'S VIEWS in ROME, royal 8vo. containing 27 pretty plates, gilt cloth, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 7s 6d 1834 PLOOS VAN AMSTEL'S IMITATIONS of DRAWINGS by the principal Dutch and Flemish Masters, consistmg of 100 beautiful Engravings, executed in exact Imitation of the Originals, many beautifully Coloured, ac- companied by Historical and Descriptive Letter- press, by C. Josi, of the British Museum, 3 vols. in 2, imperial folio, elegantly half bound nwroccOy (pub. at £63.) reduced to £16. 16s PLUTARQUE FRANCAIS.— Vies des Hommes et Femmes lUustres de la France, avec leurs Portraits en pied, publie par E. Mennechet, 8 vols, imperial ^vo. containing 192 spirited full- length portraits, etched on copper, cloth, (\)\ih. at £12. 12s) reduced to £4. Us6d Far. 1838-41 thesaiae,hf.bd,redmor.giltedges, £5. 15s 6ci POULSON'S Histi.rr nnil Antiquili, -, of the Seig- niory of llULl ) hllN ESS, in the K:ist Kidingof tlie COUNTY .u YORK, including the Abbies of IMeux and Swine, with tlie I'riuries of Nun- keeling and I'.iirsiall, compih-d from authentic Charters, Reconis, and the iiiii>ublished Manu- scripts of the l!ev. William Dade, remaining in the Library of liurton Constable, u'i(/infcoie 200 copper-plule engravings and wood-ruts, consisting of Vieivs, Churches,Monumental Lffigies and Brasses, Fonts, Ground Flans, Facsimiles of Charters, Deeds, Armorial Hearings, Seals, &c. 6<;c. 4 parts, or 2 vols, 4to. boards, yiub. at £3.) reduced to £1. Is . 1841 Laiige Paper, 4 parts, or 2 vols, royal 4to. boards, (pub. at £4.) reduced to £1. 15s " This is one ol ihe mosl |i;; £19.) reduced to £8. 8s .. — the same, Laroe Papeh, imperial folio, illuminated with extra splendour, (pub. at £28.) reduced to £12. 12i STRUTT'S DRESSES and HABITS of the PEOPLE OF ENGLAND, from the Establish- ment of tlie Saxons in Britain to the present time ; with .in historical and critical Inquiry into every branch of Costume : new and greatly improved edition, with critical and e.xphmatory notes by J. R. Planche, Esq. F.S.A., 2 vols, royal 4to. 153 plates, cloth, £4. 4s 1842 the same, the plates coloured, half morocco, top edses gilt, £1. Is the same, the plates splendidly illu- minated IN GOLD, SILVEIl, AND OPAQUE COLOU IIS, IN THE Missal style, 2 vols, royal 4to. half morocco, top edges gilt, £20. No more lliaii '25 copitJ have been executed in tliis expensive manner, and but lewoftliese remain unsub- toribed lor. STRUTT'S REGAL and ECCLESIASTICAL ANTIQUITIES of ENGLAND, containing the most authentic Representations of all the English Rlonarchs from Edward the Confessor to Henry the Eighth ; together with many of the Great Personages that were eminent under tlieir several Reigns : new and greatly improved edition, by J. R. Planche, Esq. F.S.A., royal 4to. 12ptates,cloth,£2.2s . 1842 ^-^ . the same, the plates coloured, half morocco, top edges gilt, £4. 4s the same, the plates splendidly illu- minated, (exactly uniform with the dresses) royal 4to. half morocco, top edges gilt, £12. 12s STRUTT'S SYLVABRITANNICAetSCOTICA, or Portraits of Forest Trees distinguished for their Antiquity, Magnitude, or Beauty, compris- ing 50 verii large and highlii finished painter's etchings, impl. folio, hf. morocco extra, gilt edges, (pub. at £9. 9s) reduced to £4. 10s 1826 i Proof Impressions on India Paper, hf. morocco extra, gilt edges, (pub. at £15. 15.s) reduced to £7. 17s 6(/ 1 STUBBS' anatomy of the HORSE. 24 fine [ large cepper-plate engravings, impl. folio, in bds. ; with leather back, (pub. at £4. 4s) reduced to ; £l.lls6(i . 1766 The original edition of this fine old work, which is indispensable to artists. It has Ion:; been eonsi^lered | rare. i TAYLOR'S HISTORY of the FINE ARTS in GREAT BRITAIN, 2 vols, post Qvo. uooa- \ cuts, c/ot/i, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 9s 1841 I "The beet view of the stale of modern art." I United States Gazette, j TOD'S ANNALS and ANTIQUITIES or U.AJA- i ST'HAN, or the Central and Western Rajjioot ! States of India (commonly called llajpootana). By Lieut.-ColouelJames Tod, many years resi- dent in Rajpootana as Political Agent, 2 vols. impl. 4to. embellished with above 50 eitremely beautiful line engravings by Finden, and capital large folding maps ; extra cloth bds. (pub. nt £9. 9s) reduced to £6. 6s . 1829-32 - the same, with Proof Impressions of the Plates on India paper, (pub. at £15. 15i) redicedto£7. llsGd VISCONTI, Musee Pie-Clementin,7 rojs,— Mus6e Chiaramonti, 1 vol. — Iconogra[)hie (irecque et Romainn, ou Portraits authentiipies des Empe- reurs, Rois, et lloiiiines lilusires do I'Antiquit^, 4 vols. — together 12 vols. 8vo. conlaining up- wards of 1000 plates of higlily intereUing subjects, neatly engraied in outline; hf. btl. uncut, (itah. nt £20.) reduced to £5. 15s Ud MiUm, 1818-26 WATTS'S PSALMS and HYMNS, Im.u.strated F.DiTioN coinjilete, with Indexes of " Subjects,'' " first lines,'' and a Table of Scriptures, 8vo. printed in a very large and beautiful tj'pe, ew tiidlished with 24 beautiful icnodruts by Martin, IVestall, and others ; elegantly bound in gilt cloth, (j)ub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s 6(/ tlie same, embossed roan, gill edges, 10s the same, morocco, elegantly gilt, 16s WHISTON'S JOSEPHUS— Illustrated Editio.v OF, complete ; containing both the Antiquities and the Warsofthe Jews. 2 vols. 8vo handsomely printed, embellished with 52 beautiful icood en- gravings, by various Artists, cloth bds. elegantltf gilt, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 14s 1845 WIGHTWICK'S PALACE of ARCHITEC- TURE, a Romance of Art and History, impl. 8vo. loith 211 illustrations, steel plates and wood- cuts, cloth, (pub. at £2. 12s 6d) reduced to £1.55 1840 the same, impl. 8vo. India Proofs, cloth, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £2. 2j the same, mor. extra, reduced to £2. 12s ( Intended as a popular Introduction toall the varieties of Architecture. WILD'S ARCHITECTURAL GRANDEUR of Belgium, Germany, and France, 24 ^ne p/ates by Le Keui, &;c. impl. 4to. hf. morocco, (pub. at £1. 18s) reduced to 18s 1837 WILD'S FOREIGN CATHEDRALS, 12 plates, impl. folio, coloured and mounted like drawings, in a handsome portfolio, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £5. 5s WILD'S CATHEDRAL of WORCESTER, its Architecture, Ornament, and Sculpture, 12 highly finished line engravings, impl. 4to. (pub. at £3. 3s) bds. reduced to 14s WILLIA.MS' VIEWS in GREECE, 64 beautiful line engravings by Miller, Horsburgh, and others, 2 vols. impl. 8vo. If. bd morocco extra, gilt edges, (pub. at £6. 6s) reduced to £2. 12s 6d 1829 . or 2 vols, in 1, ivhole 7norocco, super extra, gilt edges, reduced to £2. 16s India Proofs, 2 vols, royal 4to. i?i 12 parts, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £5. 5s the same, 2 vols, royal 4to. elegantly hf. bd. morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £12. 12s) re- duced to £5. 15s (Sd the same, 2 vols, in 1, royal 4to. whole morocco, richly gilt, reduced to £6. 6s WOODS ARCHITECTURAL ANTIQUITIES AND RUINS OF PALMYRA AND BALBEC, 2 vols, in 1, imperial folio, containing l\0 fine copper-plate engravings, some very large and fold- in", half morocco, uncut, (pub. at £7. 7s) reduced to"'£3. 13s Gr/ . 1827 YOSY'S COSTUME of SWITZERLAND, 50 plates, beauiijullti coloured, 2 vols, super-royal Qvo.gilt cloth, (pub. at £:i. 13s 6(/) reduced to £l.8i . 1815 the same, 2 vols, ia 1, stout 8vo. half morocco, richly gilt back and gilt edges, (pub. at £4.) reduced to £1. 13i 12 BOOKS ON THE FINE ARTS, ARCHITECTURE, ETC. ADDITIONS. BECKER (G. G.) AUGUSTEUM ; ou Descrip- tions des Monumens Antiques qui se trouvent a Dresde, 3 vols, folio, 144 beautiful plates of the celebrated collection of Statues in the Dresden Gallery, half morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £21.) reduced to £10. 10s Leipzig, 1804-12 CATHERWOOD'S VIEWS OF ANCIENT MONUMENTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA, CHIAPAS, AND YUCATAN, royal folio, containing 25 beautiful lithographic drawings, with letter-press descriptions, Map of Central America, and illuminated title page, half morocco, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £3. 13s 6d 1 844 CORNWALL. — An Illustrated Itinerary of THE County of Cornwall, including Historical and Descriptive Accounts, with Statistical Re- lations, by Cyrus Redding, impl. 8vo. illustrated by \\8 beautiful engravings on steel and wood by Landells, Hinchcliffe, Jackson, Williams, Sly, etc. after Drawings bii Creswick and Sargent, half morocco, cloth sides, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 8s 1842 For sublime scenery, and picturesque antiquities, Cornwall is undoubtedly the most interebling County in England. " In the popular form of a tour, tins deliglittully gossiping work lends ns along from town to village, from cromlech to abbey, through the most remarkable English county, 3niii|iliU' insect in a decree or perfection that leaves imtlimj; to be desired." — Sir James E. Smith. Thi< new edition is exquisitely coloured, and must rank high anioni; the luvurious piiblii-alions of the age. Its literary and scieniific excellence is in keeping with its attractive appearance. " A few years as;o, a new edition, with impressions from the orlj^inal plates, was published under the edito- rial care of Mr. West wood, by Mr. Henry Rohn the Bookseller. It is not easy to speaU of this edillon in terms of too high commendation. The colonrinj, exe- cuted froin the original drawin'^s, under the superinten- dence of one of the ablest entomoloijical artists of the day, is faithful to nature, and owini; to the fineness of the paper and a particular process to which it has been snhjected, possesses a lustre and beauty which were unattainable at the time when the orii^inal edition appeared. The text has been in a e;reat measure re- written ; ample and accurate descriptions introduced ; the modern nomenclature applied, .ind the intricicic of synonomy unravelled ; indexes and much original matter added, and the whole work adapted to ihe present advanced slate of science." — .Vtr IV. Jardine. EVELYN'S SYLVA and TERRA, a Discourse of Forest Trees, and the I'ropagation of Timber Trees, with an Historical Account of the Sacredness and Use of Standing Groves ; to wl)ich is added, the Terha, a Philosophical Discourse of Earth ; with Life of the Author, and Notes by Dr. A. Hunisr, 2 vols, royal 4to. Jifth improved edition, wilh 46 plates, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £5. bs) reduced to £2 . . 1825 "The Sylva is by far the most important of Mr. Evelyn's writings, and has obtained tiie warmest ap- probation both of the philosophic inquirer and the practical cultivator." — Brilith Critic. FLEMING'S (Dr. John) HISTORY of BRITISH ANIMALS, exhibiting the Descriptive Cha- racter and Systematical Arrangement of the Genera and Species of Quadrupeds, Birds, Reptiles, Fishes, MoUusca, and Radiata of the United Kingdom ; including the Indigenous, Extirpated, and Extinct kinds, together with Periodical and Occasional Visitants, second edition, thick 8vo. extra cloth, (pub, at IBs) reduced to 6j . 1842 This compendious Synopsis of British Zoology is referred to as high authority by Natnralists. GEOLOGIST, being a Record of the recent Inves- tigations in Geology, Mineralogy, &c. both English and Foreign, by Charles Moxon, Esq. 2 vols. 8vo. coloured plates, cloth, (pub. at £1.) reduced to 7s 6rf . 1842-3 GORE'S (.Mrs.) ROSE FANCIER'S MANUAL, being a popular Treatise on the Culture and Propagation of Roses; including Notices and Specific Characters of 2500 varieties ; their Geography, History, Use.", &c. jiosf 8vo. n!((/i cotoitri'd jhmtiipiece, cloth hds. (pub. at 10s lid) rt^diiced to 4s GREVILLE'S CRYPTOGAMIC FLORA, com- prising the Principal .Species found in Great Britain, inclusive ot all tiie New Species re- jently discovered in Scoil;ind,6 vols, royal 8vo. 360 heantifitltu coloured plates, iifotli] hulj hnuiid, morocco, (pub. at £16. 16.v) reduced to £8 8s 18-23-8 This, thou'^h a coinplcre Wnrk in iiscll, forni- an AI.MOSI IMiiSPENSABI.K SlIPFU' « t.VT TO THlilHIKTY- SIX VOLUMES Of Sow EUBV'S Km:LISI1 Ki.TA N > . W HICH Luis xor coMPR Hr.v i> Ck v I'i^oamloi"? I'i.- \t«. It i~ OIII' •.( II. f (,., .Cirlllllli' .mil lll'-l < A I,:, .1 .<..!. ks on Ihdiirviioi.- Ko.i.y vi ,.i..ilirrfii m ih, i,j "A truly adiniiable woik, whiili iiiaj hu humstly clesij^nateil as so excellent, that nothing can be lound to AGRICULTURE, ETC. 15 compete witli it in the whole range of Indigenon* U(it:iny; whether we consider the iinporlaiice of ila ctiti.al discnssiims, the accuracy i>( llic driwiuKs, Ihe iniunieM.-s ,,1 the analyses, or The nniisu^d care which is e\ ident in the publishing depaitmenl. Afierexpresi- iii;; lliis opini.io, we are sure the work will need no further recommendation with llie public." Loudon'n Gardener's Mugasine. HALL'S (Dr. J. C.) INTERESTING FACTS of TiiK ANIMAL KINGDOM, with some Pvemarks onthe Unity of our S])ecies, 8vo. with eiisriivings on steel, some coloured, cloth, (pub. at 8.S 6d) reduced to 4.s 6d . 1841 HARRIS'S AURELIAN ; a Natural History of English !\lotlis and Butterflies, together with the riants on whioli they feed ; also a faithful Account of their respective Changes, their usual haunts when in the winged state, and their standard Ntnnes as established by the Society ot Aurelians ; new and greultu improved edition^ containing a complete Modern Nomenclature of all the Species figured in the work, and further Accounts of their Economy, by .1. O. West- wood, Esq.F.L.S. etc. in 1 vol. sin. folio, with 44 plates, containing above 400 Jigares of Moths, Bntterjiies, Caterpillars, etc. and the Plants on which they feed, exquisitely coloured after the original drawings, half bound 7norocco, £4. 4s 1840 This extremely beautiful work is the only one which contains onr English Moths and Butterflies of the full natural size, in all their changes of Caterpillar, Chry- salis, &c. with the plants on which they feed. HAVELL'S COLLECTION oi FIGURES of the BII8DS OF PARADISE, folio, contaitiing 23 extremely beautifully coloured plates, sewed in stiff covers, lettered in gold, (pub. at £4. 14s 6d) re- duced to £l. 16s HOGG'S PRACTICAL TREATISE on the Cul- tureof the Carnation, Pink, Auricula, Polyan- thus, Tulip, Hyacinth, Rose, and other Flowers, with a Dissertation on Soils and Manures, and Catalogues of esteemed Varieties, fcap. 8vo. sixth edition, coloured plates, extra cloth (pub. at 8s) reduced to 4s 6d 1839 HOOKER AND GRE VILLE, ICONES FILICUM. OR FIGURES AND DESCRIPTIONS op FERNS, many of which have been altogether unnoticed by Botanists, or have not been cor- rectly figured, 2 vols. {oUo, with 240 beautifully coloured plates, half bound green morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £25. 4s) reduced to £12, 12s 1829-31 The grandest and most valuable of the many scien- tific works produced by Sir William Hooker. EXOTIC FLOR.\, containing Figures and Descriptions of Rare, or otherwise interesting Exotic Plants, especially of such as are deservin"- of bningcuLTiVATED IN OUR Gardens; together with Remarks upon their Generic and Specific Characters, Natural Orders, History, Culture, Time of Flowering, etc. complete in 3 vols. im[)l. 8vo. containing 232 large and beautifully coloured plates, extra cloth, gilt batids, (pub. at £15 ) reduced to £6. 6s 1823-1827 the same, elegantly half bound, green morocco^ gilt edges, £6. 16s 6d This is tlie most superb and attractive of all Dr. HiMikei's valuable works. " I'lie Esoiic Flora by Dr. Hooker is like that or all the Bjtaiiical publications of the indefatigable auilmr, evn!lint ; and it assumes an appearance of finish and III \^lllch neither the Botanical Magazine uor Kegister can exteraally lay claim."— Z/Ot/aon. 16 NATURAL HISTORY, HOOKER'S (Sir Wm.) MUSCI EXOTICI ; or I Figures and Descriptions of new or little known ] Foreign Mosses, and other Cryptogamic Sub- ■. jects, 2 vols. 8vo. ndptutes, cloth bds. lettered, (pub.at£4. 4s)reduced to £1. lis 6d 1818-20 ■ the same, with the plates beautifully coloured, cloth lettered, (pub. at £8. 8s) reduced to £3. 3s BOTANICAL MISCELLANY; contain- ing Figures and Descriptions of Plants, which recommend themselves by their novelty, rarity, or history, or by the uses to which they are applied in the Arts, in Medicine, and in Do- mestic Economy, together with occasional Botanical Notices and information, including many valuable Communications from distin- guished Scientific Travellers ; complete in 9 parts, forming 3 thick vols, royal 8vo. with 153 plates, many finely coloured, gilt cloth, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £2. I2s 6d 1830-33 BRITISH JUNGERMANNI^, containing Figures of all the Species in both their natural and magnified size, with Microscopical Analysis of the parts, 4to. 88 plates, {without any other letter-press than a list of the plates) cloth lettered, £l.Us6d — — the same, with the plates beautifully COLOURED, 4to. cloth lettered, £3. 3s — JOURNAL OF BOTANY, containing Figures and Descriptions of such Plants as recommend themselves by their Novelty, Rarity, or His- tory, or by the uses to which they are applied in the Arts, in Medicine, and in Domestic Eco- nomy; together with occasional Botanical Notices and Information, and occasional Por- traits and Memoirs of eminent Botanists ; 4 vols. Bvo. numerous plates, some coloured, cloth lettered, (pub. at £3.) reduced to £1. 1834-42 The following are a feio of the original Papers contained in these volume* .v— Guiana Schombnrgk'a Plants. Hooker's Flora of Van Dieraen's Laud. Ii^gg'> Classical Plants of Sicily. Walker's Tour in Ceylon. Hooker and Aruott's Flora of Soutli America and tbe Pacific. Wight's Botanical Let- ters from India. AiMott on South African Plants. Martius on the Botany of Biitzi: Smith on the Genera of Ferns. Benlhani on Mimoseie. Systematic Cataliigue of Ferns in the Philippine Islands, &c. Edgewonh's Account of the Sikh States. Account of Mr. Druni- inond's CoUi'ciions. Lindley 's Catalogue of Cum- ing's OrchideiK. Jack's Malayan Plants. FLORA BOREALI-AMERICANA ; or the Botany of British North America ; compiled principally from the Plants collected by Dr. Richardson and Mr. Drummond on the late Northern Expeditions, under the command of Captain Sir John Franklin ; to which are added, by permission of the Horticultural Society, those of Mr. Douglas and other Naturalists, illustrated by 240 plates, complete in 12 parts, roy.4to.(pub.at £12. Pis) reduced to£8. 1829-40 the same, the 12 parts complete, done up in 2 vols, royal 4to. eitracloth,£ii. HOPE'S (Rev. W.) COLEOPTERIST'S MA- NUAL, the Predaceous Land and Water ^ \Jeetles, 8vo. beautifully coloured pLites, cloth, (pub. at 10s 6ci) reduced to 7s 1845 HUISH ON BEES ; their NATURAL HISTORY AND GENERAL MANAGEMENT; new and greatly i.Mi'RovED EDITION, Containing AGRICULTURE, ETC. latest Discoveries and Improvements in every Department of the Apiary, with a Description of the most approved Hives now in use, thick 12mo. portrait and numerous woodcuts, extra cloth gilt, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 6s 6d 1844 " We have read the work of Mr. Hnish with very great pleasure. He, indeed, claims cap, gown, and chair, as Regius Professor of Apiarian Science, and demolishes in every page one or other of 'the erode and fallacious statements of Huber.' His work is most exact, and contains much solid information. We feel the healthier and happier for meeting with such a book. The repose of the forest walk is ou it, and tbe fragrans. summer meadow breathes through its pages ; and we forget the hot pavement, the glaring lights, the loud voices of London -with - the - many -sins, in which Charles Lamb delighted." — Athenceum. JARDINE'S NATURALIST'S LIBRARY, 40 vols. 1 2mo. co/ourcd plates, cloth lettered, {puh. at 6s per vol.) reduced to 5s 1834-43 1. Humming Birds, Vol. 1. 2. Monkeys. 3. Humming Birds, Vol 2. 4. Lions, Tigois, &c. 5. Poaciicks, PheasantSj&c. 6. Birds of llie Game kind. 7. Fishes, Vol. 1. 8. Ci>leopterous Insects (Beetles.) 9. Columbidie (Pigeons.) 10. Britisli Diurnal Lepi- (loplera (Buiierllies.) 11. Ruminating Animals (lleer, Antelopes, &c.) 12. Ruininaling Animals (Goats, Sheep, Cattle, &c.) 13. Pachidermata (Ele- jilianis. Rhinoceroses, &c.) 14. British Nocturnal Le- pidoptera (Moths, Sphinxes, £cc.) 15. Parrots. Ifi. Whales. 17. Birds of Western Africa, Vol.1. 19. Birds of Western Africa, Vol. 2. 20. British Birds, Vol. I. 21. Fly Catchers. 22. British Quadrupeds. 23. Amphibious Carnivora (Walrus, Seals, &c.) 24. British Birds, Vol. 2. •25. Dogs, Vol. 1. 20. Honey Bees. 27. Fishes, Vol.2. 28. Dogs, Vol. 2. 29. Introduction to Ento- mology. 30. Marsvpialia, orPonched Animals, 31. Horses. 32. Fishes of Guiana,Vol. 1. 33. Foreign Moths, 34. British Birds, Vol. 3. 35. Introduction to Mam' malia. 3G. Son Birds. 37. British Fishes, Vol, 1, 38. Fishes of Guiana.Vol, 3. 39. British Fishes, Vol. 2. 40. British Birds, Vol. 4. 18, Foreign Butterflies. JARDINE AND SELBY'S ILLUSTRATIONS of ' ORNITHOLOGY, royal 4to. New Series, (forming a 4th vol, of the entire work), 53 fine coloured plates, with letter-press descriptions; half bound morocco, £2. 2s 1836-43 KIRBY'S (Rev. W.) ENTOMOLOGIA BO- REALI-AMERICANA, or Natural History of the Insects of North America, more espe- cially tlie Provinces under the dominion of Great Britain, containing Descriptions of the Objects collected in the late Northern Expedi- tions under the command of Captain Sir John Franklin ; completed by an enumeration of all those taken in the Arctic Regions by Captains Parry, Sir John Ros=s, and Back ; as well as those described by Otho Fabricius, in his " Fauna Grocnlandica ;" 4to. with nearly 70 beautifully coloured figures of rare insects, extra cloth Ms. £1. 4s 1837 LAMARCK'S CONCHOLOGY, containing a com- plete Translation of his Descriptions of both tlie recent and Fossil Genera, illustrated by nearly 400 accurate Figures of Shells drawn by J. Mawe, edited by E. A. Croi'ch, royal 4to. extra cloth 6(Zs. (pub. at £1. llsGtZ) reduced tol0s6t/ . 11527 the same, with the plates beautifully GOI.OURED, elegantly bound in gilt c/ot/i, (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to £1. Us 6d NATURAL HISTORY, AGRICULTURE, ETC. 17 LATHAM'S GENERAL HISTORY of BIRDS, being the Natural History and Description of all the Birds (above four thousand) hitlierto known or described by Naturalists, with the Synonymes of preceding Writers ; the second enlarged and improved edition, compreliending all the discoveries in Ornithology subsequent to the former publication, and a Cieneral Index, 11 vols, in 10, 4to. with upwards o/'200 coloured plates, cloth lettered, (pub. at £26. 8s) reduced to £7. 17s 6d Winchester, 1821-28 the same, with the i'lati;s i;xquisitely COLOURED, LIKE DRAWINGS, 11 vols. in 10, ele- gantly hf. bd. green morocco, gilt edges, £12. \'2s The Iiukx sold separately, price 10s. 0(1. in bils. Thts celebrated work was publislied at tweiity-five gaineas in boards, with tlie plates coloured in the ordi- nary manner. The present bound copies are all co- loured LIKK HIGHLY-FINISHED DRAWINGS, \villi Studious accuracy, under the direction of several emi- nent Ornithologists. Copies coloured in this manner by Miss Stone, similar in execution but interior in ac- curacy to liie present, have been sold as high as from fifty to one hundred guineas at the sales of Col. Stanley, Jolin Dent, Esq. and Sir Mark Sykes. " No authentic works on Natural History ever ob- tained so nnicb celebrity as those of our venerable countryman Dr. Latham. His General History of Birds is undoubtedly the most useful and valuable work of its class, that has yet appeared, as it contains exact scieiititic descriptions of every bird known at the time." — Neville Wood. LE KEUX'S ILLUSTRATIONS OF NATURAL HISTORY, embracing a Series of Engravings, and descriptive Accounts of the most interest- ing and popular Genera and Species of the Ani- mal World, 8vo. ivilh 114c/ei'er steel engravings by Le Keux, Daniell, Landseer, and others, extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 9s LEWIN'S NATURAL HISTORY of the BIRDS OF NEW SOUTH WALES, collected, en- graved, and faithfully painted after Nature by John William Levvin, late of Paramatta, New South Wales ; third greatly improved edition, •with an Index of the Scientific Names and Synonymes by Mr. Gould and Mr. Eyton, folio, with 27 plates, beautifnlly coloured, neatly hf. bd. morocco, (pub. at £4, 4s) reduced to £2. 2s . 1838 " Admirable figures, full of truth and nature; accom- companied by valuable observations on the liabits and economy of the birds." — Xwainson. " According to the first ornitliologisis of the day, these plates are of permanent value." — Wood. LINDLEY'S BRITISH FRUITS; or Figures and Descriptions of the most Important Varieties of Fruit cultivated in Great Britain, 3 vols, royal 8vo. containing 152 most beautiJuUu coloured plates, chiefly by Mrs. Withers, Artist to the Horti- cultural Society, elegantly hf. bd. green morocco citro,^i/t edges, (pub, at £10. 10s) reduced to £5. 5s . 1841 This is ?.n exqaisitely beautiful work. Every plate is like a highly finished drawing, similar to those in the Horticultural Transactions. LOUDON and WESTWOOD'S TREATISE on INSECTS INJURIOUS to GARDENS, Forests, and Farms, translated from the Ger- man of Kbilar, illustrated by GO woodcuts, fcap. 8vo. eitra cloth (pub. at 7s) reduced to 4s 1840 LOUDON'S (Mrs.) ENTERTAINING NATU- RALIST, being Popular Descriptions, Tales, and Anecdotes of more than Five Ilundred Animals, comprehending all the Quadrupeds, Birds, Fishes, Reptiles, Insects, &c. of which a knowledge is indispensable in Polite Education; with Indexes of Scientific and Popular Names, au explanation of Terms, and an Apjieiidix of Fabulous Animals, illustrated by upwards of 400 beautiful woodcuts by Bewick, Harvey, Whimper, and others, new edition, revised, eidarged, and corrected to the present state of Zoological Knowledge, in 1 thick vol. post 8vo. elegantly bound in gilt cloth, Is iid 1843 the same, in morocco extra, 12s This new and handsome edition is likely to become the most popular work of the! kind, having been con- siderably enlarged and improved both in text ani plates. MACGILLIVRAY'S DESCRIPTIONS of the RAPACIOUS BIRDS of GREAT BRI- TAIN, post 8vo. plates, and numerous fine wood- cuts, cloth ^i/t,(i)ub. at 9s) reduced to 3« 6a! 1836 HISTORY OF THE MOLLUSCOUS and CIRRIPEDAL ANIMALS of SCOTLAND, as found in the North-Eastern District, particu- larly in the Shires of Aberdeen, Kincardine, Banff, &c. second editioji, fcap. 8vo. gilt cloth, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 1844 MAIN'S (.Tas.) VILLAGE and COTTAGE FLO- RISTS' DIRECTORY, particularly the Ma- nagement of the best Stage, Bed, and Border Flowers usually cultivated in Britain; second edition, fcap. 8vo, extra cloth hds. (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s . 1835 MANTELL'S (Dr.) NEW GEOLOGICAL WORK — The Medals of Creation, or First Lessons in Geology, and in the Study of Or- ganic Remains ; including Geological Excur- sions to the Isle of Sheppy, Brighton, Lewes, Tilgate Forest, Charawood Forest, Faringdou, Swindon, Calne, Bath, Bristol, Clifton, Mat- lock, Crich Hill, &c. by Gideon Algernon Man- tell, Esq. L.L.D., F.R.S., &c. 2 thick vols, fcap. 8vo. with coloured plates, and several hun- dred beautiful woodcuts of Fossil Remains, cloth, elegantly gilt, £\.\s 1844 WONDERS of GEOLOGY, or a Familiar Exposition of Geological Phenomena, new edi- tion, illustrated by a beautiful frontispiece by John Martin, coloured plates, and upwards of 150 wood- cuts, 2 vols. fcap. 8vo. eitra cloth, 16s FOSSILS OF THE SOUTH DOWNS, or illus- trations of the Geology of Sussex, royal 4to. 42 plates, cloth bds. (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to £2. 2s . 1822 MARTIN'S (P. I.) GEOLOGICAL MEMOIR on A PART of WESTERN SUSSEX, with some Observations upon Chalk-Basins, the Weald- Denudation and Outliers-by-Protrusion, 4to. letrge map and coloured plates, cloth hds. (pub. at £1.) reduced to 12s . 1828 MINSTRELSY OF the WOODS, or Sketches and Songs connected with the Natural History of some of the most interesting British and Foreign Birds, (by Miss Waring, of Selborne), post 8vo. with 17 coloured plates of Birds, green cloth, richly gilt, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 6s 1832 MUDIE'S (ROBT.) HISTORY of BRITISH BIRDS, or the Feathered Tribes of the British Islands, 2 vols. 8vo. ne^u edition, the plates beau- tifully coloured, extra cloth gilt, (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 16s . ^ 1835 " This is, without any exception, the most truly charming work kindred spiiit) in the first few numbers of Iii4 rielit pleasant London Journal. The descriptions of Bewick, Penniint, Lewin, MontaKU, and even Wilson, will not for an instant stand comparison with the spirit- stirring enianaiioiis of Mudie's 'living pen," as it lias been called. We are not acquainted with any author who so felicitously unites beauty of style with strength and nerveof expression— he does not specify, he paints." ffood's Ornitlwlogical Guide. " The ' Feathered Tribes' is indeed an exquisite WORK, and unquestionably the best that has yet ap- peared on the habits of our native birds, in that it is scarcely second to those of Wilson and Audubon. Mudie is the most accurate observer of nature,— Selby ex- cepted, and he treats not exclusively of habits— conse- quently the ' Feathered Tribes' deserves a distinguished place on the shelves of the philosophic ornithologist." Ornithologist' s Text Book. MURCHISON'S SILURIAN SYSTEM, founded on Geological Researches, in the Counties of Salop, Hereford, Radnor, Montgomery, Caer- marthen, Brecon, Pembroke, Monmouth, Glou- cester, Worcester, and Stafford ; with Descrip- tions of the Coal Fields and Overlying Forma- tions, illustrated bv Jive large Geolngicnl Maps, coloured to represent the various Strata, 166 plates of Fossils, and fine wood cuts, 2 vols, royal 4to. (pub. at £8. 85) reduced to £6. 6s 1839 Of this extremely valuable work but very few Copies remain for sale. The large Map in this splendid work alone cost Fifteen Hundred Pounds. PARKINSON'S ORGANIC REMAINS OF A FORMER WORLD, or Examination of the Mineralized Remains of the Animals and Vegetables of the Antediluvian World, 3 vols. 4to. 54 coloured plates, by Sowerby, cloth (pub. at £10. 10s) reduced to £4. 4s 1833 This is the best Atlas of Geological Specimens ever published, and forms a most desirable adjunct to the Elementary Works of Lycll, Mantell. and others. INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF FOSSIL ORGANIC REMAINS; especially those found in the British Strata, intended to aid the Student in his Inquiries respecting the Nature of Fossils, and their Connexion with the Formation of the Earth, 3rd edition, 8vo. illustrated Ini 220 Fossil Specimens, extra cloth bds. (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s 6d PHILLIPS'S COMPANION to the ORCHARD ; an Historical and Botanical Account of Fruits known in Great Britain, with the most approved methods of Cultivating them, new edition, much enlarged, 8vo. three plates, extra cloth, (pub. at 10s 6(0 reduced to 3s 6fi 1831 PURSH'S FLORA AMERICA SEPTENTRIO- N.ALIS ; or a Systematic Arrangement aud Description of the Plants of North America ; containing, besides what have been described by preceding Authors, many new and rare spe- cies, collected during twelve years travel and residence in that country, 2 vols. 8vo. with 24 plates, cloth, (pub. at £1. 16s) reduced to 14j 1814 thesame, with the plates beautifully coloured, cloth, (pub. at £2. 12.'i 6(0 reduced to £1. Is KEDOUTE, LES ROSES, 3 vols. 8vo. containing 184 extremely beautiful coloured plates; ele- gantly hf. bd. morocco exti'„, full gilt backs, gili ed^es, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £6. 0$ Paris, 1835 One of the dost beautiful works of its kind ever executed. The names arc given in various languages, but the letter-press is French. To those who wish to have English descriptions, Mrs. Gore's Rose Fancier's Manual will be found a very complete and satisfactory book of relcreuce. AGRICULTURE, ETC. RICHARDSON'S FAUNA BOREALI- AMERICANA, or ZOOLOGY of NORTH AMERICA, containing Descriptions of the Subjects collected in the late Northern Expe- ditions under the command of Captain Sir John Franklin, by John Richardsov, M.D., Wm. Swainson, Esq., and the Rev. Wm. KiRBY, published under the Authority of the Right Hon. the Secretary of State for Colonial Affairs, with numerous beautifully coloured plates, 4 vols. 4to. cloth, (pub. at £9. 9s) reduced to £5, 15s 6d The following may be had separately . Vol. 2. Birds, by Swainson, 50 coloured plates, cloth, (pub. at £4. 4s) reduced to £2. 2s 3. Fishes, by Richardson, coloured plates, £1. 4s 4. Insects, by Kirby, coloured plates, £1. 4s RICHARDSON'S GEOLOGY FOR BEGINNERS, comprising a familiar Explanation of Geo- logy and its associate Sciences, Mineralogy, Physical Geology, Fossil Conchology, Fossil Botany, and PalMontology ; including Direc- tions for forming Collections, &c. by G. F. Richardson, F.G.S., (formerly with Dr. Man- tell, now of the British Museum,) secortd edi- tion, considerably enlarged and improved, one thick vol. post 8vo. illustrated by upwards of 260 woodcuts, cloth lettered, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 7s 6d . 1846 This easy and popular introduction comprises about as much matter as two ordinary Svos. 'I'lie fust edi- tion was sold off in one twelvemonth. ROBERTS'S (MARY) CONCHOLOGIST'S COMPANION, fcap. Svo. coloured frontispiece and woodcuts, extra cloth bds. (pub. at 6s 6'i) reduced to 4s . 1834 SEA-SIDE COMPANION, or IMarine Natural History, fcap. 8vo. with beautiful wood- cuts by Baxter, extra cloth bds. (pub. at 6s 6d) reduced to 3s 6d 1835 "This is just such a book a« the curious in natural history ought to have with them in their rambles ou the sea-side." — Sunday Times. " Scientific and amusing. The history of the Corals, Hydras, and Sponges, is neatly and accurately given." Gent.'t Mag. SELBY'S COMPLETE BRITISH ORNI- THOLOGY, A MOST MAGNIFICENT WORK OF THE FIGURES of BRITISH BIRDS, containing exact and faithful repre- sentations in their full natural size, of all the known species found in Great Britain, 383 Figures in 228 beautifully coloured plates, 2 vols, elephant folio, ei«gant/i/ ^/. bd. morocco, full gilt back and gilt edges, with gUtied paper to the plates, (published at £105.) reduced to £31. lOs 1834 The grandest work on Ornithology published in this country, the same for British Birds that Audubon's is for the birds of America. Every figure, excepting in a »ery few instances of extremely large birds, is of the full natural size, beautifully and accurately drawn, with all the spirit of life. " Every lindividual of the Falcon and Owl Families would make A PEttPucT picture ov itself, so beau- tifully and correctly are they executed: they have CERTAINLY NEVER BEEN EQUALLED EVEN BY GoULD AND AuDOBON." — Ornithologist' I Text Book. The author has been most successful, especially in the larger birds, and it would be impossible to improve on any of the Raplores, which for fidelity, boldness, and spirit, are unequalled — every feather is distinct, yet beautifully blended." Wood's Ornithological Guide. " What a splendid work I This is the kind of orua- in«n of pas! nirntnl furniture, in wliiih we, uere foriiinc, wiiiild , luiiiiiiiir.-, .mil (IraNving-rimins .sliiiuUI tr.'iin — nil, ijot [;r":iii — Iml smile, witli Miit.ilily-boiinil Miliiniis (if Naliir.il lli>ti'rj, mi the o|i<-mii;; dl' .my one ii( whieli, Udiilil siiild. iily t^'"" belmo 113 foiiie rieli :iiiil r.iie, .■«iiiie bri-jlil iiiiil beaiilediis, some wuiKlerliil aiiil \\ilil, smiie strange and laiiia.-lie, 8oiiie flerre ami tniible, mine imiuite i>r inii;lity piodiicliiin 111' tbe jjieat iiiuilier— Natiiie. \Vlial a ireasiire, (or Instance, diirliii; a rainy ImeniKni in the rinmliy, is sntli a iiloriuiisly ilhinnnaied work as this of Mr. 8elby. It is, Willi. nil iloiiDt, llie iiio.st splendid of llie kinil evei pulilislied in Biilain, and will stand a coni- p.iiiMiii, witluMit any eclipse of its Inairc, with tlic nlusl inr.Kiiirieeni ornillioloi;ical illnstialions of llic Freneh scliool. Mr. Selliy lias Ion;: and deservedly ranked Ili^li as a seientilic nalnralisl." lilacliwood'a Magazine. SELBY'S ILLUSTRATIONS of BRITISH ORNITHOLOGY, '2 voIs.8vo. Second Kdition, in bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 12s lB33 — — tbe same, lif. bii. green morocco gilt edges, to match the folio voluina of plates, £1, Is Tliis is tlie most complete Scientific manual of Urilish Oriiitliology ye' published. livery known Jirilish Bird i> cniiineraled, witb an ample description of il» plnmaKe, habits, etc., the scientific as well as familiar names i;iven by dirtercnt Naturalists, and references to all those who have fij;ured it. " SkI.IIY's is the most masterly WoR.'t THAT HAS EVER APrr.ARKU oX 1HE BlRDS OF BRITAIN, ANL IS »Jl'ITE INUlSrE.NSABLE TO EVF.RY ORNITHOLOGIST." Orniiholoyist' s Text Book. SIBTHORPS FLORA GR^CA, the most Costly and RIagnificent Botanical work ever published, 10 vols, folio, with 1000 beauti- fully coLounED PLATES, half bound morocco, I publishing fci/ Subscription, and the number strictly limited to those subscribed for, (pub. at j£252) roduced to £63. Separate prospectuses of this work are now ready for delivery. Only forty copies of the original stock exists. No greater number of subscribers' names can therefore be received. The Adrertiser has also the pleasure of offering, on terms similarly advantageous, the following letter- press work in 8vo. which is a desirable adjunct to thefoUo, as it contains a description of all known plants belonging to the Flora GrcEca, whether fgured in the folio work or not. FLOR.E GB.Ai.CAL PRODROMUS. Sive Rlantarum omnium Enumeratio, quas in Provinciis aut Insulis Graeciae invenit Joh. SiBTHOup r Characteres et Synonyma omnium cum Annotationibus Jac. Edv. Smith, four parts in 2 thick vols. 8vo. (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to 14s Londini, 1816 SOWERBY'S MANUAL of CONCHOLOGY, contaiiiiiifr a complete Introduction to the Sciencp, iilustrati^d by upwards of 650 Figures OF Shells, etched on Copper-plates, in which the most characteristic examples are given of all the Genera established up to the present time, arranged in Lauiarckian Order, accom- panied by copious explanations ; observations respecting the geographical or geological dis- tribution of each ; tabular views of the Systems of Lamarck and De Blainville ; a Glos.sary of technical terms, &:c. &c. new edition, con- siderably enlakged and improved, with numerous wood-cuts in the TEXT, now first .ADDED, 8vo. cloth, £1. 5s 1842 the same, coloured plates, gilt cloth, £2. 5s This is the only work which, in a moderate com- pass, gives a comprehensive view of Conchology, ac- cording to the present advanced state of the science. It will not only be found aieful to all who wish to acquire an elementary acquaintance with the subject, bat alM to tbe proficient, as a book of reference. NATURAL HISTORY, AGRICULTURE, ETC. 19 SOWEUr.Y'S CONCIIOLOGICAL ILLUSTRA- TIONS, or CoLouiiED Figures of all thb III iiiERTO UNriouRED Shei.ls, complete in 20O jiarts, 8vo. comprising several lhou>:iuid fif^ures of ahells, all beautifnUij coloured, (pub. at £15.) reduced to £7. iOs . 1841-45 SPRY'S BRITISH COLEOPTERA DE- LINEATEU, containing Figures and De- scriptions of all the Genera of British Beetles, edited by Sliuckard, 8vo. with 94 plates, com- prising 638 fgurcs of Beetles, beautifully and most accurately drauii ; cloth Itttered, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. Is 1840 The most perfect work yet published in this depart- ment of Britisli EntomoloKy. SWAINSON'S EXOTIC CONCHOLOGY, or Figures and Descriptions of Rare, Beautiful, or Undescribed Shells, with new Letter-press Descriptions, royal 4to. containing 94 large and BEAUTIFULLY COLOURED FIGURES OF SllELLS, elegantly half bound morncco, gilt edges, (pub. at £5. 5s)' reduced to £2. 12s 6d " Many of the most rare and beantiful species of this singularly elegant genus (the Volutes), have been fignred by Swaiiison in his Exotic Concholoyy, with a verisimilitude that has never been equalled, and pro I bably never will be excelled, by any artist. This talent comijir.ed with his scientific knowledge as a naturalist, must render the above work the most eminent of its kind in the country." — Dubois. ORNriHOLOGICAL DRAWINGS, being figures of the rarer, and most interesting Birds OF Brazil. Complete in 7 parts, royal 8vo CONTAINING SEVENTV-EIGliT BEAUTIFULLY CO LOURED PLATES, elegantly half bound morocco, in one volume, (pub. at £3. 13s 6d) reduced to £2. 5i This exceedingly beantiful work is in very few even of the most complete ornithological libraries, as only 175 copies were printed, and Mr. Swaiuson relused to sell any excepting to those who had originally sub- scribed for them. " A splendid work, in every respect worthy of it* Author. Farther coinmendalion we fetl would be supertlaous." — Loudon. ZOOLOGICAL ILLUSTRATIONS, or Original Figures and Descript.vUS of New, Rare, or Interesting Animals, selected chiefly from the Classes of Ornithology, Entomology, and Conchology, and arranged on the Prin- ciples of Cuvier and other JNIodern Zoologists, BOTH SERIES COMPLETE, 6 vols. Toyal 8vo. Con- taining 318 FINELY COLOURED PLATES, nCatly half bound morocco, gilt edges, (pub. at £16. 16s) reduced to £9. 9s This highly esteemed publication has long been considered very scarce. " It might, perhaps, almost be deemed presumption to offer any remarks on a work emanating from the pen and pencil of, undoubtedly, the first Ornithologist of the day, but we feel it our duty to give our readers some idea of the contents of the Zoological Illustra- tions. It will be sufficient, if we mention that bis coloured figures of birds are almost unequalled — they are certainly not surpassed. The figures are beyond conception lovely and delicate, and it only remains for ns to remark, that every Philosophic Ornitho- logist MUST POSSESS THE ZOOLOGICAL IlLOSTKA- TIONS, IP INDEED THKY ABB NOW TO BE HAD." If ^ood's Ornithnloqist's Text Book, SWEET'S FLORA AUSTRALASICA, or a Selec- tion of Handsome or Curious Plants, Natives of New Holland, and the South Sea Islands. 15Nos. forming one vol. royal 8vo. complete, with 56 beautifully coloured plates, eitra cloth, (pub. at £3. 15s; reduced to £1. 16s 1827-28 " This department of exotic vegetation is one of the highest interest ; it belongs to the opposite part of the globe, and has an aspect of siugnlarity and beatuy 20 NATURAL HISTORY, Seculiar to itself. The greatest part of the plants which [r. Sweet describes consist of ever-green free-flower- | ing shrabs, handsome in every stage of their growth ; sometimes siognlar in foliage; generally elegant in form ; curiously rich, beautiful, or brilliant, when in flower; and the flowers in many cases are highly odori- ferous. These, together with their being so hardy as not to require fire heat, and at the same time being singular and rare, are circnmstances which place them in the highest class of greenhou&e or conservatory plants." — Loudon. SWEET'S CISTINEiE; or NATURAL ORDER OF CISTUS, OR ROCK ROSE, 30 Nos. forming one vol. royal 8vo. complete, xiaiih 112 beautifully coloured plates, extra cloth, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £2. 12* 6d 1828 One of the most interesting, and hitherto the scarcest of Mr. Sweet's beautiful publications. BRITISH WARBLERS, containing an Ac- count of British Singing Birds, 'with Direc- tions for their Treatment, new edition, es- LARGED, rojal 870. illustrated by 16 beautifully coloured plates, extra cloth gilt, 1846 WAKEFIELD'S (Priscilla) INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. Eleventh Edition, vdth conside- rable Additions, and an Introduction to the Natural Arrangements of Plants, post 8vo. with 10 plates, containing 216 figures beautifully COLOURED ; extra cloth, (pub. at 8<) reduced to 5s 1841 WALLICH, Plants Asiaticae Rariores, 12 parts, impl. folio, 300 most beautifully coloured plates, (pub. at £36.) reduced to £25. Sets completed at the same rate. WESTWOOD'S ENTOMOLOGIST'S TEXT- BOOK, an Introduction to the Natural History, Structure, Physiology, and Classification of Insects, including the Crustacea and Arachnida, fcap. 8vo. several hundred wood-cuts, and plates ; elegantly bound in gilt cloth, (pub. at 6s 6d) reduced to 4s . 1838 the same, %i)ith the plates coloured, gilt cloth, (pub. at 8s 6d) reduced to 5» AGRICULTURE, ETC. WHITE'S (Gilbert) NATURAL HISTORi' o? SELBORNE, trith Observations on various Parts of Nature, and the Naturalist's Calendar. New Edition, with Additions, by Sir W. Jar- dine, 18mo. many prcUy wood-cuis of birds by Branston, extra cloth boards, (pub. at 8s 6d) re- duced to 2s 6(i . 1836 the same, with the plates beautifullv co- loured, 18mo. gilt cloth, (pub. at 7s) reduced to 5s "An excellent edition of the most fascinating piece of rural writing, and sound English philosopliy, that ever issued from the press." — AtheniEum. WILSON AND BONAPARTE'S AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGY, or the Natural History of the Birds of the United States, edited by Jameson, 4 vols. 18mo. cloth boards, (pub. at 14s) reduced to 8s 1831 WITHERING'S ARRANGEMENT of BRITISH PLANTS, according to the latest Improve- ments of the Linnean System ; with an easy Introduction to the Study of Botany, 4 vols. . 8vo. plates, last edition, cloth, (pub. at £2. 16s) reduced to £ 1.4s . 1830 WOOD'S GENERAL CONCHOLOGY, or a Description of Shells, arranged according to the Linnsean System, illustraied by 60 plates, containing 2G0fgures of Univalves and Bivalves, beautifully coloured, royal 8vo. elegantly half bound morocco, (pub. at £3. lOi) reduced to £1. 10s OR LARGE PAPER, impl. 8vo. (pub. at £4. 18s) reduced to £2. 2s WOODVILLE'S MEDICAL BOTANY, 5 vols. 4to. — See Medical Books. ADDITIONS. BATEMAN'SORCHIDACE.E of MEXICO amp GUATEMALA, comi>lete in 8 parts, elephant folio, 40 magnificent plates, beautifully coloured, the letter-press embeUiihed by splendid woodcuts, sewed, (pub. at £16. 16s^ reduced to £12. 12s 1837-43 Tills is without question the greatest botanical work of the present age. Mr. Bate:nan lias got it up per- fectly regardless of e.tpense, and would be a consider- able loser even had the edition been published at double the price. Only one hundred copies were printed, which were all subscribed for. WOOD'S INDEX ENTOMOLOGICUS; or a complete Illustrated Catalogue of the Lepidop- terous Insects of Great Britain, in 1 vol. 8vo. 54 plates, comprising 1945 coloured figures of Butterflies, Sphinges, and Moths, cloth boards, (pub. at £8. 2s) reduced to £5. 15s 6d 1839 LINDLEY'S LADIES' BOTANY; or a Familiar Introduction to the Study of the Natural Sys- tem of Botany, new edition, 12mo. tvith nume- rous woodcuts, elegantly bound in cloth, with gilt hack and sides, (pub. at 12$) reduced to 7s 1841 . the same, with the plates coloured, extra gilt cloth, 12s ile'dicine, ^urfieii>> ^Inatomj), €i)tmi^tv^, W)\}^io\ou\], tit. ABERNETHY'S SURGICAL and PHYSIO- i LOGICAL WORKS, with a Memoir, 4 vols. 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £2. 5s 6d) reduced j to 165 . 1830 Cor>/«j<».— Constitutional Origin and Treatment of local Diseases ;AneuriMus; Diseases resembling Sypliilis, anti Diseases of tlie Urellira; Injuries of the Head; Tumotir9;Lnnibar AbfCesses; Lectures on Surgery; I'liy- siological Lectures, &c. &c. BARTON AND CASTLE'S BRITISH FLORA I MEDICA, or History of the Medicinal Plants , of Great Britain, 2 vols. 8vo. illustrated b\j upwards of 200 Jinely coloured Jigures of plants, extra cloth, (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to £1. 16s 1845 An exceedingly cheap, elegant, and valuable work, necessary to every medical practitioner. BATEMAN and WILLAN'S DELINEATIONS OF CUTANEOUS DISEASES, exhibiting the Characteristic Appearance of the principal Ge- nera and Species, 4to. containing 12 plates, beau- fidly and very accurately coloured under the super- inte7idence of an eminent PrnfeisionaL Gentleman, {Vr. Carsxcell) hf. hd. morocco extra, top edges gilt, (pub. at £12. 12s) reduced to £5. 5s 1840 " Dr. Bateman's valuable work has done more to extend the knowledge of cutaneous diseases than any other that has ever appeared." — Vr. A. T. Thompson. BELL'S (Sm Charles) ILLUSTRATIONS of the GREAT OPERATIONS OF SURGERY, Trepan, Hernia, Amputation, Aneurism, and Lithotomy, folio, with 20 coloured plates, hf, bd. morocco, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £1. 10s 1821 BOSTOCK'S (Dr.) SYSTEM OF PHYSIOLOGY, comprising a complete View of the present state of the Science, including an Account of all the most important Facts, and Observations, and Analyses of the principal Theories and Hy- potheses, 4th edition, revised and corrected throughout, complete in 1 thick closely printed volume, 8vo. (900 pages), extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1.) reduced to 8s . 1844 BURN'S (Dr. John) PRINCIPLES OF SUR- GERY, containing the Doctrine and Practice relating to Inflammation and its various Conse- quences, Tumours, Aneurisms, Wounds, and the States connected with them ; the Surgical Anatomy of the Human Body, and its appli- cation to Injuries and Operations, 2 vols, done up in one stout vol. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 7s 6d . 1838 This is a capital wore. The author is Regius Professor of Surgery in the University of Glasgow, and one of the most eminent Surgeons of the present day. His esteemed work on the Principles of Midwifery ba> already passed through nine editions. CASTLE'S ESSAY ON POISONS, embracing their Symptoms, Treatment, Tests, and Morbid Appearances ; to which are added, the Means for Treating Cases of Suspended Animation, 7th edition, 24mo. with 21 coloured plates, extra cloth, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 4s 6d 1845 CELSUS DE MEDICINA, edited by E. Mn- Lie AN, M.D. cum Indice copiosissimo ex edit. Targae, editio secunda, tliick Qvo. printed in a large type, frontispiece, extra cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 9s . Ediid). 1831 This 15 THE VERY REST EDITION OF CeLSUS. It contains critical and medical iiotus, applicable to the practice of this contitry ; a parallel Table of ancient and modern Medical ttriiis, synonymes, weights, measures, &c. and, indeed, every ihiug wliicli can be useful to the Medical Student; together with a singular ly exten- sive Index. CELSUS, Latin and English, iNTEiiLiNEAn, with " Ordo" and the Latin Text beneath, for the Examination of Candidates at Apothecaries' Hall, and other Public Boards ; with an Ex- planatory Introduction by Venables, 2nd edi- tion, greatly enlarged and improved, 12mo. extra cloth, lettered, (pub. at 10s 6(/) reduced to 5s . 1837 " In this edition the elliptical constructions are com- pleted by supplying liie suppressed words, shewing the relations and concords of the ditfercut words with each other. It also contains an Introdnctiou explanatory of the more obscure and ditTicnlt grammatical construo- tious, and rules for reducing to the English parallels and equivalents." CONOLLY'S (Dr. ofHamvell Lunatic Asylum) IN- QUIRY CONCERNING the INDICA- TIONS OF INSANITY, with Suggestions for the better Protection and Cure of the Insane, 8vo. cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 5s 1830 " We have no hesitation in declaring this to be one of the most able and satisfactory works on the philu- sophy, or rather the physiology, of the luiiiian under- standing, which has been hitherto produced. Dr. Co- nolly has done for this branch of science what Dr. Arnott has done for physics; he has produced a werk which will have an honourable place in the aunals of medicine, while it reflects great lustre on tlio splendid institution to which he belongs." Medical and Surgical Journal, COOPER'S (Sir Astley) ANATOMY and SUR- GICAL TREATMENT of HERNIA; new and complete edition, impl. 8vo. 26 plates, cloth, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to£l. Is 1844 The original edition of this valuable work, pHblished at £5. 5?. is now very scarce, and not to be had at any price. The present contains the whole. COOPER'S (Bransby) SURGICAL ESSAYS, the Result of Clinical Observations made at Guy's Hospital, royal 8vo. tvith several fnely coloured plates, bds. (pub. at 15s) reduced to 7s 6d 1843 A collection of Hospital cases, systematically ar- ranged, with their mode of treatment. DICK (Dr) ON the DERANGEMENTS or the ORGANS OF DIGESTION, 2nd edition, en- larged, post 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 7s 6- * . 1814-28 or LA lie K PAPin, 6 vol.«. royal 4to. (pub. at £27. Gi) cli'ih hds. reduced to £8. 8s Vols. .') to (i of eillier size may be hail separately at the same rate. A most valuable and important work. It routaius all llie materials of any imporlance collected by ihe author (luring fifty-five yearn, from the age of seven- teen lo f^eveniy-two, being a Ioniser life .'pciit in llie pursuit than most men en^^aged in scientific invediga- tions have enjoyed. HOPE'S PRINCIPLES and ILLUSTRATIONS OF aiORBID ANATOMY, being a com- plete Series of Coloured Drawings, from origi- nals by tlie Author; with Descriptions, Cases, I Symptoms, Treatment, &c. royal 8vo. with 48 ] higltln finished coloured plates, containing 260 i accurate Delineations of Cases in every known varieti) of Uisease, in extra cloth, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £3. 3s . 1834 " Tlic want of a complete series of Illustrations of Morbid Anatomy, in a form so compact and economi- cal as to be generally accessible, has hitherto been peculiarly fill. " The engravings admirably delineate the morbid changes caused by disease. The colouring of each figure is the result of minute and careful attention ; there is nothing oveidrawn ; no indiscrinjinale heighten- ing to produce effect. The imnien«e tield troin which Dr. Hope has the opportunity of gleaning a rich bArvest as physician loan institution where so many lick and aged are assembled, produces fruits worthy of l)i> talents and ioduilry."— Medical aiyi Surgical Jturnal. JENNER'S (Dr., the Discoverer of Vaccination) LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE, with 11- lustrations of his Doctrines, by John Baron, M.D.,F.R.S., &c. 2 thick vols. Qvo. with two Portraits, extra cloth boards, (pub. at £1.4i) reduced to 7s 6ti " To medical men these volumes will be very valuable, as illustrations of Ihe history of one of the greatest discoveries in their science." LAWRENCE'S (W.) TREATISE on the DIS- EASES Of the eye, Third Edition, revised, corrected, and enlarged. One thick volume, 8vo. (820 closely printed pages) extra cloth boards, (pub. at. £1. 4s) reduced to lOs 6d 1844 The most courREHBNsivB book on the sub- ject, BY ONK OP THE ABLEST AND MOST PHILOSOPHI- CAL OP OUR PRACTISING SuRCKONS. The Cases and opinions published by preceding writers, especially Mackenzie, Middlrmoiib, Guthrie, Travers, Saunders, and other modern German and French practitioners are extensively cited and examined, anith numerous cnpper plates and teood-cuts of Machinery and Chemical Apparatus, extra cloth hoards, (pub. at 18>) reduced to 5j . 1841 The popularity of these es.iaya i* universally known ; they were formerly printed in Ti small vols. RUDIMENTS of CHEMISTRY. New edition in the press, postSvo. uni/i plates RASPAIL'S NEW SYSTEM of ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, translated from tlie French, with Notes and Additions by Dr. Henderson, Bvo. mafiy plates, cloth lettered, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 6* . 1 843 SMITH AND HORNER'S ANATOMICAL ATLAS, illustrative of the Structure of the Human Body, under the supervision of the Pro- fessor of Anatomy in the University of Penn- sylvania, etc. impl. 8vo.contaiTii>i^ 636 beautifully executed wood engravings, extra cloth, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. 8i . 1845 This is the molt compendious and complete Anatomical Alias evt-r published. " The present work has been selected from the most acrnratr anatcimical works of Kngland, France, Italy, and Geniiaiiy, and includes the latest microsoopical obxTvaliiins on the Analomy of the Fissures. Where plates wire not deemed satisfactory, it has been enriched by original drawiuj;s, from specimens furnished by the beautiiul Anatomical Museum of the University." SINCLAIR'S (Sir John) CODE op HEALTH AND LONGEVITY; or, a General View of the Rules and Principles calculated for the Preserv.ntion of Health, and the Attainment of Long Life, sixth edition, conijilete in 1 thick vol. 8vo, portrait, (pub. at £!•) reduced to Is 1844 This new and con)pacl edition contains the whole of tne prfvious four voluuits, with fucli improvements as CHEMISTRY, PHYSIOLOGY, ETC. q:^ the advanced slate of knowledge supi)lirs. Dr-. Raillii', BccUloes, Currie, Spreni;cl, ami oihi r rniinrni l'li\- sicians have warndy eulo^i/.ed the »ork; hiii the l'>-t testimony of its iisetidnesi is ihe aiUlidrS own l()in;<\ iiy, as he was enabled to carry on his literary |iui.suil» at Ihe advanced aue of einli'y- STUBBS' ANATOMY of tiie HOUSE, including a particular Description of the Bones, (.'arti lages. Muscles, I'liscias, Ligaments, Nerves, Arteries, Veins, and (ilands, illustrated by 24 fne large copper plate engi-avings, ali, diiawn FiioM NAi UKii, imp. folio, in hoards, with leather fcocA, (pub. at £4. 4s) reduced to £1. Ils6(i TAYLOR'S MEDICAL .JURISPRUDENCE, in- terspersed with a copious selection of curious and instructive cases at Coroner's Inquests, with an Analysis of the lei^al and medical Opinions delivered there, 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 15s) reduced to 5.« 1843 TYRRELL on the DISEASES of the EYE, being a Practical Work on their Treatment, Medically, Topically, and by Operation, by F. Tyrrell, Senior Surgeon to the Royal London Ophthal- mic Hospital, 2 thick vols. 8vo. illustrated by nine plates, containing upwards of 60 Jinely coloured figures, extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 16s) reduced to £1. Is . 1840 WOODVILLE'S MEDICAL BOTANY, third EDITION, ENLARGED BV SiR W. JaCKSON HooKER, 5 vols. 4to. with 310 plates, engraved by Sowerby, most carefullx) coloured, half bound morocco, uncut, (pub. at £10. 10s) reduced to £5. 6j 1832 the Fifth, or Supplementary volume, entirely by Sir W. J. Hooker, to complete the old editions, 4to. 36 coloured plates, boards, (pub. at £2. 12$ 6d) reduced to £1. lis No well-siored English Library should be withont Woodville's Medical Botany.a work of long-established repntaiion, and the best on a subject which must, more or less, he interesting to every man of inquiry. It contains accurate figures and descriptions of all Ihe plants u.. but is equally suitable to Diudorff's, recently pnblislied at Oxford, in 2 vols. 8vo. - the same, with Dindorff's edition of the Greek Text, forming together a complete variorum edition of Aristophanes, 5 vols, in 4, 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £2. 16s) reduced to £1. 10s ARISTOPHANES' PLUTUS and the FROGS, literally translated into English Prose, with copious Notes, Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 6s 6d Oxford, Talboys, 1822 BIRDS, translated from the Greek, with copious Notes, by the Rev. H. F. Carv, (translator of Dante) 8vo. extra cloth hds. (pub. at 9s 6(i) reduced to 3s . 1824 " Mr. Gary has rendered the Birds of Aristophanes into Enulish with a spirit that will not discn-dit cvin that admirable translator of VdiilK."— Quarterly lie- view. ARISTOTLE'S RHETORIC, literally translated from the Greek, with Notes ; to which is added, an Analysis of Aristotle's Rhetoric, by Thomas Hobbes, of Walmesbury, and a Series of L Analytical Questions, 8vo. second edition, S very much improved, extra c/of/i, (jiub. at 14.v) reduced to 10s 6d Oxford, Talhoys, 1B33 ATLASES.— WILKINSON'S CLASSICAL and SCRIPTURAL ATLAS, with Historical and Chronological Tables, iinpl. 4to. new and iin- jmwed edition, 1842, 53 maps, coloured^ If. bd. morocco, (pub. at £2. 4s) reduced to £1. lis 6d This is the most cotnprehensive Classical Atlas of llie present day, containing about double the number of Maps of any other, and on a lar<;er scale. It haslongand deservedly enjoyed the highest repu- tation, and should be in the hands of every Siudciii, as well as in every Library. The Tabula Chkonologic/e are peculiar to this Atlas, and bein;; exireinely uselul, as well as ingenious, give it a great superiority over its contemporaries. WILKINSON'S GENERAL ATLAS, new and improved edition (1842), with all the Rail-roads inserted. Population according to the last Census, Parliamentary Returns, &:c. impl. 4to. 46 maps, coloured, hf. hd. mm-occo' cloih sides, (j)ub. at £1. lus) reduced to £1. 5' 'J'his work is uniform in size with the Classical Atlasi and is very distinctly enfjraved, and on a larger scale than anv other of the modern portable Atlases. BARLTTPS ITALIAN-ENGLISH and ENG- LISH-ITALIAN DICTIONARY, new edi- tion, corrected and enlarged by Thompson, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, £\. 6s 1839 BENTLEY'S (Riciiaiid) WORKS, containing Dissertations upon the Epistles of Phalaris, Theraistocles, Socrates, Euripides, and the Fables of ^sop ; Epistola ad Jo. Millium; Sermons, Boyle Lecture ; Remarks on Free- thinking; Critical W^orks, \c. Edited, with copious Indices and Notes, by the Rev. Alfx- ANDEit Dyce, 3 vols. 8vo. a beautifully printed edition, in extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 18s) reduced to £1. Is . 1836-38 " The greatest of English Critics. Grsvius and Spanliciin pronounced him the star of British Litera- ture."— Hallam." the same, tree-marbled calf extra, for college prizes, £1. 16s BIBLIA HEBRAICA, ex edit. Vander Hoocht, recognovit J. d'Allemand, very thick 8vo. handsnmelii printed, bound in cloth, (pub. at £1. 5s) reduced to 15s Lond. Duncan, 1840 BOS ELLIPSES GREC^E, ex editione Schaefer, cura Weiske, cum Hermanni Diss, de Ellipsi, &c. thick Bvo. cloth lettered (pub. at 18s) reduced to 4s 6d . 1825 CiESARIS OPERA, cum Notis Variorum et Oberlini, 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 16s) reduced tc 4s C(i . Lond. 1825 CHRONOLOGICALTABLES OFUNIVERSAL HISTORY (called "the OXFORD CHRO- NOLOGICAL TABLES"), from the earliest Period to the present Time ; in which all the great Events, Civil, Religious, Scientific, and Literary, of the various Nations of the World are placed, at one view, under the eye of the Reader, in a Series of i-arallel cousins, so ns to exhibit the state of the whole Civilized World at any epoch, and at the same time form a CONTINUOUS CHAIN OF HiSTOUv, with Genea- logical Tables of all the principal Dynasties. Complete in 3 Sections, viz. : — I. Ancient His- tory. II. Middle Ages. III. Modern History. With a most co.mplete Index to the entire WORK, folio, hf. bd. morocco, lettered on back and sides, (pub. at £1. 16s) reduced to £1. Is Oxford, Talhoys, 1835-39 The above is also sold, separately, as fullows: — THE MIDDLE AGES AND MODERN HISTORY, 2 parts in 1. folio. If. bd. morocco, (pub. at £1. 2s 6f/) reduced to ISs MODERN H18T0RV, folio, scim/, (pub. at 12.s) reduced to 8s This comprehensive and beautifully exiiuled volume is one of the must arduous and cekbralcd under- 26 FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE, COLLEGE BOOKS, ETC. tiikingi produced by the enterprising publisher, and itsanKieties are said to have shortened his days. It was compiled with the utmost care and re-earch, Irom the best works ou the subject, both English and Foreign ; includin<: those of Bredow, Le Sage, Lavoisne, Hase, Heehen, Dumbeck, and Vehse ; collaled and verified with Usher, Blair, Hale, Bell, Fynes Clinton, etc. etc. At any period Irom the Deluge to the present day, the reader may at one view ace the Political, Ec -lesiastical, Scientific, and Literary state of the whole woild ; every opening being divided into numerous columns according to the nations then in existence, and each column being devoted to a concise Chronological History of that nation. /( is accompanied by very full Genealogical Tables, and a most elaborate Index, by which the reader is enabled in a moment to turn to the date and particulars of every principal event in the history of the world. A more desirable book for library reference, or for school or colle<;e use. can hardly be conceived. It is vastly superior to all former manuals of Chronology. CICERO'S LIFE, bv IMiddleton ; LiiTxEns to SEVERAL OF HIS FrIENDS, BY MelMOTO ; LET- TERS TO Atticus, by Heberdkn, complete in one thick vol. impl. 8vo. portrait, cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 12i' Moxon, 1841 the same, bound iu calf, gilt, (for college prizes) (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced tc ' ^• " This book is a library. The whole Corpus of Tully. What a fund of genius, «liat eloquence, wnat feeling, is contained in the»e eight hundred pages.'— Literary Gazette. CICERO'S OFFICES, translated with Notes px- plaining the Method and Meanin^r of the Author, by Thomas Cockman, D.D, 12mo. extra cloth, (pub. at 5s 6d) reduced to 4s Oxford, Talbovs, 1834 CICERONIS EPISTOL^ AD ATTICUM, with English Notes, by a Master of Arts, 2 vols, small 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 14s) reduced to 's . Ca«M 840 CICERO. NOT^ VARIORUM IN CICERO- NEM, cura Oliveti, ad edit. Ernesti accommo- datae. (An extensive and valuable collection of explanatory Notes to Cicero, suited to Emesti's and all other editions), 3 vols. 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to 10s 6d — the same, large paper, 3 vols, royal 8 vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to 13s 6d COPLESTON (EPISC.) PR^LECTIONES ACADEMICS, OXONII HABITS; editio altera, 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 15s) re- duced to 7s 6d . Oxon. 1828 " Tlie elegant and masterly Prcelectiones of Mr. Copleston, delivered by him as Professor of Poetry at Oxford, are, we presnme, already in the hands of our readers." — Museum Vriticum. "I am most anxious that the ' young man' should peruse, as I am sure he will do with oleasure and profit, the pages of Dr. Copleston's Prtelscliones Academica, in which many of the beauties of the Classic Poets are brought forward with the most felicitous eflect." — Dibdin. CORPUS POETARUM LATINORUM, edidit G. S. Walker, complete in one very thick volume, royal 8vo. doth, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to 18s . 134Q This comprehensive volume contains a library of the poetical Latin classics, correctly printed from the best texts, viz. Catullus, TibuUus. Propcrtius, Lucretius, Virgil, Ovid, Horace, Phaedrni, Lucan, Persius, Juvenal, Martial, Siilpicia, Slatius, Silim Itahcu' Valerius Flaeo,r>, Calpiirnius Siculus, Ausonius, Claudian. the same, plain rtuna, marbled edPtt, (for College prises) £1. 4i o \j CRAMER AND WICKHAM'S DISSERTATION ON THE PASSAGE OF HANNIBAL OVER THE ALPS, founded on actual Survey, second edition, 8vo. maps, extra cloth bds. (pub. at 9s 6d) reduced to 4s . 1828 " A scholar-like work of first rate ability. The ingenious authors have collected and arranged, with great industry and perspicuity, the materials furnished by their predecessors." — Edinburgh Revieiv. DAMMII LEXICON GR/ECUM, IIOMERI- CUM ET PINDARICUM, cura Duncan, royal 4to. new edition, printed on fine paper, extra cloth ids. (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £1. Ijl 1842 " An excellent work ; the merits of which have been universally acknowledged by literary characters.''— „, , 2Jr. Dibdin. Ihe most valuable help for reading ilomer and Pindar which a classical scholar can desire; not a single fact, or word, or grammatical construction, is left unexplained. Before this republication, which ii put into alphabeiical order, and much in?proved, the work used to sell lor ten guineas and upwards, and was then bought up eagerly. the same, veri; neat in plain riissla, for coUce prizes, (pub. at £6.; reduced to £1. 1 Is 6d DAWES, MISCELLANEA CRinCA, curavit Kidd, 8vo. cloth, last edition, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 5s 1827' EURIPIDES' FOUR PLAYS, (viz. Hecuba, Orestes, Phq;niss«, and Medea,) literally, translated into English Prose, from the Text of Porson, with Notes, 8vo. extra c/ot/i, (pub. at 8s) reduced to 4s 6d Oxford, Talhous, 1836 HIPPOLYTUS AND ALCESTIS, "literally, translated into English Prose, from the Text of Monk, 8vo. sd. 3s fid ,7, I834 1 FREYTAGII LEXICON ARABICO-LATIN UM ! in usum Tyronum, thick 4to. cloth bds. leather backs, (pub. at. £2. 5s) reduced to £l. lis 6d Halce, 1830-38 ! GAELIC-ENGLISH and ENGLISH-GAELIC: DICTIONARY, with Examples, Phrases, and I Etymological Remarks, by two Members of I the Highland Society, complete in one thick vol. 8vo. new edition, containing many more words than the quarto edition, extra cloth, (pub. at £1 . Is) reduced to 12s ]845 1 " We wish well to this Gaelic Dictionary it is ' very neatly printed ; and tfs accuracy is vouched for by the respectable names of its editors. Dr. M'Leo(l of ■ Carapsie, and Dr. Dewar of Glasgow— two gentlemen who are imbued with classical as well as Celtic literature, and whose names might reasonably uive currency to a work of more pretension than "the present."— .Spec/afor. GREEK GOSPELS, (THE FOUR) with the Roots in the Margin, by Charles Iloole ; to which are added English Notes, philological and explanatory, for the use of Schools, post 8vo (pub. at 5s) c/o(/i, 3s 6roved Plan, by Dr. J. Reid, 8vo. cloih,(pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 5s Gksg. 1821 FORKIGN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE, COLLEGE BOOKS, ETC. 11 LAMARTINE, SOUVENIRS, Iniiirt«ssion». Pen- sees et Pnysajros, jieiulaiit uii VOYAGE eu ()RIF.NT,1832-lB33,oii Notes (run Voyap;eur, Seconde Edition, 2 vols. fcap. 8vo. (i/it) JliWi/i SEDERICI LEXICON GR.ECO-LATINUM, cum iN'otis Larclieri, etc. t/ie /asf irade edition, edited by Dr. Blomfield, Bi'. of London, 4to. cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 14s) reduced to 125 . 1825 Hbekun's Wouks — See Miscellaneous. HERODOTUS, Three Books (Clio, Euterpe, and Thalia) in Greek, from Bekker's Text, with English Notes, Critical and Explanatory, by John Edwards, M.A., Head Master of Bury School, thick 8vo. elegantly printed, extra cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s 1840 -GARY'S (Rev. IL) GREEK and ENG- LISH LEXICON TO HERODOTUS, adapted to the Text of Gaisford and Baehr, and all other editions, 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 8s . 1843 HERMANN'S MANUALOFTHE POLITICAL ANTIQUITIES OF GREECE, historically considered, translated from the German, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 15s) reduced to lOs H(/ 0.iford,rulhoy., \8Z6 " Hermann s Mainial of Gri'ik Antiqiiilii-!- is nll.^l \mparUml."—Thirlu'airs Hist, of Greece, vul. i. p. 44:i. '• We Irnst tliis book will be iiioi-t (Ijliutnlly slnilied ; our schools have too long iienlfcltil llie Mihsidiariis— we tniglit say, the cfseiilials of history; liMohers have loaded Ihe memory wilh lacls, iiisle.id or sioiiiij; the mind with principles. Such a uoik i^ a proof of the rapid advance made by coiiliiieiital scholars in developing the trne philosophy of history ; II (liiecls attention from the facts of revolutions to their causes ; it shews that the fortunes of nations, as will as individuals, are determined by their liabils of llionght and action ; and it examines with equal in- dustry and skill Ihe principal circumstances that formed or modified those habits in the most important of ancient nations." — JthentEum. HORACE, literally translated into English Prose, foiXvlassical Students, on improved principles, by the Rev. 11, P. Haughton, fcap. 8vo. eitrn cloth, (pub. at 8s) reduced to 4s 1844 " In this translation the original is rendered word for word ; and wherever a word of the ori;^inaI i( lendered by two or more words, they are connected. The renderins;s are as far as possible the derivatives from the orii;inal ; all ellipses necessary to the sense and grammatical construction are supplied in italics; and wherever Ihe translation is, from its verbal or derivative cliaracler, obscure, it is explained ; whilst the whole is accompanied by explanatory and critical noies." HORATII OPERA, recensuit et illustravit F. G. Doering, in 1 thick vol. 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 10s 6d JAMIESON'S HERMES SCYTHICUS ; or the Radical Affinities of the Greek and Latin Languages to the Gothic : with a Dissertation on the Historical Proofs of the Scythian Origin of the Greeks, 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s Ed. 1814 " An excellent and valuable work." — Lowndfs. JUVENAL AND PERSIUS, translated into Eng- lish Verse by Gifford, 2 vols. 8vo. eitra cloth bds, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 10s 6d KUINOEL. CO„IMENTARIUS IN NOVI TESTAMENT! LIBROS HISTORICOS, 3 vols. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 1G>) reduced to 12s . Loud. 1835 This may be used as an annotated edition of the Historical Books of the New Testaineni, the Greek Text being at the top of the pane, wilh the elaborate _^ Commentary beneath, like the Varionini Editions. " One of the best philological Commentaries on the New Testament. To each book are prefixed well- compiled Prolegomena, in which the author's lite, the authenticity of hia nariative, the time, place, and the laogaage in which he wrote, as well as bis style and aurnar ot wriliog, are fully discussed," — Hornt. miijis, extra cloth bds. (pub. at 1 2s) reduced to 6v6ci . 1B38 •,* TTii* U an admirable reading-book for Sludenlt in the French lanyuaye, and may tafely be recom- mended to Schools. " The Voyage en Orient is written in a marvellous style— simple, elegant, and, at times, sublime— a style of a thousand characters, a thousand varying physi- ognomies, and a thousand sparkling hues. It ii • shower of gems and perfumes."— JuLES JaMN (in Atheneeum.) LARCH ER'S NOTES ON HERODOTUS. New- Edition, with Corrections and Additions by \V. D. Cooley, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, £1. 4» 1844 LAYTOCK'S PORTUGUESE GRAMMAR, compiled from ViEYiiA and the best Sources; ior the use of Englishmen studying that Tongue without the help of a Master, to which is added a copious Mercantile Vocabulary, together with sundry Commercial Letters, fcap. 8vo. shee]), (pub. at Ws) reduced to 3s Qd 1841 FABULASAPRAZIVEIS e INSTRUCTI- VAS, para uso das pessoas que se consagrao ao estudo da Lingoa Portugueza, fcap. 8vo. hf. bd. (pub. at 4s) reduced to 2s 1329 LEE'S HEBREW GRAMMAR, compiled from the best Authorities, and principally from Oriental Sources, designed for the Use of Students in the Universities. New Edition, enriched with much original matter. Sixth Thousand, 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 8s Lond. Duncan, 1844 HEBREW, CHALDEE, AND ENGLISH LEXICON, compiled from the best Authori- ties, Oriental and European, Jewish and Christian, including Buxtorf, Taylou, Pahk- nuRST, and Gesenids; containing all the Words, with their Inflections, Idiomatic Usages, etc. found in the Hebrew and Chaldee Text of the Old Testament ; with numerous corrections of former Lexicographers and Commentators, followed by an English Index, in 1 thick vol. 8vo. Third Thousand, stronglif bound in cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 5s) reduced to 15s Lond. Duncan, 1844 The Rev. Dr. Lee, author of the two preceding works, is Ihe present Regius I'aoFESsort op Hebrew in the University of Ca.mbridgk, and one of the most remarkable and accomplished Linguisis in Europe. His principles are strictly High Church, which give his Lexicon, independent of its great literary merit, a recommendation to our Established Clerny, not pos- sessed by any other of the present day. The work of Gesenius abounds with the Uationaljsins of th« Ger- man school. LEMPRIERE'S CLASSICAL DICTIONARY, ]\IiNiATUnF. Ediiion, containing a full Ac- count of all the Proper Names mentioned in Ancient Authors, and much useful information respecting the uses and habits of the CJreeks and Romans, new and complete edition, KI.IGANTLY PniNTFI) IN PEAnL TVl'E, ill One very thick vol. 18mo. cloth Uttered, (pub. at 7s iU) reduced to 4s &d 1845 the same, vertj neotlu hound in embossed roan (pub. at 8s) reduced to 5s This elegant and portable edition contains as madk aslbeSvo. and i> corrected to the present ftale ot knowledge. LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE, COLLEGE BOOKS, ETC. 28 FOREIGN LEMPRIERE.— A COLLECTION OF SUP- PLEMENTS TO ALL EDITIONS of LEMPRIERE'S CLASSICAL DICTION- ARY, more especially to the enlarged one by Professor Anthon, containing — I. Sillig's Dic- tionary of the Artists of Antiquity, and Pliny's Books on tlie Fine Arts. — II. Payne Knight's Inquiry into tlie Symbolical Language of Antient Art and Mythology. — III. Barker's Fifteen Supplements and Indices, comprising various Chronological Tables and Dissertations; Tables of Ancient Pleasures, Weights, and Monies ; Classical Names in tlie Apocrypha and Testament ; Geographical and other In- dices, etc. etc. One closely printed vol. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 6s Valpy, 1837 A volume which must always be useful to scholars and classical students, LEIBNITII OPERA PHILOSOPIIICA, qufe extant Latina, Gallica, Germanica, Omnia ; edidit Erdmann, in 1 tliick volume, impl. Bvo. portrait, sewed, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 16s Berolini, 1840 LIVII HISTORIA,exrecensione DRAKENBOR- CHII et KREYSSIG ; Annotationes Cre- viERii, Strothii, Ruperti, Raschig, Nie- BUHRii, Waciismuthii, et suas addidit Travers Twiss, J. C. B. Coll. Univ. Oxon. Socius et Tutor. Cum ludice amplissimo. 4 vols. 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 18s) reduced to £1. 8s . Oxford, 1841 This is the best and most useful edition of Livy ever published in octavo, and is preferred at all our uni- versities and classical schools. It is most carefully edited by Dr. Twiss, from the text of Drakenborch, as revised by Kreyssig, by the collation of some im- portant Manuscripts from the Bamberg and Vienna libraries, accompanied by an admirable selection of the most useful and explanatory notes of Crevier, Stroth, Ruperti, Raschig, and others, and the critical animadversions by Niebuhr, Wachsmutb, and other late German philologers. LIVY'S HISTORY OF ROME, Books XXI to XXX. inclusive, literally translated, with Ex- planatory Notes, 2 vols, in 1, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 10s 6d Oxford, Talboys, 1828 MENDHAM. PALEOTTI IlISTORIA ACT^ CONCILII TRIDENTINI, an. 1562 et 1563, cum aliis multis circa dictum Concilium, thick 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to7s6(i . 1842 INDEX LIBRORUM PROHIBITORUM A SIXTO V. PAPA, confectus et publicatus : ad vero a successoribus ejus in sede Romana suppressus, ed. Jos. Mendbam, 4to. cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 8s . 1835 MIGNET. HISTOIRE DE LA REVOLUTION FRANCAISE, dopuis 1789 jusqu' en 1814. Douziemo Edition, augmentee de I'Histoire de la Rf'Stauration jusqu'a 1 'Avenement de Louis Philippe, par De Bonnechose, complete in 1 vol. post 8vo. elegantly printed , sewed, 5s Brnx. 1844 MILLER'S COMPANION TO THE ATLAS, or a Series of Geographical Tables on a new Plan, forming a complete System of Geography'. Second Edition, small folio, cluth, (pub. at ls6d) reduced to 5s . 1838 " I admire both the principle and the cxecniion of this work: nor can I doubt that it will become a Kcneral favourite with Teachers. It is llie right medium b«tweeo lueagreness a-id distracting profusion : aud the neatness and clearness of the Tabala^ form, w. ;,' I am confident, prove very attractive to youth. " College of Edinburgh. (Signed) " James Pillans, L.L. Prof* " These Tables are among the most successful of the many plans lately devised to facilitate and simplify elementary education. The design is original and perspicacious." — Edinburgh Journal, MUHLENFELS' POETISCHE ANTHOLO- GIE ; a INIanual of Progressive Examples of the best German Poets, printed in the German character, fcap. Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 8s) reduced to 3s 6(i . 1841 MULLER'S HISTORY of the LITERATURE OF ANCIENT GREECE ; Published by the Society for the Diflfusion of Useful Knowledge, including- the Continuation, being all published of tlie 2nd volume, Bvo. cloth, (pub. at 10s) reduced to 7s . 1842 the same, the continuation separately, 4 parts, (being all that is published of Vol. 2) contain- ing Aristophanes and the Comic Drama, the Orators, Sophists, Thucydides, Lysias, Iso- crates, Socrates, &c. 8vo. stitched, 2s 1842 This able work is discontinued ; this fragment, there- fore, may be bound up with the previous volume. MUSEUM CRITICUM; OR CAMBRIDGE CLASSICAL RESEARCHES, A Series of Philological Papers, Criticisms, Essays, Frag- ments of Greek and Roman Authors, un- published Notes of Scholars, learned Corres- pondence and Memoirs, &c., by many of the most talented Critics of the University, in- cluding Bishops Blomfield and Maltby, Professor Monk, Elmsley, Dr. Burney, Hare, &c. &c. 2 vols, Bvo. cloth, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to 16s . Camb. 1826 The Museum Criticum stands in the first rank among British contributions to classical learning. ■ the same, tree-marbled calf extra, for college prizes, £1. 5s NEUMAN AND BARETTI'S SPANISH-ENG- LISH AND ENGLISH-SPANISH DIC- TIONARY, greatly improved and enlarged by Dr. Seoane, 2 thick vols. 8vo. extra cloth, £1. 8s . 1845 the same, abridged, 12mo. pearl, new edition, roan lettered, 8s . 1843 NIEBUHR'S HISTORY OF ROME, epitomized, (for the use of Colleges and Schools,) with Chronological Tables and Appendix, by Travers Twiss, 13. CD. complete in 2 vols, bound in 1, Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 12s Oxford, Talboys, 1837 the same, well bou7id in calf gilt, (for School Prizes), 16s "This edition by Mr. Twiss is a very valuable addition to classical learning, clearly and ably embodying all the latest efforts of the laborious Niebuhr." Literary Gazette. "This truly valuable work, which for the first time presents the researches of Niebuhr so suitable to the use of English students. Mr. Twiss has judiciously expunged those passages in which Niebuhr exhibited so strange a mixture of scepticism and credulity." Athenteum. NUGENT IMPROVED; a complete French and English Dictionary, in two parts : I. French and English ; and II. English and French, by John Wilson, 24mo. elegantly printed J» pearl type, bound in roan, lettered, (pub. at 5s 6d) re- duced to 4s (5d . 1845 NUTTALL'S CLASSICAL and ARCH^OLO- GICAL DICTIONARY of the Manners, Customs, Laws, Institutions, Architecture! Arts, etc. of the celebrated Nations of Anti- FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND LITERATUUr:, COLLEGE BOOKS, ETC. ^ 29 quity, and particularly of the ]\Iiddi,k Ages ; to which is prefixed a Synoptical and Chrono- logical View of Ancient History, 8vo. extvacbnh hoards, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 5s 1B40 Tliis is an able and very useful work; and bting cliietly devilled lo the explanation of Mediaeval Anti- quities, becomes a desirable companion to Lenipriere, which is limited to subjects strictly classical. PARIvHURST'S IIEliREW and ENGLISH DICTIONARY, without Points, in which the Hebrew and Chaldee Words of the Old Testament are explained in their leading and derived Senses, last edition, corrected and im- proved, royal 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 16s) re- duced to 10s 6saris, iNIaximiani, Valerii Catonis, Antimachi Colophonii, et SeveriSancti, 5 vols. 8vo. in extra glazed boards, (pub. at £3. 7s) reduced to 15s Of this elegantly primed series only 100 copies were printed. PORSON'S WORKS, viz. Aristophanica, Adver- saria, Photius, Letters to Travis, Tracts and Criticisms, 6 vols. 8vo. cloth lette'-ed, uniform, (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £2. 8s RAMSHOllN'S DICTIONARY OF LATIN SVNONYMES, for the u.se of Schools and Private Students, translated and edited by Dr. Lieber, post Bvo. cloth, (pub. at 7s) reduced to 5s . 1841 RITTER'S HISTORY OF ANCIENT PHILO- SOPHY, translated from the German by A. J. W. Johnson, B.A, Trin.CoIl. Cambridge, 3 vols. Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at £2. Os) reduced to £1.1 Is 6c/ . Oiford,Talboys,lQ'Mi ' Vol. IV. to complete the work is in the press, and will be reaily in January 1840. It will be published al Ids,; but those who purchase copies of the 3 vol*, from the advertiser, will be entitled to have the 4lli at the eame rate of reduction In price. " A n important vmrk ; it may he said to have su- perseded all the inevious hUtories of philosophy, and to have become the standard work on the subject. Mr. Jiiliiison is also exempt from the usual faults of trans- lators."— Quarterly Review. ST'S GREEK GRAMMAR, for the use of Schools, translated from the German ; with an Appendix on Greek Versification, 8vo. (5G0 pages) extra cloth boards, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s . . 1827 In Germany this Grammar is more popular than even Matthite. "This Grammar is distinguished by lucid arrange- ment, conciseness, and tullneas. The author judiciously commences with I'rosody, and then proceeds to Ety- mology and Syntax. The system of accentuation, which is so slightly noticed in Malthis, he explains with the utmost clearness." — Monthly Mai/. RUPERTI COMMENTARIUS in TACITUM, 8vo. cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 3s 1825 This admirable volume of explanatory Notes on the Annals of Tacitus, by the distinguished Kuperti, is not incorporated in any edition of the author, and will therefore be found a valuable addition to the student's library. SANTAGNELLO'S DICTIONARY of the PE- CULIARITIES OP THE ITALIAN LAN- GUAGE, being a Collection of Sentences from the most approved Italian Authors, particula- rizing those Verbs, Prepositions, &c. which govern difterent Moods and Cases, Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 9s 6f0 reduced to 3s Gd 1820 This volume forms a desirable Supplement to all Italian Dictionaries. SCHELLER'S LATIN GRAMMAR, translated from the German, with the addition of some valuable lists from the Port Royal Grammar and Bentley on the Metres of Terence and Ho- race,.by George Walker, M.A. Head Master of the Leeds Grammar School, 2nd edition, with an Index, 2 vols. Bvo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at £1, 10s) reduced at 12s . 1838 This adiuirable Grammar is the most perfect and the most comprehensive of its kind, and is the same for the Latin language that Matihiai's is for the Greek. Indeed Matthiae in his preface declares that his aim was to produce as complete a Grammar of the Greek, as his predecessor Scheller had done for the Latin, which he held up as a model. SCHOMANN'S HISTORY OF THE ASSEM- BLIES OF THE ATHENIANS, translated from the Latin, with a complete Index, 8vo. extra c loth, {Tpuh. at 10s 6d) reduced to 5s Camb. 1838 A book of the same school and character as the works of Heercn, Boechk, Scidegel,&c. SCHRODER, Elementa Mathpseos Puraj, in duabus partibus: Pars. I. Prolegomena de IMatheseos Ratione : Pars. II. Elementa Arith- meticaj Purre ; 2 thick vols, Bvo. {A work oj great depth ; in much esteem abroad) 6(is. (pub. at £1. iOs) reduced to 16s TraJ. ad Rhen. 1831-4 SOPHOCLES, literally translated into English Prose, with Notes, 8vo. 4th improved edition, extra cloth, (pub. at 15s) reduced to 9s Oxford, Talboys, 1842 ELLENDT'S GREEK AND ENGLISH LEXICON TO SOPHOCLES, translated by Cary, Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s Gd . »&• 1841 30 FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE, COLLEGE BOOKS, ETC. TROLLOPE'S (Rev. W.) GREEK GRAM- MAI! TO THE KEW TESTAMENT, and to the (Common or Hellenic Diction of the Later Greek Writers, with Greek, Latin, and STUART'S HEBREW GRAMMAR, 5th edition, corrected and enlarged, \ivo. extra cloth, 12s Orfor(l,TuU,ous, 1338 STUART'S HEBREW CHRi STOMATll Y, de- sij;ned as an Introdiictioa to a Course of Hebrew Study, 3rd edition, 8vo. eitra cloth, {\mh. at 145) reduced to 9i- . ik 1834 Tlii." work, which was designed by its learned author ti) l;icililalf the sliuly ot Hehiew, h^i? Iiad a vt ly exten- sive sale in Ainei ica. Jt forms a desirable adjunct to all Hebreiv Grammars, anil is sntficient to complete llie syslcui of instrui-tion in that langnaj;e. TACITUS, CUM NOTIS BROTIERI, editio nova, cum Appendice, ciirante A. J. Valpy, 4 vols. 8vo. fxna c/ot/i ii/i, (pub. at £2. 16s) reduced to £1. 5s 1823 The most complete edition. TACITUS, A New and Literal Tuanslatiox, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 10s 6d Orfont, Talhoys, 1839 TAYLOR'S ELEMENTS OF THOUGHT, ievcnth edition, 12mo. cloth lettered, 4s 1843 This popular work is an admirable condensation of all tliat has been written or said on the subject, and a most usetnl Introduction to the study of Metaphysics, while it contains as much inlurinatioa as the general reader will require. TENNEMANN'S MANUAL OF THE HIS- TO RY OF PHI LOSOPH Y.translated from the German, by the Rev. Ai-.thuk Johnson, M.A., Professor of Anglo-Saxon in the Univer#ity of Oxford, in one thick closely printed volume, 8vo. lids. (pub. at 14s) reduced to 9s Oxford, Talboys, 1832 " A work which inarks out all the leading epoohs in philosopli>, and gives minute chronological inlornia- tion concerning ihem, with biooraphual notices of the founders and l'lo:;ical Students. It is a desirable a'ljurict to the Greek Grammars of Buttman and Matthia-, especially to the former, upon the rule* i of which its copi.ius illustrations are arran!»ed. VALPY'S (F.) FUNDAMENTAL WORDS or THE GREEK LANGUAGE, adapted to the Memory of the Student by means of Deri- vations, and Derivatives, Passages from the Classical Writers, and other Associations, Bvo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 5s - 1826 " I have frequently consulted this work of the learned and ingenious author with considerable satii- faction." — The Rev. J. R. Major ofKing'i College. VIEYRA'S PORTUGUESE ENGLISH and ENGLISH PORTUGUESE DIC- TIONARY, improved and enlarged by T. Do Canto, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, £1. 16* 1840 W^ESLEY'S (Dr. C.) LOGIC : A Guide to Syl- logism, or a Manual of Logic, 12mo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 4s Qd) reduced to 3* 1832 WHITEHEAD'S SPANISH GRAMMAR, with copious Exercises ; the whole rendered so easy as to be intelligible without the aid of an Instructor, post 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 7s Qd) reduced to 2s Qd 1826 WILLIS'S ELEMENTARY HEBREW GRAMMAR, (with Points), to which is added a Selection of Hebrew Sentences, with a short Lexicon and References to the Gram- mar (on the plan of Leusden and Buxtorf,) Bvo. cloth (pub. at Qs) reehiced to 3* 1834 An excellent and much esteemed Grammar for the tise of Schools and Young Students. WILSON'S (JAMES, Professor of French in St. Gregory's College) FRENCH-ENGLISH and ENGLISH-FRENCH DICTIONARY, con- taining full Explanations, Definitions, Sy- nonyms, Idioms, Proverbs, Terms of Art and Science, and Rules of Pronunciation in each Language. Compiled from the Dictionaries of the Academy, Bowyer, Chambaud, Garner, Laveaux, Des Carrieres and Fain, Johnson and Walker, 1 large closely printed volume, imperial Bvo. cloth, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to£l.Bs 1841 WILSON'S FRENCH ENGLISH and ENG- LISH FRENCH DICTIONARY, abridged, 18mo. 'dan, 4s 6d 1837 XENOPHOiNTlS OPERA, Gr. et. Lat. Schnei- deri et Zeunii, accedit index, CPorson and Elmsi.ey's Edition,) 10 vols. 12mo. hand- SO.MKI.V rlllNTED IN A LARGE TYPE, iu Cltra cloth hoards, done up in 5 vols. (pub. at £4. 10s) reduced to 18s 1811 — — the same, la rce paper, 10 vols, crown 8vo. in extra cloth boards, done up in 5 vo'umes, reduced to £1. 5s This is the only complete modern edition of Xeno- phon which lias the Latin Versioo and a Geocril Index. 5nbetttle antr eifmentar|) ^ook^, 6^nmmt\t&, ttu ABBOTT'S TEACHER, or Moral Influences em- ployed in the Instruction of the Young, in- tended chiefly to assist young Teacliers in organizing and conducting their Schools, new- edition, revised by Dr. Mayo, fcap. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 5s) reduced to 3.s- 1834 ^SOP'S FABLES, 18mo. elegatitly printed at the Chiswick Press by Whittingham, embellished bii 153 pretty engravings on uwod, extra cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at 5s) reduced to 3s 1838 ACKVVORTIl'S ENGLISH VOCABULARY, last edition, corrected and improved, 18rao. clotli lettered, Is 6d . . 1845 AIKIN'S (Dr.) CALENDAR of NATURE, for the Instruction and Entertainment of Young Persons, 18mo. beautiful wood-cuts bij Harveij, new and improved edition, cloth. (The prettiest edition of a very popular and edifying work.) (pub. at Is 6d) reduced to Is 1836 BAKEWELL'S THILOSOPHICAL CONVER- SATIONS, in which are familiarly explained the Causes of numerous daily occurring Phe- nomena, 12mo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 5s 6d) re- duced to 3s BARBAULD, LECONS POUR LES ENFANS, depuis Page de deux ans jusqu'a cinq; traduit par M. Pasquier, last edition, 18mo. cloth let- tered, 2s . ] 845 BELL'S SELECTIONS OF THE MOST REMARKABLE PHENOMENA OF NATURE, 18mo. cloth bds. (pub. at 3s 6d) reduced to 2s , 1827 BINGLEY'S USEFUL KNOWLEDGE, or a familiar Account of all the various Productions of Nature, Mineral, Vegetable, and Animal, systematically arranged, which are chiefly em- ployed for the use of Man, illustrated bi) plates and 150 ivood-cuts, and intended as a work both of instruction and reference. Sixth Edition, revised, enlarged, and altered to the existing state of science, by D. Cooper, of the British Museum, 2 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 16s) reduced to 10s 6d Trade edition, 1842 BROWN'S BOOK OF BRITISH BUTTERFLIES, iMOTHS, Sec, complete in 3 vols. 18mo. illus- trated hy lAi coloured plates, in extra red cloth, lichly gilt, (pub. at 15s) reduced to 7s 6d 1834 CITY SCENES, or a PEEP into LONDON, sq. 12rao. with 102 fine wood-cuts, designed by Gilbert, engraved by Folkard, extra gilt cloth, gilt edges, 3s 6d . . 1845 CRABB'S (Rev. G.) NEW PANTHEON, or Mythology of all Nations, adapted to the Bib- lical, Classical, and General Reader, but more especially for the Use of Schools and Young Persons ; with Questions for Examination on 7HE Plan of Pinnock, 18mo. xcith 30 pleasing lithographs of the principal Heroes of Heathe/i Mythology ; gilt cloth, (pub. at 3s) reduced to 2 J 6d . 1840 This is by far the cleverest of all the sma!I works on mytholosy. The talented author is well known by his Historical and Technological Dictionaries, Dictionary oi'Syuouymet, and works on the German language. CROWQUILL'S PICTORIAL GRAMMAR 16mo. with 120 humorous illustrations, extra cloth, gilt sides, (pub. at 5s) reduced to 2s 6d 1844 " A really aniui«in(; ami instructive little volume, in which the oriliiimy inks of Grammar, the choice say- ings of Liiulli-y Miiiiay.th«Mlr> slmly iif rules, arc illus- trated, aii'l tlial SI) Cdiiiic.iUy by the ^^aphic art of the celfbrHted AUrcd Cro«qiiill, that the ai;iccintnt of the noun with tlie verb, or the iimiiinative with the objec- tive, never faiis lo excite roars of iansihter. If ladders to learniug are desirable, a position seldom questioned, surely so humorous an introduction to the acquisition of speaking and wiiting the English language with pro- pria ly , must bf .ucciil ible h')th lo fond parents and as- piriniJ youth." — Morning Chronicle. DRAPER'S JUVENILE NATURALIST, or Country Walks in Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter, in one thick volume, sq. 12mo. illustrated ivith eighty beautifully executed wood- cuts, and fine frontispieces ; richly bound in green cloth, gilt edges, new and improved edition, (pub. at 7s Qd) reduced to 4s 6rf 1845 ENTERTAINING PHILOSOPHER; a familiar Explanation of the most interesting Pheno- mena of Natural and Experimental Philosophy, comprising a Store of curious and instructive Infoi-mation in Mechanics, Hydrostatics, Pneu- matics, Heat, Optics, Magnetism, Electricity, Galvanism, etc. compiled to promote Practical Education. By W. M. Higoins, Lecturer on Experimental Philosophy at Guy's Hospital, fcap. 8vo. illustrated by above 100 wood engrav- ings, extra cloth boards, (pub. at 9s 6J) reduced to 3s 6rf . 1844 ENCYCLOPAEDIA of MANNERS and ETI- QUETTE, comprising an improved edition of Chesterfield's Advice to his Son on Men and Manners; and The Young Man's Own Book, a Manual of Politeness, Intellectual Improve- ment, and Moral Deportment, calculated to form the Character on a solid Basis, and to insure Respectability and Success in Life, one elegantly printed vol. fcap. 12mo./ro)i(ispiece, extra cloth boards, gilt edges, 2s. 1844 the same, clotli, gilt edges ENGLISH BOY AT THE CAPE ; an Anglo- African Story. By the Author of " Keeper's Travels." 3 vols, royal 18mo. embellished with engravings, cloth gilt, edges cut, (pub. at 10s 6rf) reduced to 5s . 1835 " This is a very interesting Robinson Crusoe sort of a tale, suitable to youth of both sexes. From it much more than mereanuisement will be gained. The infor- mation it contains of the manners of the inhabitants, the topography, and other peculiarities of Southern Africa, is correct and valuable ; and the moral incul- cated throughout is not the least of its excellencies." Metropolitan Mag, EQUESTRIAN MANUAL for LADIES, (by Frank Howard) fcap. 8vo. upivards of 50 beau- tiful wood-cuts, richly bound in cloth, with appro- priate devices in gold, (pub. at 4s) reduced to 2s6(Z I'iii, 1844 FISHER'S JUVENILE SCRAP BOOK; by Mrs. Ellis, Miss Strickland, and others, various vols, sm. 8vo. niLmerous beautiful engravings, cloth, o gilt edges, (each pub. at 8j) reduced to 5s 32 JUVENILE AND ELEMENTARY BOOKS, GYMNASTICS, ETC. FORTUNES OF FRANK FAIRFIELD, by M. H. Barker, Esq., the " Old Sailor," (a well writ- ten and Entertaining Narrative of Naval Ad- 'rentures). 18mo. with 7 pretty engravings on &eel, and numerous woodcuts, cloth extra, gilt edges, (pub. at 3s 6dJ reduced to 2s 6d 1845 This interesting tale \s founded on facts. Fairfield is a pseiidonynie for Admiral Trowbridge, the friend and companion of Nelson. GLIMPSES OF THE WONDERFUL, a Christinas Present for Young People, for 1846, sq. 12mo. with 7iumerons woodcuts, extra, gilt cloth, gilt edges, 5s . 1846 the same, former series, 1845, extra gilt cloth, gilt edges, 5s HACK'S (Maria) ENGLISH STORIES of the OLDEN TIME. 2 vols. 12mo. vignettes by Harvey, extra cloth, very richly gilt backs, 12s " A popular History of England, from Alfred to Eli- zabeth, adapted to tlie capacity of young persons, and embodying a great deal of information, valuable and interesting to juvenile readers. Tliere is throughout a dispassionate and just estimate of the characters of the persons, and the causes and influence of events." Spectator. GRECIAN STORIES, 12mo. with 39 fine illustrations by Gilbert, engraved by Wrigfit and Folkard; extra cloth, very richly gilt, (pub. at 8s) reduced to 5s "These historical narrativesare composedon the po- pular pliin of the entertaining and instructive stories of the authoress relating to England. They will be valu- able, especially to the non-classical, as an accurate pic- ture of Greece, its annals, and its great men." Tait's Mag. WINTER EVENINGS, or Tales of Travel- lers. New Edition, one thick vol. post 8vo. fine front, gilt cloth, very richly gilt, 6s A most delightful book for young people, by a very popular writer. *• Several interesting narratives are here very ably abridged from the works of celebrated travellers, and interspersed with such questions and explanations as are likely to make every circumstance intellii;ible." " The fair compiler is entitled to much gratitude for this instructive and agreeable publication." Monthly Review. HALL'S (Capt. Basil) PATCHWORK, (a new Series of Fragments of Voyages and Travels,) second edition, 12mo. handsomely printed, extra cloth, with the back very richly and appropriately gilt with patcliwork devices (pub. at 15s) reduced to7s6d . Moion, 1841 A book full of the moat entertaining stories and ad- ventures, written with all the vigour and sprightliness of this very agreeable writer. " Captain Basil Hall imparts a freshness to what- ever spot he touches, and carries the reader, with un- tiring good humour^ cheerily along with him. Turn ■where we will, we have posies of variegated flowers presented to us, and wc are sure to find in every one of them, whether sombre or gay, a sprig of Uasil. His Patchwork is full of varied information, rich in mate- rials for thinking, and far more amusing than any novel or ronance. It makes us long to have the gal- lant Captain afloat again ; for, pleasant as he is on eliore, he is without a rival on the merry sea." Quarterly Review. HEEREN'S MANUAL op ANCIENT GEOGRA- PHY, for the use of Schools, 12mo. cloih lettered (pub. at 2s 6d) reduced to 2s Oxf. 1535 HOWITT'S JACK of the MILL, 2 vols. 12mo. cloth, richlugilt (pub. at 15.'i) reduced 7j 6(1 1844 BRITISH PRESERVE, royal 8vo. con- taining 36 clever and highly finiihed etchings of Game, Birds, Deer, Hares, etc. (very suitable as a DiiAWiNG Book for Youxi:) extra cLotk, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 5s JOYCE'S SCIENTIFIC DIALOGUES, for Young Peojde, new and improved edition, edited by Pin NOCK, 12mo. plates, cloth gilt 1846 KILOH'S ABRIDGMENT of ANCIENT HISTORY, chiefly of the Egyptians, Cartha- ginians, Assyrians, and Medes and Persians; with Exercises at the end of each Chapter, on THE Plan of Pinnock, for the Use of Schools, NEW EDITION, 12mo. bound in roan, 4s 1845 " A very valuable abridgment compiled with great care, and accompanied by questions on the plan of Pin- nock's Goldsmith. It is extremely well adapted to the purpose for which the Authoress intended it, namely lor the use of Schools." — Slantlard. KNIGHT'S LIBRARY for the YOUNG, puft- lished under the superintendunce of the Society for Promoting Useful Knowledge, 10 vols. 16mo. elegantly bound in cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at £2. 3s) reduced to £1. 6s Or separately, as follows. PicTuKE History of England, 3 vols, in 2, with 126 woodcuts the size of the page, (pub. at lOs) reduced to 6s '** This is one of the best and most esteemed of the numerous Histories of England for Youth. History of Spain and Portugal, 2 vols, in 1,14 woodcuts, (pub. at 5s) reduced to 3s Uncle Oliver's Travels in Persia (by Kitto), 2 vols, in 1, 24 woodcuts, (pub. at 7s 6d) re- duced to 3s 6d *,* This interesting compilation is by the talented editor of the Pictorial Palestine, and is admirably adapted to the capacity of youth. Flowers and their Associations, by Miss Pratt, witli coloured plates, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 6d The Field, the Garden, and the Wood, by Miss Pratt, numerous luoodcuts and coloured frontis- piece, (pub. at 4s) reduced to 2$ 6d Dawnings of Genius, or the Early Lives of Emi- nent Persons, (pub. at 3s) reduced to 2s Old Sj)orts of England, many woodcuts, (pub. at 2s 6d) reduced to 2s The ILIder Brother, by Mrs. Barwell, woodcuts, (pub. at 2s) reduced to Is 6d Chivalry and Charity, exemplified in the Lives of Du Guescelin and John Howard, (pub. at 3s ) reduced to 2s KNIGHT'S ANTIQUITIES of the BRITISH MUSEUM, coHtai/iJ/(^ \\2 engravings of all the most remarkable Statuary and Sculpture, Egyptian Antiquities, Vases, S^c. with letter* press on the reverses, mounted on Cards, fcap. 8vo. in a cloth case, lettered, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 4s 6d Lamartine, Voyage en Orient — See Foreign Litera- ture, *,* This is an admirable reading book for Students in the l-'rench Language, and may safely be recom- mended to Schools. L. E. L. TRAITS AND TRIALS of EARLY LIFE, a series of Tales addressed to Young People. By L. E. L. (Miss Landon). Fourth edition, fcap. 8vo. with a beautiful portrait en- graved on steel, gilt cloth, (pub. at 5s) reduced to3s6(i . 1845 LE KEUX'S ILLUSTRATIONS OF NATURAL HISTORY, embracing a Series of Engravings, and descriptive Accountsof tlio most interesting and popular Genera and Species of the Animal World, 8vo. with 114 clever steel engravings bi, Le Keux, Daniell, Landseer, and others, extra lolhgilt, (pub. at£l. Is) reduced to 9s Lempriere's Classical Dichonauv— See Foreign and ClaMical Literature, , JUVENILE AND ELEMENTAUY BOOKS, GYMNASTICS, ETC. MUDIE'S (Rout.) HISTORY 33 LAMB'S TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE, de- signed principally for the Use ot Young- Persons, (written by JMiss and Charles Lamb,) sixth edition, embellished with 20 large and beautiful wood-cut eiigravings, Jwiii designs btf Harvey, fcap. 8vo. extra cloth, full gilt buck (pub. at 7s Qd) reduced to 5s . 1843 the same, i)j morocco extra, reduced to 10s " One of the most useful and agreeable companions to the understanding of Shakspeare wliich have been prodnced. The youthful reader who is about to taste the chartns of our great Hard, is strongly recommended to prepare himself by first reading these elegant tales, which ill a short compass, and adopting as ninth as possible the language of tlic great original, give each plot and story in a most impressive manner. Evtn those who are familiar with every line of the i)ri;;inal, will be delighted with the pleasing and eonipendiims way in which the story of each play is here presented to them." — Quarterly Review. LIFE OF CHRIST, in the Words of the Evan- gelists, IBmo. 28 -pretty woodcuts, c.il>a cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at 4s) reduced to 3s TUt, 1837 LOUDON'S (Mrs.) IMPROVED EDITION of THE ENTERTAINING NATURALIST, being popular Descriptions, Tales, and Anec- dotes of more than F' eHundre- Animah, <'.om- prehending all the Quadrupeds, Birds, Fishes, Reptiles, Insects, &c. of wliich a knowledge is indispensable in Polite Education ; with In- dexes of Scientific and Popular Names, an explanation of Terms, and an Appendix of Fabulous Animals, illustrated by upwards of 400 beautiful woodcuts by Bewick. Harvey, Whimper, and others, new edition, revised, en- larged, and corrected to the present state of Zoological Knowledge, in 1 thick vol. post 8vo. elegantly bound in gilt cloth, 7s6d 1843 -— — the same, in morocco extra, 12s This new and handsome edition is likely to become the most popular work of the kind, having oeen con- siderably enlarged and improved both in text and plates. MANGNALL'S HISTORICAL and MISCEL- LANEOUS QUESTIONS, new Pictorial Edition, by the Rev. Ingram Cobbin, 12mo. embossed roan, 4s 6d MARTIN AND WESTALL'S PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE BIBLE, the letterpress by the Rev. Hobart Caunter, 8vo. 144 extremely beautiful wood engravings by thefrst Artists (in- cluding reduced copies of Martin's celebrated Pictures, " Belshazzar's Feast, the Deluge, Fall of Nineveh," etc. etc.) bound in cloth, full gilt backs, gilt edges, reduced to 12s 1846 ■ the same, whole bound morocco, riclily gilt, gilt edges, 18s A most elegant present to young people. MINSTRELSY of the WOODS, or Sketches and Songs connected with the Natural History of some of the most interesting British and Foreign Birds, (by Miss Waring, of Selborne) post 8vo. with 17 coloured plates of Birds, green cloth, richly gilt, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 6s 1832 MITFORD'S (Miss) TALES and STORIES for YOUNG PEOPLE, selected from American Writers, for Children above ten years of age, 3 vols. 12mo. gilt cloth, edges cut, (pub. at lOs 6d) reduced to 5s . 1835 MORE'S (Hannah) SACRED DRAMAS, Prac- tical Piety, and other Works— .See Thcoingy. BRITISH BIRDS, or the Feathered Tribes of the British Islands, 2 vols. 8po. second edition, the plates beautifully coloured, extra cloth Lds. elegantlq gilt on the backs, (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 16s 1841 the same, 2 vols, morocco, gilt edges, £\. 6s " This is, without any exception, the most truly charming work on Ornithology which has hiiherto ap- peartd, troin tlio d.iys of VVillugfiby d-cut engra- vings, bound in cloth, lettered, edges cut, (pub at 12s) reduced to 4s 6d 1843 CONDER'S VIEW OF ALL RELIGIONS NOW EXTANT AMONG MANKIND, with their internal Diversities of Creed and Profession, thick Bvo. extra cloth, 12s 1838 COOK'S (Dr.) GENERAL AND HISTORICAL VIEW OF CHRISTIANITY, comprehending its Origin and Progress j the leading Doctrines and Forms of Politj founded on it, and the Effect which it has produced on the Moral and Political State of Europe, 3 vols. Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 16i) reduced to Us 1822 HISTORY, AND MORALS. 39 CRICHTON'SrA.) LIVES OF EMINENT CON- VERTS FROM INFIDELITY; aSelectionoI the most remarkable Examples of those who have renounced Libertine Principles and Scep- tical Opinions, and embraced Christianity, in- cluding the Earl of Rocliester, Lord Lyttelton, John Bunyan, Hon. Robert Royle, Soame Jenyns, Rev. John Newton, Count Struensee, Count Brandt, Gilbert West, Sir John Pringle, Charles Gildon, Rev. R. Cecil, La Harpe, Dr. Bateman, and Baron Haller, 2 vols, in 1, IBmo. port, extra cloth (pub. at 7s) reduced to 3s 1837 CROLY (Dr.) ON DIVINE PROVIDENCE, or the Three Cycles of Revelation ; shewing the Parallelism, civil and religious, of the Patriarchal, Jewish, and Christian Eras ; the whole forming a new Evidence of the Divine Origin of Christianity, thick Bvo. extra cloth hds. (pub. at 15s) reduced to 10s 1834 " To discover, in these late days, a new evidence of our lioly religion, nn evidence unsuspected and undis- covered by all former theologians and scholars, proves the superior erudition and acuteness of the author. To Dr. Croly belongs the high and lasting praise of lending new forces to the defenders of religion, and adding a new wing to the temple of the Christian Faith." Oent.'s Mag. CRUDEN'S CONCORDANCE TO THE OLD' AND NEW TESTAMENT, and Apocrypha, impl. 8vo. BEST EDITION, portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at IBs) reduced to 13s 1845 CRUDEN'S CONCORDANCE TO THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT, revised and condensed by G. K. Hannaj', thick IBmo. beautifully printed, cloth lettered, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 6d . 1844 " An extremely pretty and very cheap edition. It contains all that ii useful in the original work, omitting ouly prepositions, conjunctions, &c. which can never be made available lor purposes of reference. Indeed it is all that the Scripture student can desire." — Guardian. DAILLE'S TREATISE ON THE RIGHT USE OF THE FATHERS, iu the Decision of Con- troversies existing in Religion. Translated from the Frencli and revised by the Rev. T. Smith. Now re-edited and amended, with a Preftce by the Rev. G. Jekyll, Bvo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 7s Gd) reduced to 5s 1843 The value of Daille's work is well known. It has of late been constantly referred to in consequence of the publications of the Oxford Tracts by Dr. Pusey and others. It is an original and valuable treatise, and bad a considerable effect in diminishing the undue authority of the Fathers. "It is a work." says Bp Warburton. " of uncommon learning and strength of -argument. It brought the Fathers from the Bencli to the table, and may be truly said to be the storehouse from whence all who have since written popularly on the character of the Fathers, have derived th<'ir materials." The present edition has been revised throughout, and is handsomelv printed. DAILLE'S EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLES OF ST. PAUL TO THE PHILIPPIANS AND C0L08S1ANS. with a Memoir of his Life, impl Bvo. extra cloth bds. 12s 6d 1841 " Still held ill the highest estimation" — Lon-ndet. DE WETTE'S CRITICAL AND HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION TO THE CANONICAL SCRIPTURES of the Oldlestament, translated from the German by T. Parker, 2 vols. Bvo. cloth lettered, {a first rate work) (jiub. at £1. )6s) reduced to £l. 4s . 1843 DODDRIDGE'S FAMILY EXPOSITOR, or a Paraphrase and Version of the New Testament, with critical Notes ; with JNlenioirs of the Author by Job Orton and Dr. Kippis, impl ^^0. cloth lettered, IQs . J838 40 THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAii HISTORY, AND MORALS. DODDRIDGE'S MISCELLANEOUS WORKS, containing his Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul; Life of Col. Gardiner; Lectures on Pneumatology, Ethics, and Divinity ; Sermons ; Lectures on Preaching ; Hymns ; Tracts; etc ; with an Introductory Essay by the Rev. T. Morell, of Coward College, impl. 8vo. cloth lettered, 18s 1839 I EDGAR'S VARIATIONS OF POPERY,! Second Edition, revised and enlarged, in one | closely printed volume, 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. sit 12s) reduced to 6s Seeley, 1833 The object of this very learned and able book is the same in lespect to Popery that Bossuet's is to Protes- tantism. It is divided into 17 books, under the follow- ing heads, in the course of which most of the principal Popish writers are examined — 1. Popes; 2. Councils; 3. Supremacy; 4. Infallibility; 5. Deposition of Kings; 6. Persecution ; 7. Invalidation of Oaths ; 8. Arianism; 9. Eutychianism ; 10. Monothelitism ; 11. Pelagian- ism ; 12. Transubstantiation ; 13. Communion in one kind; 14. Extreme Unction; 1.5. Image Worship; 16. Purgatory ; 17. Celibacy of the Clergy.— At the end of the volume is a very copious Index. EDWARDS'S (JONATHAN) WORKS, 2 vols, impl. Bvo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £2. 10s) re- duced to £2. 2s . 1840 " I consider Jonathan Edwards the greatest of the sons of men. He ranks with the brightest luminaries of the Christian Church, not excluding any country, or anv age since the apostolic." — Robert Hall. ^' That great master-mind, Jonathan Edwards, whose close-sighted observation, clear judgment, and unbend- ing faithfulness, were of the very highest order." Dr. Pye Smith. " Jonathan Edwards is a writer of great originality and piety, and with extraordinary mental powers. He, in fact, commenced a new and higher school in di- vinity, to which the great body of evangelical authors who have since lived, have been indebted." — Eev. E. BiCKERSTETH. •' To theological students his works are almost in- dispensable. In all the branches of theology, didactic, polemical, casuistic, experimental, and practical, he had few equals, and perhaps no superior. The number and variety of his works shew the intenscness of his industry, and the uncommon strength of his intellectual powers. They will live as long as powerful reasoning, genuine religion, and the science of the human mind continue to be objects of respect."- —Orme. FABER'S APOSTOLICITY OF TRINITARI- AN ISIM, or the Testimony of History to the positive Antiquity and to the Apostolical In- culcation of the Doctrine of the Holy 'J'rinity, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 6s) re- duced to 9s . 1832 - — . ON TRANSUBSTANTIATION.— Christ's Discourise at Capernaum fatal to the Doctrine of Transubstantiation, on the very principle of Exposition adopted by the Divines of the Roman Church, and suicidally maintained by Dr. AViseman : associated with Remarks on Dr. Wiseman's Lectures on the principal Doctrines and Practices of the (Roman) Catho- lic Church, 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 8s Gd) reduced to 4s . 1840 " This work will be found full of sound information and learning, well disposed, and brought witli good cflect on the argument. The whole book is written with logical force and precision, and the sophisms of his antagonist clearly detected."— Gen t.'s Mug. FIFTY- FOUR SERiMONS BY EMINENT CLERGYMEN OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND, published for the Uelief of the Distressed Irish Clergy, (among the writers are I Rev. Chas. Brydges, Henry iMelvill, Gerard j Noel, T. T, iJiddulph, Josiah Pratt, Dr. Gilly, | Francis Close, Henry Blunt, ArcMeacon Wil- berforce, Ed. and J. Bickersteth, Hugh Stowell, J. S. Grmishawe,) 2 thick vols. 8vo. e.itvjs doth, (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 10s 6d 1834 FINNEY'S LECTURES ON REVIV.ALS OF RELIGION, Thirteenth Edition, with Notes and Memoir, 8vo. cLoth bds. (pub. at 9s) reduced to3s6d . 1840 0/ this excellent and popular work '"originally pub- lished in Anienca) many thousana copies have been sold. The present is the only complete one published m this country. FLAVEL'S SERMONS; viz. Fountain of Life, or Forty-two Discourses on the Person and Work of Christ ; and Method of Grace, or Thirty- seven Discourses on the Principal Doctrines of Christianity, complete in 2 thick vols. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 9s 1819 the same, complete in 2 thick vols. 12mo. extra cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s 1819 The incomparable writings of this eminent author are i;nown throughout the Christian'world, and are above all commendation. For theological learning and piety, depth of experience and practical observa- tion, and for a holy savour of evangelical truth, they stand unrivalled in the English language. FRY'S (REV. J.) SHORT HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH, from its Erection at Jerusalem down to the present time, 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 12s) reduced to 9s 1825 NEW TRANSLATION AND EXPOSI- TION OF THE VERY ANCIENT BOOK OF JOB, with Notes, Explanatory and Philo- logical, thick 8vo. extra cloth (pub. at 12s) re- duced to 4s 6d . Duncan, 1827 FULLER'S (REV. ANDREW) COMPLETE WORKS ; with a Memoir of his Life, by his Son, one large vol. imperial 8vo. new edition, •portrait, extra cloth boards, (pub. at £1. 10s) reduced to £1. 5s . 1845 " The Rev. Andrew Fuller has been styled by the Americans, 'The Franklin of Theology ;' and it is said of, him, that ' all his writings bear tlie powerful stamp of a mind, which, for native vigour, original re- search, logical acumen, profound knowledge of the human heart, and intimate acquaintance with the Scripture, has had no rival since the days of President Edwards.' The celebrated Robert Hall has also said of him, ' He was a man whose sagacity enabled him to penetrate to the depths of every subject he explored; — whose conceptions were so powerful and luminous, that what was recondite and original appeared familiar: what was intricate, easy and perspicuous, in his liands; equally successful in enforcing the practical, in stating thS theoretical, and discussing the polemical branches of theology." " Fuller was of the same good scnoo. of divinity as Scott. With a lively imagination and all the powers of a raascul'ne mind, he maintains the distinguishing doc- trines of the Gospel, and insists on its practical holi- ness."— Bickersteth. " Fuller thought with Owen, and wrote with the pointed pen of Baxter. His discourses are shrewd, in- structive and touching." — Orme. " I am slowly reading Andrew Fuller's works. He was an interesting man ; one of the wisest, and most moral mindjjd of his day. Ho possessed wonderful strength of mind ; and is an instance how Providence can draw forth instruments from the most unlikely quarters." — Bishop Jebb. GRAHAM (MRS.) THE POWER OF FAITH, exemplified in the Life and Writings of the late Mrs. Isabella Graham of New York. New Edition, post 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 6s) reduced to 4s . Duncan, 1838 A popular work, which has gone through upwards of thirty editions , both in this co-iiitry, and in the United States. THEOLOGY, ECCLESlASTICAt GOODWIN'S (THOS.) CHILD OF LIGHT WALKING IN DARKNESS, a Tieatiso skewing the Causes, Circumstances, and I'ur- poses for which God leaves his Children to Dis- tress of Conscience, with Directions how to be Relieved, new edit, royal 18ino. extra cloth, (pub. at 3s 6(i) reduced lo '2.« 6d Hceteij, 1840 Tliis is the rcprir .of a very scarce and higlily es- teemed volume. " With sentiments truly evangelical, Dr. Goodwin possesses a most happy talent at opening, sifting, and displaying the hidden riches of scripture. Ho is a Puritan writer of very superior powers, and entering very fully into the peculiar mode of expression in the sacred writings, he casts much light on the scriptures on which he treqts." — Bickersteth. GREGORY'S (DR. OLINTHUS) LETTERS ON THE EVIDENCES, DOCTRINES, AND DUTIES OF THE CHRISTIAN RE- LIGION, addressed to a Friend, Eighth Edi- tion, ■with many Additions and Corrections ; complete in one thick well printed volume, fcap. Bvo. in extra cloth bds. (pub. at 7s 6d) re- duced to 5s . 1846 CONTENTS. On the folly and absur- i 10. On the inspiration of HISTORY, AND MORALS. 41 dity of deism. 2 On the revelation of the will of God. 3 On the opinions of the heathens, relative to God, to moral duty, and a future state. 4 On the probability that there should be myste- ries in a revealed reli- gion. 5 On the genuineness and authenticity of the Scriptures. 6. On the evidence dedu- cible from the prophe- cies. 7. On the evidence dedu- cible from miracles ; and on the credibility of human testimony. 8. On the resurrection of Jesus Christ. 0 Evidence drawn from the rapid ditfusion of Christianity, and its tri- umph over persecution ; also from the purity and excellency of the scrip- ture morality and the- scripture. 11. On some of the most plausible objections urged against tlie truth and divine authority of the scriptures. 12. On the leading doctrines of the Chiistian Eeli- gion. 13. On the fall of man, and the depravity of Human Xature. 14. On the atonement for Bin, by the death of Jesus Christ. 15. On the divinity of Jesus Christ. 16. On the nature of con- version, and its neces- sity. 17. On the influences of the Spirit. 18. On justification by faith. 19. On providence. 20. On the resurrection of the body. 21. On eternal existence after death. 22. Summary of Christian duties. ology " Rarely, if ever, have superior philosophical attain- ments been turned to a better account, or u richer oll'er- ing brought from the fields of science into the temple of God. Is ot a single consideration of moment, tending to confirm the genuineness and integrity of the Scrip- tures in their present state, appears to have escaped his notice. He has united with extraordinary attainments in the severer sciences, the art of recommending his sentiments with impressive efiect; and he exhibits, in an eminent degree, the most important ingredients of good writing. He is correct and luminous, and often rises to the tone of the most ir vpassionato feeling. His language is eminently easy (lowing, and idiomatic. The abstractions of science have not in him exerted tlio influence often imputed to them, of chilling the heart, and impairing tlie vigour of the imagination. While he reasons with the comprehension and depth which dis- tinguish the philosopher, he feelswith ardour and paints with force. He is often inspired and transported with his theme. In the midst of pursuits which are not always found to have a propitious efi'ect on the religious character of their votaries, he has found the means of preserving his devotion in its warmth, his faitli in its purity, and bis sensibility in its infantine freshness and vigour. We earnestly recommend this work to the attentive pcruial of all cultivated minds. We are acqnaintcd with no book in the circle of English lite- rature, whichis equally calculated to ijive youny per- sons just views of the ecidence, the nature, and the importance of revealed religion."— Robert Haii,. GRAVES'S (DEAN) WHOLE WOKKS, now first collected, comprising Essay on the Cha- racter of the Apostles and Evangelists; Lec- tures on the Four last Books of the Pentateucii ; Proofs of the Trinity ; Absolute Predestination coiujiared with the Scripture Statement of tho Justice of God; and Sermons; with Life by his Son, Dr. R. H. Graves, 4 vols. 8vo. hand- iomelu printed, portrait, extra cluth bds. (pub. at £2. ifis) reduced to £1. 8s 1840 LECTURES ON THE PENTATEUCH, 8vo. new edition, cloth lettered, (pub. at 14s) re- duced to 10s 6d . 1844 Si.i.iccT SciiiPTun.^L PnooFS OF THE Trinity, 8vo. extra cloth, (})ub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 1840 "The work of Dr. Graves on the Pentateuch is truly invaluable, and we cannot but strongly advise every student in divinity to get it up (as it is called), in pre- paring for his ordination." — Jiriiish Critic. The late excellent Uisliop Lloyd made it one of the text books of his jirivate divinity lectures. "Graves's Lectures are indispensably necessary to the biblical student." — Home. " Dean Graves's Lectures are a work of learning and merit. He examines very minutely the authenticity and truth of the Mosaic Histo- , and the theological and moral principles of t„e Jewish Law; and replies at great length, to the most plausible objections. With Dr. Geddes, in particular, he maintains a very deter- mined conflict, and exposes, very successfully, the infidel reasonings of that arrogant writer. He also frequently combats LeClerc and Warburton. Dr. Graves's Essay on the Character of the Apostles and Evangelists, de- signed to prove that they were not enthusiasts, is a book which deserves to be consulted." — Orme. GREENHILL'S EXPOSITION OF THE PRO- PHET EZEKIEL, with a brief Notice of the Author ; one large vol. impl. 8vo. extra cloth bds. £1. Is . 1839 The author was one of .the Westminster Assembly of Divines. " Like all the productions of the Puritans, this Exposition is evangelical, stored with great know- lodge of the Scriptures, and distinguished by its sound doctrinal and practical views."— /7cir7i(?. GROTIUS ON THE TRUTH OF THE CHRIS- TIAN RELIGION, with 2 additional Books, and Notes by Le Clerc, translated by Clarke, 12mo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 4s 6d) reduced to 3s . 1825 HALL'S (BISHOP) ENTIRE WORKS, with an Account of his Life and Sufferings. New Edition, with considerable Additions, a Trans- lation of all the Latin Pieces, and a Glossary, Indices, and Notes, by the Rev. Peter Hall, 12 vols. 8vo. portrait, extra cloth, lettered, (pub. at £7. 4s) reduced to £5. Oxford, Talboys, 1837-39 " The glowing, the tender, the pathetic eloquence of a Hall, vfho, with the spirit of a saint, could strew some holy text upon every trivial event of life, and find ' sermons in stones, and good in everything.' " — Quarterly Heviem. ''This is by far the best edition of the works of the ' Christian Seneca.' The learned editor, a des- cendant of the Bishop, has inserted several excellent pieces not published in any former edition ; has verified and enlarged the references, added many valuable notes, and above all, a complete index of texts, " Ji]). Hall's writings abound iu richness of fancj', and eloquent bursts of feeling. Tliey manifest a piety, humble, fervid, and sincere; a Theory of Christian morals, unforbidding and practical ; and Views of a future existence, animating, elevating, and sublime." British Critic. " Bishop Hall has been entitled the Christian Seneca ; his knowledge of the world, depth of thought, and elegance of expression, place him nearer our own times than any of his contemporaries, whilst he adorned his age by learning, piety, and the uniform exercise of all tlie Christian graces. It would, indeed, be liitruiiit to mention a prelate of more excellent character." Cliahners. 42 THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL. HISTORY, AND MORALS. HARCOURT'S (THE REV, VERNON) DOC" " Imaginative and copious eloquence, terse and pointed sentences, full of piety and devotion. Few writers so useful to divinity students. Let them thoroughly read and digest him, and they mill be *'urnished for ^nost of the calls upon them." Bickerstetk. " During this period, two men of genius, contri- buted by the spirit and energy of their discourses, to maintain the credit ot the orthodox pulpit — these were Hall and Taylor : the former gifted with all the in- spiration of poetry, and all the severity of a chastised judgment ; in his style, quajnt, rather than pedantic ; in his sense, clear, manly, and original." Quarterly Revieiv, vol. xiv. pp. 248, 249. CONTEiMPLATlONS upon the Historical Passages of the Old and New Testaments, new- edition, revised and corrected, by the Rev. Peter Hall, 2 vols. 8vo. eitva cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 15s Oxford, Talhoijs, 1837 " Incomparably valuable for language, criticism, and devotion." — Home. HARD TEXTS OF THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS, Plainly and Fami- lia ly Explained, by way oi Paraphrase, new aud corrected edition, by the Rer. Peter Hall, 2 vols. 8vo. eiira cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 15s Oxford, Talboys, 1837 " These expository notes are very valuable, especially tor sliewiug the spirit and force of many expressions that occur." — Home. HALL'S (THE REV. ROBERT) C0MPLF:TE WORK'S, with a Memoir of his Life by Dr. Olinthus Gregory, and Observations on his Character as a Preacher, by John Foster, Author of Essays on Popular Ignorance, &;c. 6 vols. 8vo. handsomely •printed, ivith beautiful portrait, in ejtra cloth boards, contents lettered, (pub. at £3. 16s) reduced to £2. 2s 1845 — — the same, printed in a smaller size, 6 vol.'. fcp. 8vo. cloth lettered, £1. Is 1844 " Whoever rvisheg to see the English language in its perfection must read the writings of that great Bimne, Hobert Hall. Be combine the beauties of Johnson, Addison, and Burke, jvithout their im- 1 perfections."— DvaAi^D Stewart. " I cannot do better than refer the academic reader to the immortal n-orks of liobert Hall. For moral grandeur, for Christian truth, and for sublimity, we may doubt whether they have their match in the sacred oratory of any age or country."— Prof. Sedg- wick {in his Discourse on the Studies of the Uni- versity.) " The Ser'7nons and. Discourses of Robert Hall are nonderful comxiositions." " The bold diction, the majestic gait of the sen- tence, the vivid illustration, the rebulce which could scathe the offender, the burst of honest indignation at triumphant vice, the biting sarciism, the fervid appeal to tin; heart, the sagacious dcvelopoment of principle, the broad Held of moral vision— all these distinguisli the compositions of liobert Hall, and we bear our most willing testimony to their worth."— Quarterly Jievieic. " In the Eloquence of the pvlpit, Itnbert Hull comes nearer Massillun than either Cicero or JEa- chincs-to Demosthenes."— hoHV Bbotjgham. " His wind is little to be envied, if from, the perusal of Itohcrt Hall, he do not find himself a more accomplished, a wiser, and a better man." Church of England Quarterly Bcciew. " Mr. Hall, like Bp. Taylor, ' has the eloquence of an orator, the fancy of a poet, the acutenesx of a schoolman, the profoundness of % philosopher, and the piety of a saint.' "-Va-rv. (Sptial .Sermon.) " The excellence of Mr. Hall docs not consist in the predominance of one of his powers, but in the ex- quisite proportion and liarmony of all. The richness, variety, and extent of his knowledge, are not less re- markable than his absolute mastery over it. His style it one of the clearest and simplest— the least en- cumbered n-ilh its onm beauty— of any which ever has been written."— CuAS. Lamb, LontLon Magazine. " The name of Robert Hall will be placed by pos- terity milling the best writers of the age, as well as t 'le iii'Ltt rigorous defenders of Religious truth, and the brightest examples of Christian charity." Sia J. Mackimtosh. TRINE OF THE DELUGE, 2 vols. »vo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at £l. 16s) reduced to 10s 6(2 Longman, 1838 " The object of this very learned, pious, and inte- resting work is to pursue the traditional memorials of the ark through the pages of pagan mythology. Those who have not bent their studies that way, are not aware what a mass of evidence is to be collected from the most unsuspected sources in corroboration of the Mosaic Deluge. We consider Mr. Harcaurt's re- searches as most valuable, totally apart from all con- siderations of philosophy. To tho.se who have a taste for such learned inquiries as have immortalized the venerable name of Jacob Bryant above all modem scholars in this department of antiquity, we recom- mend a perusal of Mr. Harcourt's book, in which they will see much additional light thrown on many of the subjects discussed, from information inaccessible to Bryant — the produce of later studies and inquiries. Nor can we omit to mentien, with great satisfaction, an Historical Treatise on Baptismal Regeneration, which closes the second volume, and which we should like to see separately published." — Gent.'s Mag. HENRY'S (MATTHEW) COMMENTARY ON THE BIBLE, Bickersteth's Edition, in 6 vols. 4to. new edition, printed on fine paper, (pub. at £9. 9s) reduced to £4. 14s 6d 1846 HOPKINS'S (BISHOP) WHOLE WORKS, with a Memoir of the Author, in one thick vol. royal 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 14s 1841 the same, with a very extensive general Index of Texts and Subjects, 2 vols, royal 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 18s . 1841 " Bishop Hopkins's "Works form of themselves a •ound body of divinity. He is clear, vehement, and persuasive."— Bickerstetfi. " The merits of Bishop Hopkins are well tnown to Theologians, although perhaps not so universally as might be wished. AVe have often heard of tlie supe- riority of the theology of our older authors to that of our more modern Divines ; and certainly never have we seen the superiority more strikingly shewn than in the works of Hopkins. Whatever be the nature of the subject on which lie treats, his hand is instantly seen to be that of a master : throughout we find a strength o/ thought an originality of 'illustration, a force and I felicity of style, a homely raeincss of expression, I which command jperpetual attention. There do not exist manuals of fjhristian duty more searching in tlieir knowledge of the human heart, more compre- hensive in their application to all the situations and contingencies of life, than his ' Exposition of the Ten Commandments,' and the ' Exposition of the Loi-d's Prayer.' These taken in connection with his other works, form in themselves a body of Divinity, the jios- session of which alone would enrich the library of a household." — The Wit/icss. HILL (REV. ROWLAND) MEMOIRS OF THE, by his P'riend, the Rev. W. Jones, edited, with a Preface, by the Rev. Ja.mes Sherman, (Rowland Hill's Successor, as Minister of Surrey Chapel.) Second lulition, carefully revised, thick post 8vo. fine steel portrait, eitra cloth, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 5s . 1845 HOWE'S WORKS, witli Life by Calamv, one Inrge vol. iin))enal 8vo. portrmt, cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 16s) reduci'd to £1. 10s 1838 " I have learned far more fmm John Howe, than from any other author I ever read. There is an as- tonishing mamiificence in his conceptions. He wa« unquestionably the greatest of tiie purilan di\ines." liobert Hall. LIVING TEMPLE, or a designed Im- provement of the Idea, tliat a Good Man is the Temple of God. To which are added Discourses on Self Dedication, and on yielding ourselves to God, 18mo. portrait, cloth extra, (pub. at 4s) reduced to 2s 1845 THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, AND MORALS. 43 HUNTER'S SACKED BIOGHAI'HV, a Serit-s 1 lUELAND'S (Demi of neatminstey) PAGANISM of Lectures on Scrijiture ChaiMctcrs, witli an Introduction by the Kuv, Alexander Tattcrson, oue large vol. imperial 8vo. extra cloth, \'h ;^ 1840 " A truly fascinating work. Dr. Hunter was a man of loarnint; : his writings are eIoi)Ucnt, and sliew how well he had studied human nature."— C/taZ;«(.'r«. HUNTINGDON'S (COUNTESS OF) LIFE AND TIMES, by a Member of the Houses of Shirley and Hastings. Sixth Thousand, with a copious Index, 2 large vols. 8vo. portraits of the Countess, Whitefeld, and ]Vesley ; extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 14s 1844 " This Memoir is not only absorbingly interesting as a Narrative, but it is indispensable to the historian, developing, as it docs, the origin and progress of the most important and intlnential denominations of Dis- senters at the present day ; as well as the effects pro- duced by her Ladyship's indefatigable zeal in the cause of religion. " These volumes are destined to a lengthened popu- larity. They will be read by the serious for their re- ligious tendency, and tlie light which they throw upon the earlier days of the Methodists and other classes of Dissenters, whilst to those fond of the fashionable gossip of Courts passed away, they present an ample fund of amusement and instructioti."— Advertiser. " The work is invaluable ; and any one who should now attempt to write the religious history of the eigfe- teenth century, would be but ill qualified for his tasfi, if he had not previously made himself acquainted with tJie Life of the Counicss of Huntingdon." — Courier. " We have seldom read a more interesting work. Its extraordinary mass of anecdote and personal history will atl'ord no ordinary degree of amusement to the general reader." — Argus. " A very curious memoir, perhaps one of the most curious that has for a long time issued from the press. The reader must not suppose that this Life of Lady Huntingdon is a mere narrative of ministerial trans- actions— a history of a sect, its struggles and its pro- gress: on the contrary, it deals most with the open day-light world of action, embraces notices of some of the most distinguished men of the times, and developes, in the account of Lady Huntingdon herself, a character remarkable for energy, strong sense, and living sympa- thies. It .is a production of much greater interest than, at first sight, we anticipated." — Atlas. " This is a most interesting work, and cannot fail to become highly popular. It is exciting intense interest, and will doubtless lead us to form a correct estimate of the character and opinions of that most extraordinary woman." — Durham Advertiser. ILLUSTRATED COMMENTARY ON THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS, chiefly explanatory of the Manners and Customs men- tioned in the Sacred Scriptures, and also of the History, Geography, Natural History, and An- tiquities ; being a Re-pubi,icatson of the Notes of the Pictorial Bible, 5 vols, post Qvo.with upwards of 600 fue wood-cuts, gilt cloth, (puh. at £1. 17s 6d) reduced to £1. 5s 1840 " The explanatory notes and illustrations of the ' Pictorial Bible' are here printed separate from the text, so as to form a complete work, serving as a com- panion to any edition of the Bible. The five volumes contain a great body of information, glean.ed from a variety of sources, many of which are of recent dis- covery, on the habits and mannei-s of the Arabs and Egyptians; the pictures in tlie tombs of Thebes fur- nishing accurate representations of the costumes, &c. of ancient Egypt; and the accounts of travellers de- scribing the modes of life among the Arabs, which have undergone no change. Every allusion to local circumstances or national customs is elucidated by de- scriptions and pictures of the face of the country, buildings, plants, animals, dress, implements of trade, husbandry, and war, &c. ; the statements being con- fined to tacts."— Spectator. AND CHRISTIANITY COMPARED, in a ('oursi^ of Lectures to (lie Kin^^'s Scliolars at Westminster, 'ind edition, 8vo. eitra clotk lids. (pub. at Vis) reduced to 4s (id Mnnau, 1825 " An able, learned, and insu active vtmk.'—Uritish Critic. JEBH'S DIVINE ECONOMY OF THE CHURCH, 12mo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 6s) reduced to 4s 6d Duncan, 1840 "An excellent little volume. We like the manner in which till' author kas explained the principle of Church communion, vindicated the authority of the Church, and then deduced the necessity ol conformity to her worship, and obedience to her commands ; while his observations on the relii;ious duties demanded of her cliildren are enforced with cogent reasoning and atl'tclionate exhortation. The volume does credit to tbe talents of the author, and we tbink might advanta- geously be used, in many of its parts, in the pulpit." — Gent.'s Ma;;. " A thoughtful, perspicuous, and beautiful comment on the Articles ot the ' Holy Catholic Church, and the Comnnmion of Saints.' " — British Critic. JENKYN'S EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLE OF JUDE, AND MANTON'S PRACTI- CAL EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLE OF JAMES, with brief Notices of the Authors; 1 large vol. impl.Bvo. eifra cloth bds. 16s 1839-40 Or separately, Jenkyn, 10s 6d — Manton, 7s " Jenkyn and Manton, published nearly at the same lime, and with similar views, are both useful." — Rev. E. Jiickersteth. "A book yet in high request." — Chalmers. Archbishop Usher used to say, that Manton "had the art of reducing the substance ot whole volumes into a narrow compass,and representing it to great advantage." KELTY'S RELIGION OF IHE HEART, ex- emplified in Memorials of Madame Guyon, Fenelon, and other Spiritual Persons, with Ex- tracts from their Works illustrative of interior Religion, fcap. 8vo. cloth gilt, (pub. at 5s) re- duced to 2s 6d 1844 This will be found a very pleasing volume to seriously disposed persons. KELTY'S MEMOIRS OF THE LIVES AND PERSECUTIONS OF THE PRIMITIVE QUAKERS, exemplifying the Obedience of Faith in some of the early Members of the Society of Friends. Second edition, thick post 8vo,e.tt)ac/ot/i, (pub.at7s6(i)reducedto5s 1844 "We have rarely looked into a contribution to the Library of Disient, more qualified by its earnestnesi, and by the absence of all that is offensive, to meet with acceptance among the Orthodox — nay more, to penetrate those large masses of the reading world who take no particular tsTO under their protection, and can only bo interested by details illustrating the feelings an! charac- teristics common to humanity. Mary Anne Kelly's book may, we think, be peru.'ed wiih interest, as a re- cord of the early struggles of a body of conscientious men, apart from the peculiar doctrines it is intended to enforce and illustrate." — AthentEum. KNOWLES'S (REV. T.) SHORT AND PLAIN DISCOURSES for the Use of Families.S vols, post 8vo. c/ot/i lettered, (pub. at 17s f)d) reduced to 6s - 1822 LARDNER'S (DR. NATHANIEL) WORKS, containing Credibility of the Gospel History, Jewish and Heathen Testimonies, History of Heretics, and Sermons and Tracts, with Life of the Autlior, by Dr. Kijjpis, 10 vols. 8vo. best edition, extra cloth lettered, (pub. at £5. 5$) reduced to £4. 4s 1833 "The publication of Dr. I.ardner's works cnnsliluted a new era in the Annals of Christianity : for by collect- ing a mass of scattered evidence in favour of tbe authenticity of Evangelical History, be established a bulwark cm ihe side ot truth which iulidtlily has never presumed to attack." — Home. 44 THEOLOGY ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, AND MORALS. LAWSON'S HISTORY OF THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF SCOTLAND, from the Re- formation to the present time, 2 thick vols. 8vo. "(ra c/oi/^, (pub. at £L 10s) reduced to 15s 1843-4 HISTORY OF THE SCOTTISH EPISCO- PAL CHURCH FROM THE REFORMA- TION TO THE REVOLUTION OF 1688, (being the early portion of the preceding work- sold separately) 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at ISs) reduced to 7i 6f/ These iwo volumes form a most complete and au- thentic History of the Episcopal Church of Scotland from the Reformation, including the exciiina; reigns of James 1., Charles I., Cliarlcs II., and James IL, the vhole derived from valuable MSS., records, rare works, and other authentic sources. Many curious and inter- esting details are given of the true ecclesiastical state of Scotland in the Seventeenth century not hitherto published. " Mr. Lawson's work has made its appearance at the right time, and will be read with great interest. The narrative of the disestablishment of the Scottish Epis- copal Church at the Revolution, is a tal of suftering that has been seldom exceeded in these latter days of the Church."— Ox/ord Herald. "The History of the Episcopal Church )f Scotland, in its close connection with the annals of Scottish Pres- byterianism, is one of the most edilying episodes that ecclesiastical records present to our noiice. Mr. Lawson has shewn great ability, industry, and impartiality in his lubowrs."— Church and State Gazette, May 19, 1843. LEE (PROFESSOR) ON THE STUDY OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES ; their Nature, Inter- pretation, and some of their most important Doctrines ; in Six Sermons, preached before the University of Cambridge in 1 827-8 : to which are annexed Two Dissertations. 1. On the Reasonablenessof the Orthodox Views of Chris- tianity, as opposed to the Rationalism of Ger- many ; 2. On the Interpretation of Prophecy generally, with an Original Exposition of the Book of Revelation, shewing that the whole of that remarkable Prophecy has long ago been ful- filled.8vo. extra c/ot/ifcoar(is,(pub. atl4s) reduced to 7s' . 1830 LEIGHTON'S (ARCHBISHOP) WHOLE WORKS : to which is prefixed a Life of the Author, by the Rev. T. N. Pearson. New Edition, 2 thick vols. 8vo. portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to IGs 1846 The only complete edition. COMMENTARY ON PETER ; with Life by Pearson, comjilete, in one thick handsomely printed vol. 8vo. portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 94- 1846 " I cannot sulTnirnlly express the delight and edifi- cation which I have found in the writings of this WON- uicHKUi. MAN, f«r such I must deliberately call him. I can hardly lorbcar saying, as a considciable philosopher and eminent divine said to me in a letter long ago, 'there is a spirit in Archbi-hop Leighton 1 never met in any hnmaii writings ; nor can I read ift.iy lines in them wiiluiiit lu.'ing incvi'd.' His works ought to be reckoned arnoni; tin' greatest trea^urrs of the English tongue; they couiiniially uvcrllou willi love to God, and breathe an hrait entirely transtbrriied by the Gospel, and above till' views o( everytliin;; but pleasing God." — JJr. Doddridye. " .\bp. Leighton had the greatest elevation of soul, the largest compass of knowledge, the most mortified and most heavenly disposition that I ever yet saw in mortal ; that had the greatest parts, as well as virtues, wiih the 1). rfectest humility, that I eversaw in man." — ISp. Burnet. " I heri' is no expository work in the English language equal to Lcigliton's Exposition of Peter. It is rich in evangelical sentiment, exalted devotion, and admirable illustr.iiion. There is learning without its parade, theology divested of systematic stiffness, nnd eloquence in a beautiful How of unatfecled language and appro- priate imagery. To say more would be unbecoming, and less could not be said with justice." — Orme. "Mr. Pearson's edition of Abp. Leighton is an ex- cellent one. All parties agree in commemlation of this celebrated divine." — Lowndes. " Abp. Leighton is an incomparable writer, full of the deepest evangelical devotion, with the best taste. His praise is in all the churches. He is one of the very first divines of the British chinch, whose writings breathe throughout the spirit of devotion, a noble strain of deep piety, a most humble, heavenly, and loving spirit, an elegant mind and a scriptural standard of evangelical doctrine.— His Life, hy Mr. Pearson, is A DELIGHTFUL PIliCE OF BIOGRAPHY." — The ReV. E, Bickersteth. LETTERS ON THE WRITINGS OF THE FATHERS OF THE FIRST TWO CENTU- RIES, (Clement, Barnabas, Herraas, Ignatius, Polycarp, Justin Martyr, Irenreus,) with Re- flections on the Oxford Tracts, and Strictures on " The Records of the Church," by Misopapisti- cus, crown 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 5s 6d) redu- ced to 3s . 1838 LIFE OF CHRIST, in the Words of the Evange- lists, 18mo. 28 pretty wood-exits, extra cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at 7s) reduced to 3s Tilt, 1837 LIFE AND DEFENCE OF THE CONDUCT AND PRINCIPLES OF THE VENERA- BLE ANDCALUMNIATED BISHOP BON- NER, in which is considered the best mode of again Changing the Religion of this Nation, by a TractarianBritishCritic,( Prebendary Tremyard) 8vo. extra cloth (pub. at 10s Qd) reduced to 4s 6d 1842 " This ironical life and defence of Bishop Bonner is an exposure of the Uomish tendency of the Oxford Tracts, and is written throughout with ability and learning. There is no doubt that the antbor has damaged the party he has attacked." — AthencBtmt. "An ironical polemical defence of Bishop Bonner; under the mask of justifying, it bitterly condemns the Romish Church and its professors, Puseyites. It shews considerable reading, and is very clever." — hiterarjf Gazette. " The aim of the writer has been carried oat with great skill, great ability, and great etfect. The sarcasm is always biting; tlie very difficult point of the double character, is well sustained; and the style is strong and polished without any appearance of labour." — Spectator. LUTHER'S COMMENTARY ON THE PSALMS OF DEGREES, to which is prefixed a copious Historical Accountof JMonastic Life in England, 6vo. plate of monastic habits, cloth lettered {pvib. at lOi 6d) reduced to 54- . 1819 MAGEE'S (ABP.) WORKS, comprising Dis- courses and Dissertations on the Scriptural Doctrines of Atonement and Sacrifice; Sermons, and Visitation Charges. With a Memoir of hig Life by the Rev. A. H. Kenny, D.D. 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth (pub. at £1. 6s) reduced to 18s 1842 " Discovers such deep research, yields so much valuable inlormation, and aflfords so many helps to the r«lutation of error, as to constitute THE most valu- able TKEAStjnE OF BIliLICAL LEARNING, OF WHICH A Christian scholar can be possessed." — Chrit- tian Observer. MAL'IBY'S (DR. EDWARD, LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM) SERMONS, including those preached at Lincoln's Inn, 3 thick vols. 8vo. extra cloth, lettered (pub. at £1. 14s Qd) reduced to 15s . 1819 CHARGES AT DURHAM, CHICHESTER, &c. : and Miscellaneous Tracts on the Catholic Question, Bible Society, Education, &c. (pub- lished at various periods between 1807 and 1843, and now collected into one volume) 8vo. clotJi, lettered (pub, at 15s) reduced to 5« THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, AND MORALS. 45 MALTBVS ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE TRUTH OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION, Becond edition, revised, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 7s 6J) reduced to 3s 6rf 1803 ' A book vvbicli every clergyman oiislit t^ possess." Bishop Tomline. MATTHEW (Rev. G). SERMONS ON DOC- TRINE AND PRACTICE, by the Rev. George Mathew, Vicar of Greenwiph, and alternate morning Preacher at St. James's, Fifth Edition, 2 vols. 8vo. in extra cloth boards, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 7s 6d 1834 Few Preachers have enjoyed greater popularity in London, or its vicinity, than the late Uev. George Mathew, many years Vicar of Greenwich, and alter- iMte Morning Preacher at St. James's. Four large editions of his sermons were sold in a very short time. They are remarkable specimens of close and perspicu- ous argument, arranged with great clearness, and en- forced with extraordinary ability. " Mr. Malhew's Sermons display every excellence we could wish ; all that can instruct the ignorant, confirm the wavering, or alarm the vicious: they cannot be read without advantage. He has been eminently successful in reducing Butler's Analogy to the level of the meanest capacity, and in giving a luminous pr^cii of his arguments." — British Critic. MANUSCRIPT SERMONS— a Series of Sixty English Sermons on the Doctrine, Principles, and Practice of Christianity, adapted to the Pulpit, by a Doctor of Divinity, complete in 15 parts, sm. 4to. (each containing four Ser- mons) Uthop-aphed on writing paper to resemble MSS. (pub. at £3. 1 5s) reduced to 15s MENDHAM'S (REV. JOSEPH) PALEOTTI HISTORIA ACT^CONCILII TRIDEN- TINI, an. 1562 et 1563, cum aliis multis circa dictum Concilium, thick 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s 6d 1842 LIFE AND PONTIFICATE OF POPE PIUS THE FIFTH, Second Edition, with Supplement, Bvo. extra citth, (pub. at I2s 6rt) reduced to 5s . 1844 INDEX LIBRORUM PROHIBITORUM A SIXTO V. PAPA, confectus et publicatus : ad vero a successoribus ejus in sede Romana euppressus, ed Jos. Mendham, 4to. cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 8s . 1835 . INDEX OF BOOKS PROHIBITED by command of the present Pope Gregory XVI. in 1 835, 12mo. cloth, (pub. at 4s 6d) reduced LITERARY POLICY OF THE CHURCH OF ROME exhibited in an Account of her Damnatory Catalogues or Indexes, both Prohi- bitory and Expurgatory ; with illustrative p^xtracts, Anecdotes, and Remarks, second edition, enlarged, with two Supplements, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 14s) reduced to 6s 1844 WISIINA; Eighteen Treatises from the Mishna, translated from the Hebrew by the Rev. D. A. De Sola, and the Rev. M. J. Raphael, second edition, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 7s 6d) reduced to 5s . 1845 MOORE'S (REV. D.) CAMBRIDGE PRIZE ESSAYS, OR THE CHRISTIAN SYSTEM VINDICATED AGAINST THE MORE POPULAR FORMS OF MODERN INFI- DELITY, Second Edition, with additions, post 8vo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 4, : '"^ 1344 " A condensed and able summary of the arguments adduced by the beat writers on the Evidences of Christianity."— .4 iAentt'urn. " This publication meets the sophisms of intidelity,a» they now appear, upon right principles anrl with sound judgment. The three l.ssays which const ilnte the volume have severally obtained the Norrisian and Hulsean prizes at Cambridge, which is a sullWicnt tes- timony in its favour." — liritish May. " Distinguished by a simple elegance of language and accuracy ot reasoning, which not only obtained for the author the honours of his mother university, bat have raised his Prize Essays to the hii;hest rank in the class of compositions to which they belong." — Church' man's Monthly Keview. MORE'S (HANNAH) WORKS, with a Memoir and Notes, 9 vols. fcap. 8vo. fine portrait and frontisjiieces, gilt cloth, £2. 5s Fisher, 1840 This edition does not contain the Spirit of Prayer or the Essay on St. I'aul, but these may be had separately. WORKS, Cadell's Library Edition, in large type, 11 vols, post Bvo. portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at £5.) reduced to £3. 13s 6d 1830 LIFE, by the Rev. Henry Thomson, post 8vo. printed uniformly with her luorks, and forming an additional volume, portrait, and numerous wood engravings, extra cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s . Cadell, 1838 " This may be called the ofRcial edition of Hannah More's Life. It brings so much new and interesting matter into the field respecting her, that it will receive a hearty welcome from tJie public. Among the rest, the particulars of most of her publications will reward the curiosity of literary readers." — Literary Gazette. SPIRIT OF PRAYER, fcap. Bvo. portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 4s Cadell, 1843 STORIES FOR THE MIDDLE RANKS OF SOCIETY, and Tales for the Common People, 2 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 14s) reduced to 9s . i/;. 1830 POETICAL WORKS, post Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 8s) reduced to 3s 6d ib. 1829 MORAL SKETCHES OF PREVAILING OPINIONS AND MANNERS, Foreign and Domestic, with Reflections on Prayer, post Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 4s ib. 1830 ESSAY ON THE CHARACTER AND PRACTICAL WRITINGS OF ST. PAUL, post 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 5s . ib. 1837 CHRISTIAN MORALS, po.st Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at lOsdd) reduced to 5s i6. 1836 PRACTICAL PIETY, or the Influence of the Religion of the Heart on the Conduct of the Life, 32mo. portrait, extra cloth, 2s 6d ib. 1840 The only complete small edition. It was revised just before her death, and contains much improvement, which is copyright. SACRED DRAMAS, chiefly intended for Young People, to which is added "Sensibility," an Epistle, 32mo. gilt cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at 2s dd) reduced to 2j . ib. This is the last genuine edition, and contains some copyright additions, which are not in any other. SEARCH AFTER HAPPINESS; with Ballads, Tales, Hymns, and Epitaphs, 32nio. gilt cloth, gilt edges, (pub. at 2s 6d) reduced to Is 6d . ib' BIBLE RHYMES, on the names and pnucip.il Incidents of all the Books of the Old and New Testament, 32mo. portrait and woodcuts, gilt cloth , gilledges, (pub. at 2s) reduced to Is 6d ib. " How many have thanlicd God for the liour that first viade them acquainted 7Cith the writings of Hannah More. She did perhaps us mi:cli real goad in her generation as any woman that ever heid tlie pen. 46 THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, AND MORALS. It would be idle for us to dwell here on works so well known. They have established her name as a great moral writer, possessing a masterly command over the resources of our language, and devoting a keen wit and a lively fancy to tliebest and noblest of purposes." Quarterly Rcvietv. Horace Walpole declared tliat Hannah More was not only one of the cleverest of woman, but one of the best. Her writings, said he, promote virtue, and their repeated editions prove tlieir worth and utility. MOSHEIM'S ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, NEW EDITION, edited by Soames, 4 thick vols. 8vo. extra cloth, £2. 2s 1845 MORRISON'S (REV. DR.) SERMONS AND DISCOURSES written and preached in China, Singapore, the Cape, &c. with Remarks on Missions, Bvo. portrait, cloth lettered, (pub. at lOs 6(0 reduced to 3s iid 1826 MURRAY'S TRUTH OF REVELATION DE- JMONSTRATED by Ancient Monuments, Sculptures, Gems, Coins, and Medals. Second Edition, one handsome vol. Bvo. 52 woodcuts and 3 plates, cloth lettered, (pub. at IS*) reduced to 5s . . 1840 " A very interesting book, containing such a mass ef curious information that it will well repay the pains of a careful perusal." — Literary Gazette. NOLAN'S (DR.) WARBURTONIAN LEC- TURES— The Chronolooical Prophecies, as constituting a connected System, in which the Principal Events of the Divine Dispensations are determined by the precise Revelation of their Dates, 8vo. clolh, (pub. at 15s ") reduced to 5s . ' 1837 PALEY'S WORKS, IN one volume, consisting of his Natural Theology, Moral and Political Philosophy, Evidences of Christianity, Ilorty Paulina;, Clergyman's Companion in Visiting the Sick, &c. 8vo. handsomely printed in double columns, extra cloth 6Js.(pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 5s . 1842 POOL'S (MATHEW) ANNOTATIONS UPON THE HOLY BIBLE, wherein the Sacred Text is inserted, and various Readings annexed, to- gether with the Parallel Scriptures; the more difficult Terms in eaclA'erse are explained, seem- incr Contradictions reconciled, Questions and Doubts resolved, and the whole Text oj)ened, 3 large vols. impl. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £3. 15s) reduced to £3. 3s 1842 Cecil says, ' if we must liave commentators, as we tertainly must, Pool is inconii)arable, and I had almost said, abundant of himself,' and the Ilcv. E. Bickersteth pronounces tlie annotations to be judicious and full. It is no mean praise of tliis valuable work that it is in the list of books recommended to clergymen by Bp. Tomline It is likewise recommended by Gilpin, I)rs. E. Williams, Adam Clarke, Doddridge, Home, and tlie learned in general. PORTEUS'S (BISHOP) WORKS, with his life, by the Rev. Robert Hodgson, Dean of Carlisle, 6 vols. Bvo. extra gilt cloth, (jjub. at £2. 10s) reduced to £ 1.5s 1823 LECTURES, 2 vols. Bvo. cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 8s the same, complete in 1 vol. Bvo. cloth, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 5s SERMONS, 2 vols. Bvo. cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 10s 6d " IJishop I'orteus was a light in his generation and to posterity ; and an ornament to tlie times in wliich he lived. " His sermons are conspicuous for sound jiidgraciit, solid argument, great knowledge of the human heart, accurate observution of the world, an unshrinking reprobation of vice, the most persuasive exhortations to piety, and an unqualified avowal of all tlie essential, fundamental truths and doctrines of the Gospel." Eclectic Sevierv. " It is creditable to the public taste that his writings should have acquired this higli jiopularity; for their excellencies both as to matter and style well deserve it." Qiiarterly Review. RIDGELEY'S BODY OF DIVINITY, wherein the Doctrines of the Christian Religion are ex- plained and defended, complete in 2 vols. impl. Bvo. portrait, extra cloth, £1. 4s 1844 " It is probable that the English language does not furnish a work of this nature that, for perspicuity of language, extent of research, accuracy of judgment, and judicious description, any way equals this of Dr. Ridgeley. He was a man of extensive and sound learning, of remarkable diligence, and a strict econo- mist of his time. His skilful knowledge of the learned languages, large acquaintance with ancient and modern writers, and critical knowledge of the sacred volume, rendered him well qualified for theological controversy." Wilson. " His lectures display soundness of judgment, ex- tensive learning, and an intimate acquaintance with the sacred oracles." — Bogue. SANDERSON'S (BISHOP) SERMONS, with Life of the Author by Isaac Walton ; and an Introductory Essay by the Rev. Robert Mont- gometry, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 14s 1841 " No library which admits the Sermons of Barrow, Tillotson, and Jeremy Taylor, should be without those of that great divine Bishop Sanderson." Dr. Hammond has observed that, " Sanderson con- conceives all things deliberately, speaks upon them discreetly, discerns things that differ exactly, passeth his judgement rationally, and expresses it aptly, clearly and honestly." Dr. Wotton says, " What Bp. Sander- S'ln has written is all gold, and thoroughly refined." And the Rev. E. Bickersteth observes, " Sanderson was a man of great reflection and judgment, and his works abound with important discussions and decisions." " There are no sermons more valuable for study, or more to be recommended to a young divine for tlieir sound doctrine and admirable matter, than Bishop Sanderson's " — Ecclesiastical Journal. SCLATER'S (DR. WILLIAM) ORIGINAL DRAUGHToFTHE PRIMITIVE CHURCH, new edition, corrected, with the Quotations from the Fathers and Old Divines, given at length, 12rao. cloth lettered, (pub. at 6s) re- duced to 3s 6rf Oxford, Talboys, 1840 This is the reprint of a very rare and highly appreci- ated work. The author is mentioned by Chalmers, Wood, and others, as one of tl'.e most learned and judicious Divines of his time; and Bickersteth says that " these two valuable words have exhausted this im- portant subject," speaking of Sclaterand King. SCOTT'S (W.) HARMONY OF PHRENOLOGY WITH SCRIPTURE ; to which is added, a Refutation of the Philosophical Errors con- tained in Combe's ' Constitution of Man,' s«- cond edition, post Bvo. cloth, (pub. at 6s 6d) re- duced to 3s 6d EJm. 1837 SCOTT'S (REV. THOS.) PRACTICAL COM- MENTARY ON THE BIBLE, for the Use of Families, 2 larg'e and closely printed vols, impl. Bvo. extra cloth bds, (pub. at £l. 16s^ re- duced to IBs Seeley, 1834 Mr. Bickersteth suggested the publication of thi» condensed edition of Scott's celebrated Commentaiy, observing that " a practical Commentary on the Scriptures, written with the soundnesi of Scott, and within a moderate compass for the use of families, wag still a desideratum." SERMONS, including two on the Duties of the Pastoral Office ; with Memoir of his Life by the Rev. S. King, Bvo. handsomely printed, cloth lettered, (pub. at lO* 6d) reduced to 4s Seeley, 1837 THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL SCOTT'S (REV. THOS.) COMMENTARY ON THE HOLY BIBLE, getiuine trade edition, with the Author's last Corrections and Improve- ments, and nwixerouj beautiful wood-cut iltuslra- tions, and maps, tlie complete work in 3 vols, impl. 8vo. extra cUnh lettered, (pub. at £4. 4s) reduced to £2. 12s 6d Seetey, &;c. " An original, sound, evangelical, and praotical Commentary, with a vast collection of parallels." Blckersteth. " The capital excellency of this valuable and im- mense undertaking, perhaps, consists in following more closely than any other, the fair and adequate meaning, of every part tW Scripture, without regard to the nice- ties of human systems; it is, in every sense of the expression, a Scriptural comment. It has likewise a further and a strong recommendation in its originality. Every part of it is thought out by the author for him- self, not borrowed from others. The later editions, indeed, are enriched with brief and valuable quotations from several writers of credit — but the substance of the work is entirely his own. It is not a compilation, it is an original production, in which you have the deliberate judgments of a masculine and independent mind on all the parts of Holy Scripture. Every student will under- stand the value of such a work. Further, it is the comment of our age, presenting many of the best lights which history casts on the interpretation of prophecy, giving several of the remarks which sound criticism has accumulated from the different branches of sacred literature, obviating the chief objections which modern annotators have advanced against some of the dis- tinguishing doctrines of the Gospel, and adapting the instructions of Scripture to the peculiar circumstances of the times in which we live The commentator's eminent characteristics were a matured knowledge, skill as a textuary, sterling honesty, a firm grasp of truth, unfeigned submission of mind "to every part of the inspired records, a holy temper of heart, unfeigned diligence, and perseverance." — Horiie. SCRIPTURE GENEALOGIES, containing 38 beautifully executed Lithographic Drawings, of all the Genealogies recorded in the Sacred Scrip- tures, according to every Family and Tribe ; with the Line of our Saviour Jesus Christ obser- ved from Adam to the Virgin Mary, by J. P. Morris, Esq. royal 4to. extra cloth, gilt on sides, (pub. at £1. lis 6d) reduced to 7s 6d This elegant work will be found curious and interest- ing to the theological reader. It not only contains tastefully engraved plates of every genealogy, family, tribe, etc. mentioned in the Holy Scriptures, but also drawings of the tabernacle, and plans of tlie Camp of the Israelites, and City of Jerusalem, with explanations. An edition of only 500 cost the author upwards of 500 guineas getting up, and although printed several years ago, it has not hitherto been published. SHEPPARD'S FAMILY PRAYERS, for Morn- ing and Evening Devotion, selected exclusively from the Works of the Elder Divines of the Established Church, and accompanied by the author's name to each Prayer, l2mo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 6d 1827 The Rev. John Sheppard is the well-known Minister of Blackheath Chapel. SIDNEY'S (REV. E.) LIFE OF SIR RICHARD HILL, BART., (Brother of Rowland Hill)8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at 12s) reduced to 5s 1839 *' A better man than Sir Richard Hill I do not know within the circle of Imman nature." — Lord Kenyoii "Sir Richard Hill's life was a pattern of modesty, piety, and goodness." — Lord Erskine. SIMEON'S WORKS, including his Skeletons of Sermons and Hon/E HoMii.EiicyE or Discourses digested into one continued .Series, and ibrnaing a Commentary upon ewary Book of the Old and New Testament : to which are annexed an im- proved edition of Claude's Essay on the Com- moitioQ of a Sermon, and very comprehensive HISTORYj AND MORALS. 47 Indexes, edited by the Rev. Thomas Ilartwell Home, 21 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, contents lettered, (pub. at £10. lOs) reduced to £7. 7s The j allowing miniature editions of Simeon i popular uorki are unij'ormly printed in 32mo. and bmind tit cltnh : — The Christian's Armour, (pub. at Is) reduced to9(/ The Excellency of the Liturgy, (pub. at Is) re- duced to 9d The Ofiicos of the Holy Spirit, (pub. at 1«) re- duced to 9d Humiliation of the Son of God : in Twelve Sermons, (pub. at Is) reduced to 9rf Appeal to Men of Wisdom and Candour, (pub. at Is) reduced to 9d Discourses on Behalf of the Jews, (pub. at 2j) reduced to Is 6d Claude's Essay on the Composition of a Ser- mon, edited by Simeon and the Rev, T. Hartwell Home, with an Analytical Index, 8vo. stiff covers, in the Press, 2s 6d " The works of Simeon, containing 253C diiicourse* on the principal passages of the Old anil New Testa- ment will be found peculiarly adapted to assist the stu- dies of the younger clergy in their preparation for the pul- pit ; they will likewise serve as a Body of Divinity; and are by many recommended as a Biblical Commentary, well adapted to be read in families. Subjoined are, a Ge- neral Index, a Liturgical Index, and an Index of Ser- mons, as also an Improved edition, with an analytical Index, of Claude's Essay on the Composition of a Ser- mon. The work may truly be said to form a Theolo- gical Encyclopedia." — Lowndes. " Simeon's works are a monument of pastoral labour and piety, with much judgment on doctrinal subjects, and useful practical application." — Bickerstcth. " One of the noblest ojf'erings that consecrated hand ever laid on the altar. Let a Clergyman about to expound a chapter orally, study it in Doddridge, or Henry, or Scott, or Girdlestone ; and then let him go over the same chapter with Simeon, and we think that, notwithstanding all the admitted excellencies of the former writers, the last will furnish out the best ap- pointed champion."— C/trisiiara Remcinbrancer. " Simeon's Discourses comprise a comvient on nearly the whole of the Holy Scriptures, and exceed in copiousness, as a storehouse of sound hortatory theology, any production of the same kind that had been previously given to the work." " These outlines compose a series of regularly di- gested and supremely important topics of Christian di- vinity. As helps to composition they will be peculiarly serviceable to young clergymen, and also to the more aged, whose extensive employment incapacitates them from supplying as fast as they can expend." " We recommend these volumes most cordially to the attention of the younger members of the clerical profession; they will be found real helps to their in- ventive laculties." — Christian Observer. Simon's " Ten Tribes op Israel," historically identified — See Miscellanies. SMYTH'S (REV. DR ) EXPOSITION OF VA- RIOUS PASSAGES OF HOLY SCRIP- TURE, adapted to the Use of Families, for every Day throughout the Year 3 vols. 8vo. handsomely printed, cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 1 Is 6rf) reduced to 12s Hatchard, 1842 " This Daily Expositor for Families is a happy idea, ably carried out. We recommend it with confidence to all families, certain that it cannot fail to be approved." Theological Journal. STACK'S (DR.) LECTURES ON THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, Explanatory and Prac- tical, 8vo. 2iid edition, gilt cloth (pub. at 8s) re- duced to 2> 6d . 1 B05 These Lectures are formed upon the excellent model of those delivered by Bishop I'orteus, upon the Gospel of St. Matthew. The work is dedicated to the Bishop, and was highly recommended by hira. 48 THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, AND MORALS. SOUTH'S (DR. ROBERT) SERMONS : to which are annexed the chief heads of the Sermons, a Biographical Memoir, and General Index, 2 vols, royal 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 18s . 1844 " The Sermons of this wittiest of English Divinw \rill always rank among the standard productions of the English Church. They are adapted to all readers and to all days." — Retrospective Review. " South's iirmons are invaluable — the staff of his gpear is like a eaver's beam." — British Critic. " South is conspicuous for sound practical good '*C7ise, for a deep insight into human character, for ifvcliness of imagination and exuberant invention, and unbounded wit. In perspicuity, copiousness, and force of expression, he is almost unrivalled among English writers. The sincerity of his principles is shewn in the purity of his life, and the vigour of his understanding is stamped on all that he yi vote. "—Penny Ctjclopadia. STURM'S CONTEMPLATIONS ON THE SUF- FERINGS OF CHRIST, in a Series of De- votional Exercises, with an explanatory Para- phrase of the Gospel Narrative, translated from the German byW. Johnstone, A.M., with a Me- moir and Portrait, crown 8vo. chth lettered, (pub. at 9s) reduced to 5s 1826 ^^REFLECTIONS ON THE WORKS OF GOD, and of his Providence throughout all Nature, translated from the German, complete in one elegantly printed volume, fcap. Vlrno. frontispiece, extra cloth bds. (pub. at 5s) reduced to3s6d . 1«^^6 TAYLOR'S (JEREMY) COMPLETE V/ORKS, with an Essay, Biographical and Critical, 3 laro-e vols. impl. 8vo. portrait, extra cloth bcls. (pub^at £3. 15s) reduced to £3. 3s 1836 " Bp. Taylor lias the eloquence of the orator, tlie fancy of the poet, the acuteness of the schoolman, the profoundness of the philosopher, and the piety of tlie saint." — Parr. "We will ve. ture to assert that there is m any one of the prose folios of Jeremy Taylor more fancy and original imagery, more brilliant conceptions and glowing expressions, more new figures, and new ap])li- cation of old figures ; more, in short, of the body and the soul of poetry, than in all the odes and epics that have since beeu produced in Europe." Edinburgh Review. PRACTICAL WORKS, viz.— 1. The Whole of his Sermons, including the Supplement.— 2. Holy Living; and Holy Dying-.— 3. Contem- plations.—4. Golden Grove.— 5. Psalter of Da- vid,with Devotions.— 6. Collection of Offices. — 7. The Worthy Communicant. — B. Christian Consolations.— 9. Discourse on Friendship.— 10. Letters to Persons changed in their Reli- gion ; and 11. Liberty of Prophesying, complete with a Biographical Memoir, in 2 thick vols, medium 8vo.eitrac/o(/i, • 1844 TAYLOHS'S (ISAAC OF ONGAR) NATURAL HISTORY OF ENTHUSIASM, tenth edition, fcap. Bvo. clnth lettered, 5s . 1845 CONTENTS. 1. Enthusiasm, Secular and Religious. 2. Knthusiasm in Devotion. 3. Knthusiastic Terversion of tlie Doctrine of Di- vine Influence. 4. Enthusiasm the Source of Heresy. 6. Enthusiasm of Prophe- tical interpretation. 6. Knthusiaslic abuses of the Doctrine of I'arti- cular I'rovidence. 7. Enthusiasm of Philan- thropy. 8. Sketch of the Entlm- siasm of the Ancient Church. 0. The same Subject— In- gredients of the Ancient Mnnachism. 10. Hints on the Probable .spread of Christianity, submitted to those who misuse the term En- thusiasm. to strike any ordinary mind with subjects of rcv'cction for a year."^Literary Qazette. " The author is a clever and a pious man, whose piety never makes him duH, and whose wit never borders on profaneness ; his book is well written, and calculated to check the incipient disorders of the ima- gination, to give tone and firmness to tlie enfeebled powers of the sickly religionist, and to point out the difference between th" beneficial glow of a well-ordered piety, and Hie pernicious fervours of a distempered fancy." — Brit. Critic. " It is refreshing to us to meet with a work bearing as this unquestionably docs, the impress of bold, power- ful, and original thought. Its most strikingly original views, however, never transgress the bounds of pure Protestant orthodoxy, or violate the spirit of truth and soberness ; and yet it discusses topics constituting the very root and basis of Uiose furious polemics which have shaken repeatedly the whole intellectual and moral world." — Athcncsuin. " A very able vioik-"—Edinl)urgh Review. TAYLOR'S (ISAAC) FANATICISM, third edi- tion, cnrefully revised, fcap. 8vo. in extra cloth boards, 6s . 1843 " It is tlie reader's fault, if he does not rise from the perusal of such a volume as the present a wiser and a better man." — Eclectic Review. " The author is evidently a man of ardent piety, of a vivid imagination, and of a vigorous and excursive understanding, and has a vast command of diction and of imagery. He is never dull. Dulne^s, indeed, is at the very antipodes of his manner. There is an inten- sity about the composition which keeps our faculties perpetually upon the stretch. The man, beyond all question, is a very distinguished writer." — Brit. Crit, " We have no doubt tliat the present work will ac- quire the same popularity with the former production* of this author. He has displayed extensive research in a curious branch of religious history : the general character of his pages Is moderate and impartial, at well as pious ; he seems actuated by a sincere desire to heal, as far as in him lies, the breaches of the Christian commonwealth; and to point out as subjects of rational rejoicing those few steps which the world seems to have gained in its dark and vacillating pro- gress towards better and nobler views of religion." Edinburgh Review, SATURDAY EVENING, seventh edition, fcap 8vo. in extra cloth boards, 5s 1844 CONTENTS. " Full of admirable observation. Wo believe that from this volume might he collected Bufficieiit materials 1. The Hour of Hope and Ditfidence. 2. Tlie Expectation of Christians. 3. The Courage peculiar to Times and Places. 4. Laxity and Decision. 5. The Means of Mercy. C. The Ciiurch and the World. 7. State of Sacred Science. 8. The Hidden World. 9. The State of Seclusion. 10. The Limits of Revela- tion. 11. A'astiiess of the Mate- rial Universe. 12. Piety and Energy. 13. The Last Conflict of Great Princijiles. 14. Licentious Religionism. 15. The Power of Rebuke. 18. Strength of the Power of Rebnke. 17. The Recluse. 18. The Modern Anchoret. 19. The Family Affection of Christianity. 20. Cliarity and Conscience. 21. The Few Noble. 22. Rudiment of Christian Magnanimity. 23. The Dissolution of Hu- man Nature. 24. The State of Souls. 25. The Third Heavens. 20. The Precursor. 27. Endless Life. 28. The Pirpetuity of Hu- man Nature. 29. Unison of the Heavenly Hierarchy. Devout persons, whose leisure permits them to do so, are accustomed to devote the Saturday Evkninq to preparatory meditation. The author says " Tlie medi- tations in the present volume are intended to bear, more or less directly, upon those changes in religiou.i practices or modes of feeling, which naturally are tliought of as proper to usher in a brighter age." " Tliis is a worlc whicli we feel conlldent the religinui public will receive with sometliing more than approba- tion,— with deference and gratitude. — Admitted to his Saturday livening retirement, we listen to his discourse as that, not of a professional lecturer, or a disputant of tliis world, but of one who, having held converse with the true fountain of wisdom, opens to us his pri- vate thoughts in the tones of triendship. The volume u replete, not merely witli thouglit, but with inateriaU for thinking,— with gerrainant seeds that, where they find THEOLOGY, ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, AND MORALS. TAYLOR'S (ISAAC) HOME the riplit aoU, cannot fail to reproduce a harvest of tliouglits in otiier minds. It is in some respects adapted to be ttie most popular of his productions, as it is cer- tainly the most powerful. The style sonietinus kindles into the most vehement and lofty elociucnec. Tlie paper on 'The Means of Mercy' is one of tlie most finely sustained arpumcntative appeals, in illustration of tlie Divine scheme of Justification, tliat we have ever seen. We might specify other papers scarcely less striking. Upon the whole, the volume cannot liiil to make a very powerful impression, and it cannot be more favourably received than it deserves to be." Eclectic licvlcw. Saturday Evening,' and ' Natuuai, Hia- TOKT OP Enthusiasm/ are two noble productions." Slackn-ood's Ma(jazinc. TAYLOR'S (ISAAC) ELE!\IENTS OF THOUGHT, or concise explanations, ali)ha- betically arranged, of the principal terms employed in the usual branches of intellectual Philosophy, seventh edition, 12mo. in extra cloth boards, 4s . 18-15 •*• The design of this volume is to impart, in a fa- miliar form, elementary explanations and instructions on subjects connected with the intellectual faculties ; to afl'ord gradual and easy exercises to the powers of abstraction, and thus to conduct tlie young reader by an accessible path into that region of thought wliere the mind acquires force, accuracy, and comprehension. It is an admirable condensation of all tliat has been written or said on the subject, and a most useful Intro- duction to the study of Metaphysics, while it contains as much knowledge on the subject as the general reader will require. " As an elementary work, it is truly valuable."— Jlfo7i«7t/y Revieiv. ANTIENT CHRISTIANITY, and the- Doc- trines of the Oxford Tracts for tuk Tints. Fourth Edition, with a Supplement and Inde.ves, 2 vols, 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 18s . 1844 " He who wishes to see the subject of Puseyisni fully handled may consult Mr. Isaac Taylor s able and ela- borate work, entitled Ancient Christianity. This pro- duction has more than the author's usual excellencies. We cannot but regard it as a most valuable contribu- tion to the cause of Scriptural Christianity ; and highly creditable to his talents, energy, and learning." Edin. lieview, Apr. 1848. " The most powerful opponent of the Oxford school who has yet appeared, is Isaac Taylor, the well-known author of the ' Natural History of Enthusiasm, &c." American Biblical Repository. " One of the most remarkable publications of the present age."— Churchman's Monthly Review. " This is one of the most valuable works which have appeared in Theological Literature formanv vears, and gives quite a new aspect to the Patristic Controversy. It is a treasury of historical materials dug out of the crude masses of Ecclesiastical Antiquity; and will be indispensable to any one who, not having those ponder- ous t( mi es within his reach, wishes to form a judgment of the religion which succeeded, in the Nicene Age to Apostolic Cliristianity." — Patriot. ' LECTURES ON SPIRITUAL CHRIST- IANITY, 8vo. eao-a c/ot/i, (pub. at 4s Qd) re- duced to Si . 1841 " The Lectures before us are among the best of tlie author's numerous woiks, wliether considered in rela- tlim to their probable utility, or as exhibiting in a high degree the distinguishing excellencies of his mind Probably the cftect may be owing to the nature of the subject, and to our own jiredilections ; but from the jierusal of none of the autho.'s other works have we risen with the same sense of pleasure and of profit, and the same high admiration of tlie writer's gifts and at- taiinnerits. Cur path is through a region of light,- the waymarks of truth are visible at every turn ; and as we follow the stately steps of our accomplished guide we have not only a sense of safetv, but are charmed with the beauty of the scenes through which we pass." Congregational Mag. 49 EDUCATION, iouiih hdition, fcap. 8vo. extra cloth boards, (jmb. at 7s 6(/) rociuced to 5s 1842 *,* In this volume the general principles of Educa- tion, as applicable to private families and to small schools, are stated and explained; such methods of treatment, especially, being suggested, as are best suited to the circumstances of a Country Residence ; at the same time, hints are oftered of a kind to be available under any circumstances for carrying on the culture of those of the intellectual faculties that are the earliest dcveloiied, and on the due expansion of which the force and efficiency of the mature mind depend. " A most important subject." American Biblical Repo.iitory . " A work on moral and religious culture, from the same source, would be a boon to society of no ordinary- value."— lycstminstcr Review. EDITION OF JONATHAN EDWARDS ON FREE WILL. An Inquiry into the modern prevailing Notions respecting that Fri-edom of Will which is supposed to be essential to Moral Agency, Virtue and Vice, Kevvard and Punishment, Praise and Blame, Kew Edition, with an Introductory Essay by Isaac Taylor, Bvo. eitm cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 8s . 1846 TIMPSON'S (REV. T.) MEMOIRS OF BRI- TISH FEMALE MISSIONARIES, with a Survey of the Condition of Women in Heathen Countries; and an Introductory Essay on the Importance of Female Agency in Evangelizing Pagan Nations, by Miss Thompson, fcap. 8vo. uith beautiful frontispiece, extra cloth, (pub. at Os 6(/) reduced to 3s 6d . 1841 MOTHER WITH HER FAMILY, being Scriptural Exercises, Prayers, and Hymns for Children, every Sunday Evening. To which are added, Hannah Moore's Counsels to Mothers in teaching Religion to their Children, 18mo. frontispiece, extra cloth, (pub. at 2s Qd) reduced to Is 6d , 1841 " A liUle heaven below will be enjoyed by those fami- lies where, in the hands of a dear pious mother, this book 16 used. We most earnestly and conscientiously advise all mothers to procure, and to use this small but invaluable yioi-k."~Sundaij School Magazine. TOMLINE'S (BISHOP) INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF THE BIBLE, or Elements of Christian Theology, containing Proofs of the Authenticity and Inspiration of the Holy Scriptures ; a Summary of the History of the .lews ; an Account of the Jewish Sects ; and a brief Statement of the Contents of the several Books of the Old and New Testaments, Nine- teenth Edition, elegantly printed on fine paper, 12mo. eusly published, and contains Supplements, Indexes, and Corrections, &c. BARROW'S (SIR JOHiN) TRAVELS into the Interior of Southern Africa, Second Edition, 2 vols. — Travels in China and Cochin China, 2 vols. — together, 4 vols. 4to. many coloured plates III Daniell, cloth (pub. at £9. 9s) reduced to £2. 2s 1804-7 TRAVELS IN CHINA, containing De- scriptions, Observations, and Comparisons, made and collected in the course of a Resi- dence at the Imperial Palace of Yuen-min-yuen, and on a subsequent Journey through the Country from Pekin to Canton, in which it is attempted to appreciate the Rank that this extraordinary Jilmpire may be consi- dered to hold in the scale of civilized Nations, 2nd. edit. 4to. illustrated by coloured plates by Daniell and Alexander, extra cloth boards (pub. at £2. 12s 6(i) reduced to 15s 1806 " The most valuable and inttresting account of the Chinese nation that has been yet laid before the public." Edinhiiryh Review. BATTLES OF THE BRITISH NAVY, from A.D. 1000 to 1840, by Joseph Allen, Esq. o£ Greenwich Hospital, .nuthor of England's Wooden Walls, etc., 2 thick elegantly printed vols. fcap. 8vo. illustrated by 24 portraits of British Admirals, beautifully engraved on steel, and njimerott' iiood-c^its of battles; cloth, richly gilt (pub. at£l. Is) reduced to 14s 1842 "These volumes are in v ah; able; they contain THE VERY PITH AND MARROW OK OUR BEST NaVAI. Histories anu Chronicles ; compiled from the most aiiihentic sources, and a careful investigation of the various logs and other records deposited in Greenwich Hospital and the Admiralty. By this means many new facts, as well as important minutiae, are here pub- lished for the first time. During the whole extended period over which his researches range, Mr. Allen has not oniitied one naval action of the slighie.-t moment: indeed the work contains more information than the largest Naval History, and no lOJ pa^es, and the Indiies and Glussary aie very copious. The whole forin'i a thick elegantly printed volume, eMeiiding in all ii.848 pages. The other eili- tion>, includiiii one publisiied in ^iinil.ir >hape, with an abrid-jcmmt of the Life by Allan (!iinnini;hatn, colnpli^ed in only 47 piges, and the whole wjlimie in only 504 pages, do nut contain above two-ihiirls of the abi.vt*. It seems the more necessary to call attintion to tlii-3 fact, as the edition referred to has lately been put forth as " the only complete edition." One mi- nute's comparison will be snflicieul to undeceive in this respect. CAMPBELL'S LIFE AND TIMES OF PE- TRARCH ; with Notices of Boccaccio and his illustrious Contemporaries. Second Edition, 2 vols. 8vo. fine portraits and plates, extra cloth (pub. at £1. lis Gd) reduced to 12s 1843 "The standard lite of Petrarch. The fortunes and career of the pott are traced with admirable distinct- ness ; his devoted passion for Laura is finely developed »nd characterized ; and his poetical character is ana- lyzed and estimated with all the pc-wer ot a kindred genius. Tiiis work must take it^ place in our libraries as one of the most interesting and important hiiturical works of our lime." — Athencfum, GARY'S MEMORIALS OF THE GREAT CIVIL WAR IN ENGLAND, from 1646 to 1652, edited from Original Letters in the Bod- leian Library, of Charles I., Charles II., Queen Henrietta, Prince Rupert, Prince Maurice, Prince Charles Lodovic, Duke of York, Hyde Earl of Clarendon, Abp. Sancroft, Marqtiis of Worcester, Earl of Derby, Oliver Cromwell, Sir Thomas Fairfax, Sir Walter Strickland, Sir Arthur Haslerig, General Monk, General Poyntz, General Skippon, Colonel Ireton, Colonel Hammond, Admiral Deane, Admiral Blake, and numerous other eminent Persons, 2 vols, 8vo. handsomely printed, extra cloth, (pub. at £ 1 . 8s) red uced to 1 2s . 1 842 " We can safely recommend this work to all loveri of historical literature." — Literary Gazette. GARY'S TRANSLATION OF DANTE, fcap. Svo. extra cloth, (pub. at lOs 6d) reduced to 8s 6d 1844 Gary's version of Dante is unanimously allowed to be one of the most masterly productions of modero times. " Shelley always says that reading Dante is nnfa- vourable to writing, from its superiority to all possible com posit ions. " — Byron. TRANSLATION OF PINDAR, fcap. Svo. extra cloth, (pub. at 6.«) reduced to 4s 6d EARLY FRENCH POETS, a Series of No- tices and Translations, with an Introductory Sketch of the History of French Poetry. Edited by his Son, the Rev. Henry Gary, M.A. Worcester College, Oxford, fcap. 8vo. LIVES OF ENGLISH POSITS, from John- son to Kirke White, designed as a Continuation of Johnson's Lives. Edited by his Son, fcap. Svo. CHAMBERS'S LIFE OF KING JAMES L, 2 vols. 18mo. ckth bds. (pub. at 7s) reduced to 4s . 1830 CHANDLER'S (DR. R.) TRAVELS IN ASIA MINOR AND GREECE, made at the ex- pense of the Society of Dilettanti, 2 vols, in 1 , 4to. maps and plans, extra cloth, (pub. at £2. 2i) reduced to 12s . 1817 GHANNING'S COMPLETE WORKS, the Li- brary EDITION, complete to the time of his decease, printed from the Author's corrected copies, transmitted to the English Publishers by the Author himself, 6 vols, post Svo. hand- somely printed, with a fine portrait, cloth lettered, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. Is 1845 "The works of Channing ate among the noblest productions of the human mind, and the richest gifts of a bountiiul God. Never since man was placed upon earth, has any one wiitten with more of the spirit of truth and of love. His words are remarkable for fit- ness and btautj, his thoughts are the effulgence of the eterUHl light, and his feelings are the tidiness of the heavenl> lite. It is impossible that his works should be read without piofil. li is impossible that they should be iiiiivei>allj diffused, without ettecting a beneficent revolution amongst every class, and in every institution ol society. " " Channing is unquestionably \.he finest tvr iter of the aye. From his writings may be extracted some of the richest poetry and richest conceptions, clothed in lan- guage, unlbrtunately for our literature, too little studied in the day in which we live." — Fraser'g Magazine. " We warmiyand heartily recommend Dr. Channing to the hands of every young man who is finishing bis ^liicalion, and to every general reader who earnestly •iek> Ins own improveincnl." — Athenteum. " The Sermons of Dr. (/banning are astonishing pro- ductons, and deserve a high place in the library of every Divine throughout the worl^."-r-JVew Monthly MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. CHATRAUBRIAND'S SKETCHES OF ENG- J.lSn LITEHATL'RE, 2 vols. 8vo. in extra cloth boards, (pub. at £ 1 . 4s ) reduced to 12s 1836 ^HISTORICAL, POLITICAL, & MORAL ESSAY ON REVOLUTIONS, Ancient and IModern, Bvo. extra cloth (pub. at 8s) reduced to3s6d • 1815 " Cliiteaubriand is the greatest man of his age— in mind, in style, in poetry, in iiearl."— 7u/es Janin. CHATHAM PAPERS, being the Correspondence of William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. Edited by the Executors of his Son, John, Earl of Chat- ham, and published from the original Manu- scripts in their possession, 4 voW. Bvo. extra cbth, (pub. at £3. 12s) reduced to £1. 5s Murray, 1838-1840 " A production of greater historical interest could hardly be imagined. We have not seen another pos- »essed of more varied and engrossing interest. Never did history offer more instructive lessons tor prest nt giiidiinie than are contained in this cvas not merely the ar- biter of the destinies of his own counlry, but ' the foremost man in nil the world.' He had an unparalleled grandeur and affluence of intellectual powers, soltened and briijhltned by all the minor ^iccomplishmenis; his ambition was noble; his views instinctively elevated; his patriotism all but excessive— and in all the domestic relations of life he was exemplary and amiable — a fine scholar, a finished gentleman, a sincere Christian — one whom his private friends and servants loved as a good man, and all the world admired as a great one." — Quarterly Review. " There is hardly any manin modern times who fill* $0 large a space in our history, and of whom we know to little as Lord Chatham; and )el he is the per- son to whom every one would at once point, if desired "to name the g^^eatest Statesman and Orator that this country ever produced. We rejiard this work, then, as one of the greatest value: and hold the editors (of whom his great-gramlson and personal representative is one) to have rrndetehie most chaste and delightful volumes in the whole range of our English anthologies." —Atlas. CONQUEST OF PERU AND ADVENTURES OF PIZARRO (THE HISTORY OF) by Don Trueba, IBmo. cloth bds. (pub. at 3$ 6d) reduced to2» ' . 1830 5G MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATUREo COOKERY— JENNINGS' FAMILY COOKERY, containing 2500 Practical Receipts, the whole Art of Carving, and an Introduction on the Duties of Cooks and other Servants, thick 12ino. uood-cuts, cloth, full gilt {'puh. at 7s 6(/) reduced to 3s . 1844 This extremely useful work may be called an " En- cyclopaedia of Family Cookery." It conlains all the Laws, Rules, Recipes, Ordinances, and Regulations, wUich may be thouuht necessary, pleasant, useful, elegant, or beneficial to llie State of Cookery as now establislicd. It was compiled by two practical Cooks, Mrs. Sarah Jennings, and Mrs. Jane Johnson, and will be found to be as correct as it is complete. LADIES OWN COOKERY BOOK AND DIN N ER TA BLE DIRECTORY, adapted to the use of Persons living in the Highest Style, as well as those of moderate Fortune, including a large Collection of Original Receipts contri- buted by an extensive circle of Acquaintances, ( Lady Charlotte Bury, assisted by a distin- guished practical Cook). Second Edition, in one closely printed volume, post 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 8s 6(/) reduced to 3s Qd 1844 COOPER'S (J. F.) HISTORY OF THE NAVY OFTHE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, from the Earliest Period to the Peace of 1815, 2 vols. 8vo. -portrait, gilt cloth (pub. at £1. 10s) reduced to I2s 1839 " These volumes are filled with the graphic re- cords of dailng adventure, and contain, in their narra- tion of facts, a treasure to the lovers of ,uh. at 8s) reduced to (5s 1842 COWI'ER'S POETICAL WORKS, with Life of tne Author, by fticDiarniid, foolscap 12mo. beautifully engraved frontispieces, extra red turkey cloth gilt (pub. at 8s; reduced to 3s 1844 COWPER'S COMPLETE WORKS, edited by SouTHF.y, comprising his Poems, Correspon- dence, and Translations, witli a Life of the Author, 15 vols, post 8vo. beautifully printed by Whittingham, embellished with numerous ei" 5tiisi(e engravings, ajter the designs of Harvey, elegantly bound in cloth (pub. at £3. 15s) reduced to £2. i2s 6d . 1835-7 the same, hf. bd. morocco, marbled edges, £4. •,• This i» the only complete edition of Cowper which has ever been given to the world. The early Poems, addressed by Cowper to his cousin, Theodora Cowper, to whom he was attached, are exclusively copyright, and consequently cannot appear in any other edition. It contains all the letters which had been previously published, examined with the ori- ginals, and passages restored, that either from error in judgment, or reasons connected with individuals then living, were left out by Hayley, many of which passages are important, and liiglily illustrative of the mind of Cowper. It comprehends, in addition, up- wards of One hundred and twenty letters never before printed in any shape, and of the most interest- ing description. In the Life of the Poet, Dr. Southey has introduced much of ilie Literary History of Eng- land during half a century, with Biographical Sketches of many of his contemporaries. " Of Cowper how shall I cypress myself in adequate terms of admiration? The purity of his principles, the tenderness of his heart, his unaffected and zealous piety, his warmth of devotion, the delicacy and play- fulness of his wit, and the singular felicity of his dic- tion, all conspire by turns ' To win the wisest, warm the coldest heart.' Cowper is the poet of a well-educated and well-prin- cipled Englishman. ' Home, sweet Home' is the scene — limited as it may be imagined— in which he contrives lo concentrate a thousand beauties, which Gibers have scattered tar and wide upon objects ol less interest and attraction. His pictures are, if I may so speak, conceived with all the tenderness of Rattaclle, and executed with all the finish and sharpness of Teniers. No man, in such few words, tells his tale, or describes his scene so forcibly and so justly. The popularity of Cowper gains strength as it gains age: and, after all, he is the poet of our study, our cabinet, and our alcove." — Dibdin. " There is not in (he whole compass of English literature, a single writer, whose works, including his admirable Correspondence, deserve to be so generally infused (if we may be permitted the expression) into society, as those of Cowper." — Atlas. ''CoVVPEK IS BY FAR THE MOST DELIGHTFUl, LETTER-WRITER IN THE ENGLISH LANGtIAGR.'' — Quarterly Review. " The Letters of Mr. Cowper are the finest speci- mens of the epistolary style in our language. To an air of inimitable ease they unite a high degree of cor- rectness, such as could resultonly from the clearest in- tellect, combined witli the most finished taste. There is scarcely a single word capable of being exchanged for a better, and of literary errors there are none. I have perused them with great admiration and delight." — Rtbert Hall. " The study of Cowper's prose will be found highly useful in forming the taste of young people." — Ibid. " All the writings of Cowper bear the stamp of ori- ginal genius, and remind us of the merits that have secured immortality to Shakspeare. It is impossible to read his productions without being delighted with his force, his brilliancy, and his variety." — Edinb. Review. CRAWFURD'S (J.) JOURNAL OF AN EM- BASSY FROM THE GOVERNOR-GENE- RAL OF INDIA TO THE COURTS OF SIAM AND COCHIN-CHINA, exhibiting a View of the actual State of those Kingdoms, 2 vols. 8vo. second edition, with maps and 25 plates, cloth bds. (pub. at £1. lis 6d) reduced to 12s . 1830 "A mass of very valuable additions respecting a part of the world in which the commercial interests of the cay in all probability be concerned to a very important extent."— y^»ie«. MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITEUATUUE. 57 CRAWFURD'S (J.) JOURNAL OF AN EM- BASSY TO THE COURT OF AVA, with an Appendix, containing a Description of Fossil Remains, by Professor Buckland, 2 vols. 8vo. second edition, with 13 maps, plates, and vigtiettes, cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 1 \s6d) reduced to I2s 1834 "This, like Mr. Crawfurd's other publications, con- tains a large store of inl'ormalion, antl many sound and judicious remarks on the i.istiiiitions and manners of liie Kast." — Westminster Review. CROKER'S (CROFTON) COLLECTION OF THE POPULAR SONGS OF IRELAND, Ancient and INIodern, with Introductions, and Historical and Explanatory Notes, post 8vo. cloth lettered, (pub. at 10s St/) reduced to 5s 1839 This interesting collection is printed in the same form as Kilson's Collection of English and Scouish Songs, and the publications of the Percy Society. The Songs and Ballads are of the most interesting, and, in Miany instances, exciting character, and each is accom- panied by its history from the competent pon of Crof- ton Croker, than whom no man knows more of the poetic superstitions, and the manners and mvthology of Ireland. CROLY'S (DR.) PERSONAL HISTORY OF KING GEORGE THE FOURTH, with Anecdotes of distinguished Persons of the last Fifty Years, second edition, enlarged, 2 vols, post 8vo. portrait; extra cloth (pub. at £,\. Is) re- duced to 9s 1841 "This work is written thronghont with great anima- tion and elegance, and contains many light and pleas- ing sketches of the characters of those men whose great qualities of mind and heart made those days illustrious in England's annals. The illustrious names of Pitt and Fox, and Burke; of Thurlow, and Sheridan, and Canning; of Graltan, and Flood, and Curran, appear in the historic narrative in their various degrees of ce- lebrity, and are characterised always with force and freedom of style." — Oent.'s Mag, CRUIKSHANK'S THREE COURSES AND A DESSERT, a Series of Tales, in three sets, viz. Irish, Legal, and Miscellaneous, crown 8vo. W7(/i 51 extremely clever and comic Illustrations; extra cloth, gilt, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 10s 1844 " That very capital and comic work, 'Three Courses and a Dessert,' was published at a lime when the rage for comic stories was not so great as it has since be- come,and Messrs. Clark and Cruiksliank therefore only sold their thousands where Messrs. Dickens and Phiz dispose of their lens uf thousands. But if our recom- niendation can in any way influence the reader, we would enjoin him to secure a copy of the 'Thiee Courses,' which contains the best designs of George Cruiksliank, and some of the most amusing tales in our language." — Weft. Rev. "This is an extraordinary performance. Such an union of the painter, the poet, and the novelist, in one person, is unexampled. A tithe of the talent that goes to making the stories would set np a dozen of annual writers ; and a tithe of the inventive genius that is dis- played in the illustrations, would fnrnish a gallery of the Colour-mixers iu Essex Street and the- Strand." — Spectator. "The most amusing book we have read for many a day." — Aihentcum. "There must oe no smiling heie. A man who does not laugh outright is a dullard, and has no heart ; and there are some of these designs which have the liles5e each. DUNCAN'S HISTORY OF THE DUKES OF NORMANDY, from the time of Rolio to the Expulsion of King John by Philip Augustus of France, foolscap 8vo. frontispiece, extra cloih, gilt back, (pub. at 7s) reduced to 4s 6d 1839 "The author has, in this elegant little volume, sup- plied a deficiency in the historical literature of England. The sample is so good that we only wish we had more of it." — Examiner, DUNLOP'S (JOHN) MEMOIRS OF SPAIN DURING THE REIGNS OF PHILIP IV AND CHARLES IL from 1621 to 1700, 2 vols. 8vo. gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. 6s) reduced to 12s . Edinb. 1834 An able work, which follows Watson's Philip II. and III., and with Robertson's Charles V. and Coxc's Bourbon Kings, forms a continuous History of Spain to 1788. EARL'S (G. W.) EASTERN SEAS; OR, VOYAGES AND ADVENTURES IN THE INDIAN ARCHIPELAGO IN 1832, 1833, AND 1834 ; comi)rising a Tour of the Island of Java, Visits to Borneo, the Malay Peninsula, Siam, &c. ; also an Account of the present State of Singapore, with Observations on the Commercial Resources of the Archipelago, 8vo. ji!)(/i 4 maps, extra cloth bds. (pub. at Pis) re- duced to 6s . 1837 "The Indian Archipelago possesses in its peculiar moral inlerest, as Australia in its extent, a claim to be entitled the fillli division of the globe. An excellent anil pleasing account of it was given to the public a lew )ear» ago by Mr. Crawfurd. But Ihat ilid not allbrd a near view of the Insular communities and their singular maimeis; nor did it point out their poli- tical tendency, or commercial capabilities. These waiils are now supplied by Mr. Earl, whose volume contains much th.it is novel, communiralfd in an iiii- atlucted and agreeable manner." — Athimtriant cimtribuiion to the right understanding of ihise subjects which has ever appeared." — Lit. (iaz. This admirable and laborious ivork on the Topo- graphy of Home, should undoubtedly find a place in every good library by the side of Gibbon's History. 'i'o the classical scholar and student it is absolutely in dispensable. The Map is most beautifully engraved (similar to the Ordnance Maps), on a very large scale, and ex- liiliils the only perfect trigonometrical survey which "xisis of this classic ground. Many places are here lail down, which are not so much as named in later II (ties; and others have materially changed their loca- iiies upon well established proof. The expense of surveys and measurement alone cost npwards of five hundred pounds. GEORGIAN ERA, OR MODERN BRITISH lilOGRAPHY, comprising Memoirs of the most Eminent Persons who Lave flourished in Great Britain from the Accession of George the First to the Demise of George the Fourth, 4 vols. sm. 8vo. portraits on steel, cloth, elegantly gilt, (pub. at £L 12s) reduced to 16s 1832 This work is entirely novel in its plan, embodying, with an immense mass of personal anecdote, :> compre- hensive detail of the progress of National EtcuIs and I'l.lilical Affair^; Naval and Military Operations; Theoli>i;y and Jurisprudence ; Philosophy, Literature and Science; Maritime and Inland Discovery, Music, Vine Arts, and the Drama; during the last IIUNDRKU K\v TWENTY YliAHS. The whole has been originally written from authentic sources, expressly fur this woik ; and many of the Lives are for the first time pie- siiited to the public. GEH AMD'S (BARON) PILGRIMAGE 70 PALESTINE, EGYPT, AND SYRIA, as a Monk of La I'rappe, 2 vols, post 8vo. nr,/i littered, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 9s 1840 MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. GAZETTEER.— NEW EDINBURGH UNI- VERSAL GAZETTEER, and Geographical Dictionary, more complete than any hitherto published, new edition, revised And com- pleted TO THE PRESENT TIME, by JOHK Thomson, (editor of the Universal Atlas, &c.) very thick 8vo. (1040 pages) maps; extra cloth, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 12s Edinb. 1845 This comprehensive volume is the latest, and by far the best Universal Gazetteer of its size. It includes a full account of Atfghanistan, New Zealand, &c. Sec. GEMS OF EPISTOLARY CORRESPON- DENCE, selected from the best English Au- thors, from the Time of Sir Philip Sidney to the Present Day, by R. A. Willmott, Trin. Coll. Camb. new edition, post 8vo. extra gilt cloth, (pub. at 7s 6d) reduced to 4s 1846 This judicious selection comprises the names of above 100 of the most distinguished English Classics. Among the more recent, are— Walpole, Hannah More, Burke, Sir W.Jones, Parr, Byron, Bp. Heber, Sir Jas. Mackin- tosh, Robert Hall, Lamb, Beckford, Sir Walter Scott Sonlhey, Wellington, Coleridge, Landor, Mrs. Hemans, L. E. L. GIBBON'S HISTORY OF THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, with a Memoir of the Author, one large vol, impl. 8vo. portrait, cloth lettered, retiuced to £1. Is . 1840 GILLIES' HISTORY OF GREECE, complete, with the continuation, 8 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £3. 18s) reduced to £1. 8s 1820 GLEIG'S MEMOIRS OF WARREN HAS- TINGS, first Governor-General of Bengal, including his Journals and Letters now first published from the Originals in possession of the Family, 3 vols. Qvo.Jine portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at £2. 5s) reduced to£l. Is 1841 " A sterling book, in which altaiis of national im- portance are so mingled with details of personal diffi- culties and dangers, that we know not which most fixes our attention, the events of great public moment, or the crises of iiiflividual enterprise." — Literary Gaz. GORDON'S HISTORY OF THE GREEK REVOLUTION, and of the Wars and Cam- paigns arising from the Struggles of the Greek Patriots in emancipating their Country from the Turkish Yoke, (by the late Thomas Gordon, F.R.S. of i\lintlaw, in Cairness, Aberdeenshire, General of a Division of the Greek Army, and a zealous Promoter of the Cause.) Second edition, 2 vols. 8vo. maps and plans, extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 10s) reduced to 10s 6d 1842 " It is utterly impoSiible for us lo do anything like justice 10 the lueiits of these important volumes; but we have seen more than enough lo justify us in de- claiing that they must at once take their rank among our standard liistories. We doubt whether a person more adequate to the task could be found than the gentleman whose work is before us." — AthencEum, GOLDSAIITH'S WORKS, with a Life and Notes, 4 vols. fcap. 8vo. ivilh engraved titles and plate$ b\i Stothaid and Cruihshank, new and elegant edition, handtonielti printed, extra turkey cloth, full gilt (pub. at £1.) reduced to 12s 1846 This may be called the Waterlky Ecition CF Goldsmith, being the only one which matches in siy.e and appearance with the popular edition of the Vaveihy Novels. " Gcild-miih was a man who, whatever he wrote, did It belter ihau any other in«n couhl do." Vr. Johnson. "Can any author — can even Sir Waltb* Scott, bb coaiPARED wixu GoLCSUiTH for tbb MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. 61 T»RIKTy, BEAUTY, AND POWBR OF HIS COMPOSITION. You may take liiiii and ' cut him oiil in liule slai.s,' so many liglils does lie present to the imagination." A tlienmum. " In his |)rose and in his vene Vu •^.inibtts pue- risque was always the mono of thit benevolent and gentle-hearted man. His humour was without coarse- ness— his merriment without extravagance — Iiis wit without spleen. His volumes will ever consti- tute ONE OV THE most rRKCIOUS ' WELLS OK English undefiled.'" — Quarterly Review. GOLDSMITH'S CITIZEN OF THE WORLD, new editiim, witli original notes, square 12mo. 28 woodcuts, ornamental wrapper, (pub. at 4s) re- duced to 2s 6d . 1340 the same, c/o(/tg!/(, (pub. at 5s) reduced to 3s Goldsmith's Life — See Frior. GOLOWNIN'S (CAPTAIN) MEMOIRS OF JAPAN, during 1811, 1812, and 1813, with Observations on the Country and tlie People, second edition, 3 vols. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 1 Is 6d) reduced to 10s 6(2 1824 " No European has been able, from personal ob- servation and experience, to communicate a tenth part of the intelligence furnished by the present writer." — British Review. GRANVILLE'S (DR.) SPAS OF ENGLAND and principal Sea Bathing Places ; comprising the Northern, the Midland, and the Southern, 3 vols, post 8vo. with large Map, and upwards of 50 beautiful woodcuts; extra cloth, (pub. at il. 13s) red'uced to 15s 1841 " For the Invalid or Tourist this work forms a per- fect treasure." — Sun. " An excellent book. The analysis of the different waters, and the hints as to their usefulness in the cure of diseases, cannot but prove of the highest value." — Age. " To the invalids of the Public Services we represent, and whose interests we advocate, and who, through atdiioHs duties in distant cliniei have impaired their health, we recommend an immediate perusal of this national work, as a safe and valuable guide to direct them in the choice of the Spa or Sea Bathing place best calculated to suit their respective cases." IVaval and Military Gazette. GRANVILLE'S (DR.) SPAS OF GERMANY, Second Edition, 8 o. with 39 woodcuts and maps ; extra cloth, (pub. a • 18s) reduced to 9s 1843 " This attractive work presents a narrative of the grand tour to all the celebrated and fashionable mineral watering places in Germany — a tour in which amose- nient is bltnded with intormation, and descriptive sketches of the humours and fancies of each spa are mixed up with all the accurate details of every thing that is valuable in a medical or social point of view." Globe. HALL'S (CAPTAIN BASIL) PATCHWORK, consisting of Travels and Adventures in Switzerland, Italy, France, Sicily, Malta, &c. &c. 3 vols. 12rao. second edition, extra cloth, richly gilt, (pub. at 15s) reduced to 7s 6d 1841 A book full of the most entertaining stories and ad- vcntines, written with all the vigour and sprightliuess of this very agreeable writer. HAMILTON (LADY), MEMOIRS OF, drawn from Original Sources, and comprising many new and authentic Anecdotes of Lord Nelson, and other Distinguished Personages, post 8vo. Hue portrait, extra cloth (pub. at 8s) reduced to 3s 6d , 1835 " Since the Life of Savage we do not remember to have met with any biographical sketch that is so well enlculated as the present to paint the evils of volup- tuous irregidarity. It exhibits, in a variety of instances, the dangerous consequences of mingling virtue with vice, and of subsiilutint; bright talents and splendid deeds for the substantial qualities of integrity and cnastity." — Lit. Reg. IIEEREN'^5 (PROFESSOR) HISTORICAL WORKS, tra^islated from the German, viz : — A'jiA, new edition, complete in 2 vols.— Afhica, 2 vols. — Europe and its Coloniks, 2 vols. — Ancient Greece, 1 vol. — Historical Trea- tises 1 vol. — Manual of Ancient History. 1 vol. — together 9 vols. 8vo. cloth lettered, uni- form, (pub. at £7.) reduced to £4. 10s 1834-46 "Professor Heercn'a Historical Researches stand ir ili8 \eff highest rank among those with which modern tJermany has enriched the Literature of Europe." — {Quarterly Review. " All students of classical antiquity in this country are indebted to Mr. Talboys for the judgment and the zeal which he has exerted in making the works of this author accessible to English readers. We look upon Heeren as having breathed a new life into the dry bones of Ancient History. In countries, the history of which has been neglected, as being too imperfectly known to atlord lessons of political wisdom, he has taught us to look lor still more interesting lessons — on the social relations of men, and the intercourse of nations in the earlier ages of the world. His work is a» learned as a professed commentary on the ancient histo- rians and geographers, and as entertaininj^ as a modern book of travels." — Edinburgh Review. "There is no writer of modern times to whom the students of Ancient History are so deeply indebted as Professor Heeren. He is the equal of Niebuhr, of Miiller, and of Boeckh, in learning and talent; and he surpasses them all iu shrewdness and sagacity. The translation has been executed with equal spirit and fidelity, and has received the approbation of the illus- trious author. For ourselves, we feel deeply indebted to Mr. Talboys, who has supplied such rich stores of instruction and entertainment; and, for our country men, we can only say, that if this, the best historical work of modern times, does not obtain distinguished success, we shall despair of the cause of historical literature." — Athenceum. HISTORICAL RESEARCHES INTO THE POLITICS, INTERCOURSE, AND TRADES OF THE ANCIENT NATIONS OF AFRICA ; including the Carthaginians, Ethiopians, and Egyptians, second edition corrected throughout, with an Index, Life of the Author, new Appendixes, and other addi- tions, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth (pub. at £1. 10s) reduced to £1. 4s Oxjm-d, Talboys, 1838 HISTORICAL RESEARCHES im^O THE POLITICS, INTERCOURSE, AND TRADES OF THE ANCIENT NATIONS OF ASIA, including- the Persians, Phoenicians, Babylonians, Scythians, and Indians, new and improved edition, coiUYilete in2 vols. 8vq. elegantly printed, (pub. originally at £2. 5s) reduced to £1. 4s 1846 "The most agreeable, and one of the most profound of German writers on Antiquity." — Foreign Quarterly Review. " One of the most valuable acquisitions made to our historical stores since the days of Gibbon." — AthentBum, MANUAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE POLITICAL SYSTEM OF EUROPE AND ITS COLONIES, from its formation at the close of the Fifteenth Century, to its re-estab- lishment upon the Fall of Napoleon, translated from the Fifth German Edition, 2 vols. 8vo. txtra cloth (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 18s Oxford, Talboys, 1834 " In scrupulous fidelity, in sound judgment, and in clear reasoning. Professor Heeren ia second to none. His design in the present work is to give a connected view of the political and colonial system of Europe, from the time that the relations of the European States were formed into a system, tov\'ards the close of the fif- teenth century, to the re-establishment of the States system, consequent upon the fall of Napoleon. His 62 work is a perfect whole. It is tlie best liistory of Modern Europe that has yet appeand, and it is likely long to reiiiasn without a rival." — Athenaum. " A work of sterling value for now and litreafter— a work of infinite labour and coniniensiiralc intelligence — a work which would be cheap at double its price, in-- (Head of being dear at any price ; and a work which will dittuse useful knowledjie for geneiations, after all the shallow pretenders to that distinction are fortunately forgotten ."—Literary Gazette. HEEREIM'S ANCIENT GREECE, translated by Bancroft, fourth improved edition, 8vo. ctoth (pub. at 12s.) reduced to Is 6d 1845 " Heeren unites the laborious erudition of his coun- trymen with that animating spirit of real genius, which disposes into harmonious order, and quickens into life that which, in meaner hands, lies in dull and heavy masses of unintellij.T/i))(/, 1836 MANUAL OF ANCIENT HISTORY, par- ticularly with regard to the Constitutions, the ('omnierce, and the Colonies of the States of Antii'uity, third edition, corrected and im- proved, 8vo. eatJ-a cloth (pub. at 15.>) reduced to 12s Oxjoid, Talboys, 1840 " We never remember to have seen a work in which so much useful knowledge was condensed into so small a compass. A careful examination convinces us that tbis book will be useful for our English higher schools or colleges, and will contribute to direct attention to the better and more instructive parts of history. The trans- lation is executed with great fidelity."— Q« in this volume presented the public with tlie most interest- ing account of the campaign in China. The appendix contain! several papers of great iulcieat." — LUerarp Oaiette. MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE MACKAY^S (CHARLES) THAMES AND ITS TRIBUTAIIIKS, or Kainbles among the Rivers, 2 vols. 8vo, with 56 rr?)!/ fine wood engravings of Thames Scejiery and Antiquities, extra doth, (pub. at £ 1.8s) reduced to lis 1840 " It is most pleasant to walk out witli Mr. Mackay (IS a companion, loiter with him up the lanes and throuRli thu green fields, saunter along the river-side, and peer into every object of art and nature near, which can court tlie cont'.-mplation of intelligent minds. Hi» volumes are indeed very agreeable and very re- frcshing."— Xi<(^rnc(/ Gazette. MACNISH'S (DR.) TALES, ESSAYS, AND SKETCHES; with the Author's Life, by his friend. D. M. Moir, Second Edition, 2 vols. flap. 8vo. portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at 12s^ reduced to 5s . 1844 Dr. Macnisli is the well-known author of the Anatomy of Drunkenness, Anatomy of Sleep, &c. and one of the most popular contributors to Blackwood's Magazine under the signature of " The Modern Pythagorean." 67 CONTENTS. The Metempsychosis. Punch and Judy, 'J'lie M:in Willi the Nose. The Confessions of an Unexecuted Feiniui- cide. The Barber of Giitliugen. Culonel O'Sliriughnessy. Colonel O'Shaughiicssy in India. Who can it be ? The Man with ihe Mouth. The Wig. An Execution at Paris. The Man-Mountain. Singular Passage in my own Life. The Red Man. The Murdered Begbie, a Houiance. Terence O'Flaherty. The Covenanters. The Loves of the Learned. A Vision of Robert the Bruce. Death and the Fisher- man. A Night near Monte Video. Notes of a Journey from Paris to Ostend. M'rORMAC'S (DR.) PHILOSOPHY OF HUiMAN NATURE, in its Physical, Intel- lectual, and Moral Relations, 8vo. extra cloth (pub. at 12s ) reduced to 6s Longman, 1837 " One great merit of this book is its extraordinary lucidity of expression. Dr. M'Cormac has condensed some of the most valuable observations of his pre- deceso's, and has rendered to the comprehension of youth what Locke left incomprehensible to everybody, even ) himself," — Atlas. MALCOLM'S MEMOIROF CENTRAL INDIA, including Malwa and adjoining Provinces; with tlie History and copious Illustrations of the past and present condition of that Country, 2 vols. 8vo. third edition, with large map, gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 18s 1832 " An important work in every point of view. The name of the distinguished author stands too high to render it necessary Hiat we should waste time in passing encomiums upon it. It is a valuable addition to the stock of information already possessed by the public, and cannot be too generally read, or too care- fully slaiWed."— Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. MARCHMONT PAPERS, illustrative of Events from 1685 to 1750, selected by the Right Hon. Sir George Rose, from the Family MSS. in his possession, 3 vols. 8vo. gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. 16s) reduced to 15s 1831 " A mine of instruction and amusement. This im- portant and interesting work will stand for ever on the same shelf with Evelyn, Pepys, and the Letters of Horace Walpole." — Literary Gazette. MARLBOROUGH (DUCHESS OF) MEMOIRS OF, AND OF THE COURT OF QUEEN ANNE, compiled from Original and Unpub- lished Documents, by Mrs. A. T. Thompson, 2 vols. Qvo. facsimile letters, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 10s 6d 1839 "A sterling historical work."— Literary Qa " The Life of one of the most singular individuals in the annals of female influence in this country, written throughout with considerable power, great impartiality, and very refined taste."— jlro- bability of llicir ever beins reprinted, tliere is little doubt, but that in a few years botli works will become rare and valuable. The former edilion of the Progresses of Queen Eliza- beth, less complete than the present, had become so extremely scarce, that copies were repeatedly sold by public auction for upwards of £40. The procresses of Kinp; James have only been once printed. The two works include the republication of rare historical and poetical tracts, the originals of which, if they could be bought, would be worth more than a thousand pounds. No library, into which the English Chronicles, State Paj)ers, the Harleian Miscellany, and Lord Somere' Collection of Tracts are admitted, should be without these important volumes, which form a connected History of the Courts of Elizabeth and James, and afford a living picture of the manners of England, its pursuits and its amusements for three-quarters of a century, (1553 to 1625.) They also develope numerous inteiesting and unknown anecdotes of most of our Nohle Families, and in many cases the circumstances of their rise and first elevation to the Peerage. JS'ICOLAS'S LIFE OF WILLIAM DAVISON, Secretary of State and Privy Counsellor to Queen Elizabeth, Bvo. with Fac-Similes of tvriting, in extra cloth boards, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 4s 6rf . 1823 " This is a valuable piece of historico-biographical information. It contains a minute investigation of the question as to Elizabeth's privity and consent to the death of her sister, Mary Queen of Scots. It is a truly valuable accession to the historical library." Gcnt.'s Mag. NIEBUHR'S HISTORY OF ROME, epitomized, with Chronological Tables and an Appendix, by Travers Twiss, B.C.L. 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at£l. Is) reduced to 12s Oxford, Talboys, 1837 "Niebuhr has thrown new light upon our knowledge of Roman affairs, to a degree of which those who are unacquainted with his labours can scarcely form an adequate idea.."— (Quarterly Review. " This edition by Mr. Twiss is a very valuable addi- tion to classical learning, clearly and ably embodying all the latest efforts of the laborious Niebuhr. The chronological tables ,ire excellent ; and, indeed, the whole is a work most fitting for the library of every in- telligent re.ider." — Literary Gazette. "This is a truly valuable work, which for the first time presents the researches of Niebuhr to English students in an accessible form. Mr. Twiss has judiciously ex- punged those passages in which Niebuhr exhibited so strange a mixture of scepticism and credulity. In the appendix there are some original investigations which display great learning and acuteness ; we were particu- larly pleased with that on the office of the Dictator, which appears to us the most satisfactory account that has yet been given of that anomaly in the Roman con- stitution."— AihencBum. NIMROD ABROAD, (being Observations made during Six Years Residence in France, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Russia, United States, India, &c., by C. J. Apperley ( Nimrod), 2 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth, xvith sporting devices on back and sule$, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to Ss 1842 " Our sporting readers will welcome with delight this new production of the popular author ot ' The Chaw, the Turf, and the Road.' In these volumes the famous Nimrod, from whose sporting dicta there is no apjHjal, carries the reader with him to enjoy every species of sport which the wide world affords. We have sohfom seen Mr. Ai)pcrIoy more at home or to better purpose than in these volumes, while partaking of the princely hosi)itality of the late Duke of Orleans or the Prince of Woskowa, or of a score of the sporting noblemen in all i)arts of the civilized world." — New Monthly. OGBORNE'S HISTORY OF ESSEX, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, containing the Parishes of Westham, I^.astham, Little II- ford. Barking, Dagenbam, Wansted, Woodford, Leyton, Walthamstovv, Havering, Romford, Ilornchurch, Walthani, Epping, Chingford, Nazing, CUiigwell, Loughton, Theydon Bois, Tlieydon Gernon, and Theydon Mount, illus- trated by 39 engravings of Churches, Mntmments, Ancient Buildings, Seals, Portraits, Autographs, (S'c. 4to. extra cloth boards, (j>ub. at £2. 5s) re- duced to 10s 6(Z 1817 Strutt assisted largely in the comjiilationof tliis work. OSSIAN'S POEMS, translated by Macpherson, with Dissertations, concerning the Era and Poems of Ossian ; and Dr. Blair's Critical Dissertation, complete in one neatly printed volume, 18mo. frontispiece, extra cloth, (pub. at 4s) reduced to 3s 3844 OUSELEY'S (SIR WILLIAM) TRAVELS in VARIOUS Countries of the East, more paii- TICULAKLY PeRSIA, IN 1810, 1811, AND 1812, illustrating many subjects of Antiquarian Re- search, History, Geography, Philology, and Miscellaneous Literature ; witli Extracts from rare and valuable Oriental Manuscripts, and 80 plates and maps, 3 vols. 4to. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £11.) reduced to £3. 3s 1823 " These Travels are sp replete with new and invalu- able matter, that we «H>nfess ourselves unequal to do them justice by a synopsis ; and they assuredly must rank high among the most Important books of reference of which we are possessed. They and Burckhardt's de- serve a place on the same shelf : — a place to which no other Eastern travels have hitherto attained." — Clas- sical Journal, PARDOE'S (MISS) RIVER AND THE DE- SART, or Recollections of the Rhone and the Chartreuse, 2 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth bds, (pub. at 18s) reduced to 6s 1838 "This work is highly creditable to the author, dis- covering more mind even than any of Miss Pardee's former productions." — Atlas. CITY OF THE MAGYAR, or Hungary and her Institutions in 1839-40, 3 vols. 8vo. with 9 engravings, extra gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. lis 6(i) reduced to 10s 6d 1840 " An able and very interesting work." — Athentxum. " There is much research, and much interesting infor- mation, in the present volumes ; Miss Pardoe hasbeen an industrious and inquisitive traveller.and has success- fully studied the institutions of the country, and tlio customs and character of the people with wliom she dwelt. The book i>artakes of the nature both of a his- tory an of a book of travel : one portion of it pleases us by its graphic details, and its amusing anecdotes, another interests us by its researches info the political and statistical state of Hucsfary. Much will be new, not only to those who have never resided in that singu- larly interesting part of Europe, but even to many persons who have visited it. It is, indeed, a book of sterling merit." — GcnVs Mag. PARRY'S CAMBRIAN PLUTARCH, conipris- ing Memoirs of some of the most eminent Welshmen, from the earliest Times to the jiro- sent, including the substance of all the previouH Researclies into the Literary and Personal Hio- 72 MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. tory of Aneurin, Taliesin, Llywarch Hen, Asser Menevensis, Giraldus Cambrensis, David ab Gwilym, Humphrey Llwyd, Dr. John David Rys, Bp. Morgan, and other early Eng- lish Poets and Historians, 8vo. cloth Lettered, (pub. at 10s 6(/) reduced to 5s 1834 PAXTON'S LETTERS FROM PALESTINE, 12ino. extra cloth, f pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 6d nit, 1839 This is a very interesting and comprehensive account of Palestine and the Holy Land by an autlior who has always been well received by the public. PERCEVAL'S (G.) HISTORY OF ITALY, from the Fall of the Western Empire to the Commencement of the Wars of the French Revolution, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at £1. 10s) reduced to 10s 6d 1825 PERCY'S RELIQUES OF ANCIENT ENG- LISH POETRY, consisting of Old Heroic Ballads, Songs, and other Pieces of our Ear- lier Poets, together vrith some few of later date, and a copious Glossary, complete in 1 volume, medium 8vo. New and elegant edition, on fine paper, with beautifullij engraved title and frontispiece by Stephanoff, red turkey cloth, richly gilt, (pub. at 15s) reduced to 8s 6d 1844 " But above all, I then first became acquainted with Bp. Percy's ' Reliques of Ancient Poetry.' The first time, too, I could scrape a few shillings together, I bought unto myself a copy of these beloved volumes ; nor do I believe I ever read a book half so frequently, or with halt the enthusiasm." — Sir Walter Scott, " Percy's Reliques are the most agreeable selection, perhaps, which exists in any language." — EllU. " The most elegant compilation of the early poe- try of a nation that has ever appeared in any age or country. Every page evinces the fine taste, the genius and learning of the editor." — Evam' Old Ballad*. PINKERTON'S ENQUIRr INTO THE EARLY HISTOR^OF SCOTLAND, to vfhich is added, his IRssertation on the Origin and Progress of the Scythians and Goths, ■new edition, 2 stout vols. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. IGs) reduced to 12s 1814 POPULAR ERRORS, Explained and Illustrated, by John Times, (Author of Laconics, and Editor of tlie " Illustrated London News,") tliick fcap. 8vo. closely but elegantly printed, frontispiece, extra cloth, reduced to 5s 1841 This will be found a very entertaining and in- structive miscellany, comprehending most of the curious information contained in Browne's Vulgar Errors, besides a considerable accession from other sources. PORTER'S PROGRESS OF THE NATION, in its various Social and Economical Relations, from the beginning of the Nineteenth Century to the pi-esent Time, 3 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 13s 6rf Charles Knight, 1838-44 Contents. Vol. I. — Population. Production. Vol. II. — Interchange. Revenue and Expenditure. Vol. III. — Consumption. Accumulation. Moral Progress. Colonics and Foreign Dependencies. A book 01 the very highest character. PRICE'S (MAJOR DAVID) MAHOMMEDAN HISTORY, from the Death of the Arabian Legislator to the Accession of the Emperor Akbar, and the Establishment of the Mogul Kni])ire in Hindostan, compiled from origi- nal PfT.sian Authorities, 4 vols. 4to. with a lorj^e coloured map of Asm, gilt cloth, (pub. at £7. lis 6d) reduced to £1. 16s 1821 Tlio author. Major Price, spent nearly twenty-four years in the East, made himself thoroughly acquainted with the original authorities of Mahommedan History, and then compiled the above elaborate work, which may be said to be the only one faithfully representing Oriental records and traditions. PRIOR'S LIFE OF BURKE, with unpublished Specimens of his Poetry and Letters, third and much improved edition, Bro. portrait and auto- graphs,giltcloth, (pub. at 14s) reduced to 9s 1839 "Prior's Life of Burke is full of interesting particu- lars respecting Burke, not given by his other biogra- phers; it exhibits just sentiment and good feeling, and displays strong evidence that much careful inquiry has been employed in its production. The work is a sensible and a valuable one; and the diction of it is per- spicuous and spirited." — Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. " Excellent feeling, in perspicuous and forcible lan- guage."— Quarterhi Review. LIFE OF OLIVER GOLDSMITH, from a variety of Original Sources, 2 vols. 8vo, handsomely printed, gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. 10s) reduced to 12s . 1837 " The solid worth of this biography consists in the many striking anecdotes which Mr. Prior has gathered in the course of his anxious researches among Gold- smith's surviving acquaintances, and the immediate descendants of his personal friends in London, and relations in Ireland; above all, in the rich mass of the poet's own familiar letters, which he has been enabled to bring togetiier for the first time, No poet's letters in the world, not even those of Cowper, appear to us more interesting." — Quarterly Review. QUIN'S STEAM VOYAGES ON THE MOSELLE, THE ELBE, AND LAKES OF ITALY, with Notices of Thuringen and Saxon Switzerland, &c. with Visits to the principal Cities of Belgium, &c. 2 vols, post 8vo. 2 plates, extra cloth, (pub. at£l. l.s) reduced to 9s 1843 It was Mr. Quin's good fortune to open to his fellow countrymen, and indeed, to foreign tourists in general, the grand and peculiar attractions of the Danube. His "Steam Voyage" down that river has already been ditfused (most deservedly) all over the continent, not only in the English, but also in the French and German RABELAIS' WORKS, translated from the French by Sir Thomas Urquhart, Motteux and Ozell ; with explanatory Notes by Duchat, and others, 4 vols. fcap. 8vo. richly full gilt, with singular devices ; extra cloth, (pub. at £1.") reduced to 16s 1844 Rabelais, although a classic in every European lan- guage, and admitted into every library, is too indecent for the present age, and should not be put in the way of females. " Rabelais is one of the world's masterminds, he belongs to those who have perjietuai dominion, and rule us from their urns. His invention is inexhaustible, his opulence of diction wonderful, and his learning ever ready to illustrate and enforce whatever his genius may devise; while for wit and humour he has but one equal in literature." — Athenaum. "The English version of Rabelais by Urquhart, Motteux, and Ozell, may be considered as one of the most perfect specimens of the art of translation." Tytler. "But the most celebrated and certainly the most brilliant performance in tlie path of fiction that belongs to this age, is that of Rabelais. Few books are less likely to obtain the praise of a rigorous critic ; but few have more tlic stamp of originality, or show a more re- dundant fertility, always of language, and sometimes 01' imagination. His reading is large, but always ren- dered subservient to ridicule ; he is never serious in a single jiage, and seems to have had little other aim, in his first two volumes, than to pour out the exuberance of his animal gaiety." — Hallam's Literature of Europe. " Heyond a doubt Rabelais was among tlie deepest, as well as boldest thinkers of his age. His butfoonery was not merely Brutus's rough stick, which contained a loil of gold; it was necessary as an amulet againt the monks and legates. Never was there a more plau • ivIISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. 73 RITSON'S VARIOUS WORKS, as published by iible, and seldom, I nm persuaded, a less appropriate line, than the tliousand times (| noted " Rubelais laugliing in liis easy rhair," of Mr. Pojie. Tlio caricature of his filth and zanyism show how fully lie both knew and felt the danger in which he stood. I could write a treatise in praise of the moral elevation of Rabelais' works, which would make the church stare and the conventicle groan, and yet would be truth, and nothing but the truth. I class Rabelais witli the great creative minds of the world, Shakespeare, Dante, Cervantes, Ice."— Coleridge. RAFFLES' HISTORY OF JAVA. AND LIFE, with an Account of Bcncoolen, and Details of the Commerce and Resources of the Indian Archipelago, edited by Lady Raffles. Toge- ther 4 vols. 8V0. AND A SPLKNDII) QUARTO ATLAS, contahting npicards of 100 plales by Daniel, many finely coloured ; extra Turkey cloth, (pub. at £4, 14s) reduced to £2. 8s 1830-35 MEMOIR OF THE LIFE AND PUBLIC SERVICES OF SIR THOMAS STAMFORD RAFFLES, particularly in the Government of Java, 1811-16, and of Bencoolcn and its De- pendencies, 1817-24 ; with Details of the Commerce and Resources of the Eastern Ar- chipelago, and Selections from his Correspon- dence, by Lady Raffles, 4to. portruitx, maps, and plates, extra cloth boards (pub. at £2. 12s 6d) reduced to £ 1.5s 1830 RAIKES'S CITY OF THE CZAR, BEING A VISIT TO ST. PETERSBURG H in 1828 and 1829, 8vo. gilt cloth, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 4s 1838 RAUMER'S (VON) ENGLAND IN 1841, 2 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s 1842 " One of tlie most interesting and instructive works of our time; a work which cannot fail to do good service —assured that it will be in the hands of all." AtJmiixuin. ITALY AND THE ITALIANS, 2 vols, post Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s 1840 " A book of sterling information and full of enter- taining matter."— Xiiera?-;/ Gazette. REDDING'S HISTORY AND DESCRIPTION OF MODERN WINES. Second Edition, with considerable Additions, and a new Pre- face developing the System of the Port Wine Trade, 8vo. embellished with numerous beantij ul engravings en wood, extra cloth bocids, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 9s . 1836 RERESBY'S (SIR JOHN) TRAVELS AND MEI\10IRS ; the former, (now first published) exhibiting a View of the Governments and Society in the principal States of Europe, during the time of Cromwell's Usurpation ; with Anecdotes and Secret History of the Courts of Charles II. and James II., 3rd edition, impl. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 6s . 1813 "The Memoirs of Sir John Reresby belong to that lare and valuable class of works which appear to have been written not so much with a view towards fame or emolument, as for the private ends and satisfaction of the writers themselves." — Retrospective Review. RICH'S BABYLON AND PERSEPOLIS, viz. Narrative of a Journey to the Site of Babylon ; Two Memoirs on the Ruins ; Remarks on the Topography of Ancient Babylon by JMajor Rennell ; Narrative of a Journey to Perscpolis, with hitherto unpublished Cuneiform Inscrip- tions, %yo. maps and plates, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to lOs 6d 1839 ' Pickering, tiik set, viz. — Robin Hood, 2 vols. — Annals of the Caledonians, 2 vols. — Ancient Songs and Ballads, 2 vols. — Memoirs of the Celts, 1 vol.— Life of King Arthur, 1 vol. — • Ancient Popular Poetry, 1 vol. — Fairy Tales 1 vol. — Lettersand Memoirs of Ritson, 2 vols.: together 12 vols. post8vo. extra red turkey cloth, full gilt backs, uniform, (pub. at £6. 5s 6d) 'reducedto£3. 8s . 1827-33 Or separately as follows : ROBIN HOOD, a Collection of Ancient Poems, Songs, and Ballads, relative to that celebrated Outlaw ; witli Historical Anecdotes of his Life, 2 vols. 18s ANNALS OF THE CALEDONIANS, PICTS, AND SCOTS, 2 vols. ICs MEMOIRS OF THE CELTS OR GAULS, 10* ANCIENT SONGS AND BALLADS, 2 vols. 18* PIECES OF ANCIENT POPULAR POETRY, post 8vo. 7s FAIRY TALES, now first collected ; to which are prefixed Two Dissertations— 1. on Pigmies ; 2. on Fairies; 8s LIFE AND LETTERS OP JOSEPH RITSON, Esq. edited from Originals in the possession of his Nephew, by Sir Harris Nicolas, 2 vols. 16» " No library can be called comjJlete in Old English Lore, which has not the whole of the productions of this laborious and successful antiquary." — AthentBum. " Joseph Ritson was an antiiiuary of the first order." Quarterly Review. RITSON'S OFFICE OF BAILIFOP A LIBERTY, edited by the Author's Nephew, J. Frank, Esq. 8vo. cloth, scarce, 3s 6d . 18H OFFICE OF CONSTABLE, compiled from the best Authorities, with a Preface and an Introduction, con- taining some Account of the Origin and Antiquity of the Office, Svo. cloth, scarce, 8s Gd 1791 ROBERTSON'S HISTORICAL WORKS, con- tiiniilg History of Scotland, History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V., History of America, and Historical Disquisition concern- ing Ancient India : with an Account of the Life and Writings of the Author by Dugald Stewart, one large vol. impl. 8vo. portrait, cloth lettered, £1. Is . ' 1840 ROBINSON'S TRAVELS IN PALESTINE AND SYRIA, 2 vols, post 8vo. maps and plans, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 9s . 1837 " This journal is not merely the best, but perhaps the onlv guide through these remote regions." — Lit. Qaz. ROBINSON CRUSOE, including his further Adventures, with Life of Defoe, &c. upwards of dOfne tcood-cuts, from designs by Harvey, fcap. 8vo. 7ieio and improved edition, with additional cuts, cloth gilt, 6s . 1844 The only small edition which is quite complete. "Perhaps there exists no work, either of instruction or entertainment, in the English language, which has been more generally read, or more deservedly admired, than the Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe." Sir Walter Scott. ROBY'S POPULAR TRADITIONS OF LAN- CASHIRE, both Series, 3 vols, post 8vo. 3rd edition, with 18 spirited wood-cuts, after the desigui by Frank Howard, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £] . 1 Is 6d) reduced to 10s 6d 1843 Sir Walter Scott speaks highly of this work, which he calls "very elegant," and frequently quotes in his " Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft," and " Tales of the Crusaders." ROLLIN'S ANCIENT HISTORY, o new and complete edition, uith engraved frontispieces and 7 maps, 2 vols, bomid in one stout handsome vol. roy. 8vo. extra cloth bds, (pub. at £1. 4s) re- duced to 12s • 1844 I'he only complete edition in a compact form ; it is uniform in size and appearance with Moxon's Series of Dramatists, Ace. The prc\ious editions of RoUin in a single volume are greatly abridged, and contain scarcely half the work. MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. 74 ROSCOE'S LIFE AND PONTIFICATE OF LEO THE TENTH, new and much improved edition, edited by his Son, Thomas Roscoe, complete m 2 stout vols. 8vo. closely but very handsomely printed, illust~ated by 3 Jine portraits, and numerous iUtistrntive engravings as head and tail pieces, extra cloth, £l. 4s 1845 LIFE OF LORENZO DE MEDICI, called '' The Magnificent," new and much improved edition, edited by his Son, Thomas Koscoe, complete in one stout vol. Bvo. closelij but very handsomely printed, illustrated by numerous en- gravings, introduced as head and tail pieces, extra cloth, Us . 1845 " The delightful biographical labours of Mr. Roscoe, which at the period of their publication, and to the latest period, procured, and will procure, for tlie author, a deservedly high reputation. The style is pure and elegant; the facts are interesting and instructive; and the moral, or application, is of an incomparable ten- dency. Tliese facts are new to the greater part of Eng- lish readers : fresh fountain heads of jileasing intelli- gence are explored; and a stream of knowledge flows forth, at once bright, pure, and nourishing. I hardly know works which evince througliout a more delicate taste, exercised upon a more felicitious subject. Roscoe is the regenerator, among Englislimen, of a love of Italian literature." — JJibclin. " I cannot but congratulate the public upon this great and important addition to Classical History, rvhich I regard as a Phenomenon in Literature in every point of view. "The rise and progress of every polite art in Italy, at the revival of learning, are investigated and described with acuteness, depth, and precision, with i/ie spirit of the poet, and the solidity of the historian. I have not terras sufficient to express my admiration of Mr. Koscoe's genius and erudition, or my gratitude iot the amusement and infonnaiion 1 have received. / recom- mmid his labours to our country as works of uti- questionable genius and uncommon merit. They add the name of Roscoe to the very first rank of English Classical Historians." Matthias, Pursuits of Literature. " Roscoe is, I think, by far the best of our Historianf, both for beauty of style and for deep reflections ; and his translations of poetry are equal to the originals." Walpolc, Earl of Orford. . ILLUSTRATIONS, HISTORICAL AND CRITICAL, of the Life of Lorenzo de Medici, with an appendix of Original Documents, 8vo. portrait of Lorenzo and plates, bds. (pub. at 14s) reduced to 7s the same, 4to. (printed to match the original edition) portrait and plates, bds. (pub. at £L lis 6(i) reduced to 10s *,* This volume is supplementary to all editions of the work. " An elegant written work." — Dibdin. ROSCOE'S LIFE AND PONTIFICATE OF LEO THE TENTH, (omitting the Notes) with a Dissertation on the Character of Lucretia Borgia, in one small thick vol. 32mo. elegantly printed, portrait and frontispiece, extra cloth bds. (|>ub. at 5s) reduced to 2s 6d 1840 K().sc()i:'s Ii.i.usihaied editions uniformly printed, ,'^ee Fielding — Smollett — Stvift. HOSS'S (SIR JOHN) MEMOIRS AND COR- Ri:8P0NDENCE OF ADMIRAL LORD DE SAUMAREZ, 2 vols. Svo. portraits, gilt cloth, {pnh. at £1. 8s) reduced to 7$ 1838 " The career of the illustrious Sauniarez was a long and oventful one. He fought witli Kodney, Uridport, Melson, and Howe, and was in more general engage- ments with the enemy than any oth(M' Kngli.-h officer oil record, especially through the American tear of independence, and throughout the conliucntal war ; and i«;rformed many splendid achievements." RUSSELL'S HISTORY OF MODERN EIJROPE, new edition, continued to the Accession of Queen Victoria, 4 vols. 8vo. extra cloth £2. 5s . Trade, 1842 SADLER (M.T., M.P.of Leeds) MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF, 8vo. yorfrait,c/oJ/i/ettered, (pub. at 14s) reduced to 6s 1843 SALT'S VOYAGE TO ABYSSINIA AND TRAVELS INTO THE INTERIOR OF THAT COUNTRY, executed under the Orders of the British Government in 1809-10, in which are included Accounts of the Portuguese Settlements on the East Coast of Africa, the Aboriginal African Tribes, extending from Mozambique to the Borders of Egypt, &c. together with Vocabularies of their respecting Languages, royal 4to. illustrated by 31 fine plates, 7napsand charts, extra cloth bds, (pub. at £5. 5i) reduced to 15s . 1814 Dr. Dibdin, after speaking in the highest terras of Bruce's Travels, says, " If I am asked by the economi- cal collector to give up Bruce or Mr. Salt, I shall un- hesitatingly say, forego the former, and secure the latter." SALTER'S COMPLETE ANGLER'S GUIDE, and Treatise on Trolling, ninth edition, 12mo. portrait, and upwards of 100 beautiful woodcuts, NEW AND IMPROVED EDITION IN THE PRESS. SCOTT'S (CAPT. C. R.) EXCURSIONS IN THE MOUNTAINS OF RONDA AND GRA- NADA ; with Characteristic Sketches of the Inhabitants of the South of Spain, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 8s^ reduced to 9s 1838 " Captain Scott is as pleasant a guide and companion over the vinous hills and through the romantic forests of Spain as can be imagined ; for his eye catches at a glance what is most worthy of observation, and his wit and his enjoying heart put us into the right way to distil as much satisfaction from it as possible. He has introduced into his travels some stories and legends, which vary the nature of the work, and increases its interest. Upon the whole. Captain Scott's Excursions form one of the most entertaining books we have read for many years, while there is much in it that gives valuable information upon the present state of Spain, and the conditions of its political affairs." Court Journal. " Captain Scott is a lively and entertaining sketcher, and there is a great variety of pleasant and instructive matter also in his narrative. Roman, Moorish, and other antiquities attract a fair share of his notice." TRAVELS IN EGYPT AND CANDIA;' with Details of the JMilitary Power and* Re- sources of those Countries, and Observations on the Government, Policy, and Commercial System of JMohammed AH, 2 vols. 8vo. wit^ seven illustrations, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 8$y red u ted to 9s . 1837 " One of the most sterling publications of the season. There is a freshness in Captain Scott's narrative that alTords a new desire respecting the events of tliis most interesRng country. The habits and customs of the people are sketched with considerable spirit and talent, and there is mucli novelty in the gallant author's details." — Naval and Military Gazette. ' ' We do not recollect to have read a better book of travels than this since Slade's able i)ublic.ition on Tur- key. The field of African and Egyptian investigation has been variously trodden, but Captain Scott, trusting to shrewd observation and a sound understanding, has Slruck out new lights and improved upon the infomia- tion of others."— United Service Journal. " Capt. Scott's personal narrative is agreeable and amusing ; indeed, sonic of his sketches are clever, piquant, and characteristic ; and we must furtlicr do him the justice to »ay, that his details respecting the laili MISCELLANEOUS KNGLISH LITERATURE. 75 tary power and resources of tlip countries subject to tho sway of Mahommed Ali, as well as his observations on tlie government, policy, and commercial system of tho present ruler of Ksypt, evince great extent of informa- tion." — Edinburgh lievicw. S^COTT'S POETICAL WORKS, containing Lay of tbe Last Minstrel, IMariniou, Lady of the Lake, Don Roderic, Rokeby, Ballads, Lyrics and Songs, with Notes and a Life of the Author, complete in one elegantly printed volume, 18mo. portrait and Jrontispkce, extra cloth boards, (pub. at 5s) reduced to 3.s 6d 1843 Scott's (W.) Harmony of Phrenology with Scripture. — See Theology, etc. SCOTTISH SONGS AND BALLADS, collected and illustrated by Robert Chambers, 3 vols. post 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 7s) reduced to Us6d Ed. 1829 A valuable collection, printed uniformly with the works of Ritson. SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS AND POEMS, Valpv's Cabinet Pictoriai, Edition, with Life, Glossarial Notes, and Historical Digests of each Play, \c. 15 vols, foolscap 8vo. with 171 platei engraved on steel after designs of the most distinguished British Artists, also facsimiles of all the known autographs of' Shakspeare ; bound in cloth, richlii gilt, with four various designs on the sides, contents lettered, wrii/brro in size with the Wavertey Novels, Byron, S^c. (pub, at £3. 15s) reducedlto £2. 5s . '1843 " This is at once the most delightful and elegant form in which Shakespeare has ever appeared." Morning Pott. " The cheapest and best edition of the bard of Avon extant. Its united claims to patronage cannot be resisted ; and we are certain that the work will find its way into the boudoir of every lady, and the library of eveiy gentleman ; at least, if it does not, it ought." — Montlily Mag. " One of the most valuable of the modern illustrated works is Mr. Valpy's beautiful edition of the Plays and Poems of Shakspeare, embellished with elegant out- lines from the best and most celebrated pictures, which were originally engraved for Koydell's expensive work. With great sincerity we recommend this as one of the handsomest, and cheapest editions of the bard, that we have ever seen." — John Bull. SHARP'S COVENTRY MYSTERIES. Tbe Pageants or Dramatic Mysteries anciently performed at Coventry, by the Trading Com- panies of that City ; with a Dissertation illus- trative of the Vehicle, Characters, and Dresses of the Actors, compiled, in a great de^-ree, from sources hitherto unexplored ; to which are added the Pageant of the Shearmen, the Taylor's Company, and other Municipal En- tertainments of a Public Nature : an Essay on Minstrels and Waits, and a Glossary ; the whole embellished by copper-plates and wood-cuts, (only 250 copies printed,) royal 4to. (pub. at £3. 3s ) reduced to £ 1 . 1 s 1 825 — — the same, large paper, impl. 4to. a splendid book, of which very few were printed, proof' im- pressions of the plates on Ind'ia paper, (pub. at £6. 6s) reduced to £1. 16s •,* To shew the interest and importance attached to these Ancient Mysteries, it may be observed, that a MS. volume of them, at the recent sale at Strawberry Hill, fetched no less than £230. 10s. ! " The volume abounds with ingenious illustrations of many of those national and local customs, which are among the happiest associations of our younger ye."\rs, the minstrels, waits, and puppets, which our infant feelings welcomed in their turn. The work is a most laborious and valuable addition towards a com- plete history of the early drama and the stage, and Mr. Sharp was eminently qualified to undertake and execute the arduous task, for which he is entitled to tlia gratitudo of the literary world."— /?cO-o«i>. Review. " A singularly interesting book, which contains more information and entertainment than vfe have received for some years from any antiquarian publication that has fallen under our notice." — Gcnt.'s Mag. SHELLEY'S ESSAYS, Letters, Translations, and Fragments, edited by Mrs. Shelley, 2 vols. or. 8vo. handsomely printed, elegantly bound in gilt cloth, (pub. at £1.) reduced to lOs Moxon, 1840 SHERIDAN'S (The Right Hon. R. Brinsley) SPEECHES, with a Sketch of bis Life, edited by a Constitutional Friend, new and handsome library edition, w'Uh portrait, com- plete in 3 vols. 8vo. in extra cloth boards, (pub. at £2. 5s) reduced to 18s 1842 " Whatever Sheridan has done, has been, par ex- cellence, always the best of its kind. He has written the best comedy (School for Scandal), the best drama, (the Duenna), tho best farce, (tho Critic), and the beat address (Monologue on Garrick); and, to crown all, de- livered the very best oration (the famous Begum Speech) ever conceived or heard in this country." — Byron. No speeches have ever contained a greater degree of the true fire of eloquence, or produced more effect upon the auditors than those of Sheridan. Ma. Burke declared his Speech on the Begum Princesses of Oude, to be " the most astonishing effort of elo- quence, argument, and wit united, of which there was any record or tradition." Mr. Fox said, " All that he had overheard, all that he had ever read, when com- pared with it, dwindled into nothing, and vanished like vapour before the sun."— and Mr. Pitt acknowledged " that it surpassed all the eloquence of ancient and modern times, and possessed every thing that genius or art could furnish, to agitate and controul the human mind." SHIRLEY'S DRAMATIC WORKS, with Notes by Gifford and Dyce, 6 vols. 8vo. port, cloth, (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to £1. 16s 1833 the same, large paper, royal 8vo. cloth, (pub. at £4. 10s) reduced to £2. 5s SIMOND'S SWITZERLAND, or a Journal of a Tour and Residence in that Country, in tie Years 1817, 1818, and 1819; followed by an Historical Sketch on the Manners and Customs of Ancient and Modern Helvetia, in which the Events of our own Time are fully detailed, to- gether with the Causes to wiiich they may be referred, second edition, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 10s 6J Murray, 1823 SIMON'S "TEN TRIBES OF ISRAEL," historically identified with the Aborigines of the Western HemiaphMre ; including a co- pious Analysis of Lord Kingsborough's Anti- quities of Mexico, 8vo. w'Uh a large folding plate of Mexican Antiquit'ies, cloth, full gilt back. (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 5s Seeley, 1836 A BOOK FULL OP CURIOUS AND RECOM- DITB ENQUIRY RESPECTING MEXICAN ANTIQUI- TIES. " The following headings of chapters will give some idea of its contents— Notice of the Antiquities of Mex- ico— Notice of Spanish Historians— Mexican Names and Attributes of the Creator— Religious Observances — Festivals — Mexican Calendar— Language— Traditions — Arts and Sciences — Laws— Mexicans — Peruvians — Montezuma. SINCLAIR'S (SIR JOHN) CODE OF HEALTH AND LONGEVITY; or, a General View of the Rules and Principles calculated for the Preservation of Health, and the Attainment of Long Life, sixth edition, complete, one thick vol. 8vo. portrait, (pub. at £1.) reduced to 7s 1844 " This new and compact edition contains the whole of the previous four volumes, with such improvements as the advanced state of knowledge supplies. Drs. ■ aillie, BeUdoes, Currie, Sprengel, and otlier emlueat 7^ Physicians have warmly eulogised the work ; but tho best testimony of its usefulness is the author's own longevity, as he was enabled to carry on his literary pursuits at the advanced age of eighty. SKETCHES OF POPULAR TUMULTS, Il- lustrative of the Evils of Social Ignorance, (published by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge,) 12mo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 1837 " Beginning with the Turemlts in which the Jews were plundered and destroyed in the 12th and 13th centuries, and going through the riots of 1799-80, those of Birmingham In 1791, of Naples in 1799, and the insurrections of Lyons in 1831 and 1834, the author ascribes them chiefly to popular ignorance, and gives good counsel, both to tlie people and their rulers, on the subject." — Lit. Gaz. " A well meant and amusing volume, teeming in every page with maxims of tolerance, and reasonings on the danger and futility of appeals to force for the redress of partial wrongs." — Athenosxnn. SLADE'S TRAVELS AND RECORDS OF TRAVELS IN TURKEY, GREECE AND MALTA, 4 thick vols. 8vo. cloth, (pub. at £3. 3s) reduced to IBs 1837 An entertaining and smartly written series of Sl^etches, full of lively passages and happy descriptions. SMITH'S DISCOVERY OF AMERICA, by the Northmen in the Tenth Century, com- prising Translations of all the most important Original Narratives of this Event, together with a Critical Examination of their Authen- ticity ; to which is added an Examination of the comparative Merits of the Northmen and Columbus. Second Edition, post 8to. ma-ps, extra cloth, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 3s 6d 1842 SMOLLETT'S WORKS, (Roderick Random, Humphrey Clinker, Peregrine Pickle, Laun- celot Greaves, Count Fathom, Adventures of an Atom, Travels, Plays, &c.) complete in 1 thick handsomely printed volume, medium 8vo. tiiiift. 21 capital plates by Criiikshank, extra red turkey cloth, full gilt back, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 14s 1845 " Perhaps no books ever written excited such peals of inextinguishable laughter as Smollett's." Sir Walter Scott. " We should be glad if we had more of Smollett's Novels, just as they are." — Campbell. SNOWE'S LEGENDS, TRADITIONS, AND HISTORY OF THE RHINE, comprehend- ing the most curious and interesting of the Popular 'Jales of the Germans, 2 vols. Bvo. 26 plates of the Castles, etc. gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. 12s) reduced to 16s 1839 " Often as the Rhine has been illustrated, its talcs and traditions have never been so fully collected ns by Mr. Snowe: the Drachenfels, Die Surleyberg, Ihe Mausctlmrm, the I'falz, become in succession his Islting i)laces : and wherever tho gossip Legend is many-tongued, he liberally gives all her versions of the marvel." — Aihenaum. SOUTIIEY'S HISTORY OF BRAZIL, 3 vols. 4to. new, cloth lettered, scarce, (pub. at £7. los) reduced to £2. 5s 1817 Vols. 2 and 3, may be had separately. " Dr. Southey is doubtless the • facile princcps' of the Historians of the Brazils; but this title is hardly commensurate with the bearing and extent of his work, as it comprises the rise and progress of all the Euro- pean Colonies, from the Andes to tlie Atlantic, and from the Plata to the Kiver of tlie Amazons. Numerous will be the impressions wliich the next half century will cause to be circulated of so ample and instructive d wo k."—lHbdin. MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. SO UT KEY'S LIVES OF UNEDUCATED POETS ; to which are added, Attempts in Verse by John Jones, an Old Servant, crown 8vo. extra cloth boards, (pub. at 10s 6d) reduced to 4s 6d Mttrrat/, 1836 SOUTHGATE'S TRAVELS IN TURKEY AND PERSIA, 2 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth gilt,{p\ih. at 15s) reduced to Is 6d Tilt, 1840 This work is recommended by the Society for Pro- moting Christian Knowledge. SPENCER'S TRAVELS IN GERMANY, with a glance at Poland, Hungary, and Switzerland, in 1834, 5, and 6,2 vols. 8vo. second edition, with coloured plates and wood-cuts, gilt cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 12s 1836 SPENSER'S POETICAL WORKS, complete, with Introductory Observations on the Faerie Queen, and Glossarial Notes, handsomely printed in 5 vols, post Bvo. fine portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at £2. 12s Qd) reduced to £1. 4s 1845 SPORTSMAN (THE) IN FRANCE, comprising a Sporting Ramble through Picardy and Nor- mandy, and Boar Shooting in Lower Brittany, \)y Frederick Tolfrey, Esq. 2 vols, post Bvo. with twelve illustrations, extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 6s 1841 SPORTSMAN IN IRELAND, AND THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND, by R. Allen, Esq. 2 vols, post Bvo. with numerous Il- lustrations, extra cloth bds. (pub. at IBs) reduced to 9s . 1840 " One of the most readable and amusing book of its kind tliat we have had for many a day." — New Monthly. SPRY'S (DR. H.) MODERN INDIA, with Illus- trations of the Resources and Capabilities of Hindustan, 2 vols, post 8vo. with a capital and very large coloured map of the British Possessions in Asia, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 7s Qd 1837 " Dr. Spry's volumes exhibit a complete miscel- lany of Indian subjects, garnered and sifted on the spot. There is scarcely a single head of informalion in the various departments of government, military and civil, agriculture, tield sports, domestic customs, social characteristics, topography, public works and founda- tions, climate, statistics, and diseases, that he does not touch upon or discuss." — Atlas. ST. ALBAN'S, MEMOIRS OF THE LATE DUCHESS OF, (MRS. COUTTS). By Mrs. Cornwell Baron-Wilson, third edition, 2 vols, post 8vo. 2 portraits, extra cloth, (pub. at 16s) reduced to 7s 1844 STEPHENS'S (J. L.) Incidents of Travel in the Russian and Turkish I>nipires, 2 vols. post. Bvo. extra cloth, (pub. at 14s) reduced to 8s 1839 " Very pleasant volumes. Such, indeed, is flie spirit of the author's descriptions, and the vivid force and truth of his narrative, that reading his work is like ac- companying him on his route, and the reader grows at last to take a personal interest iu all his adventures." — Atlienauin. " M r. .^^tepliens is a lively sketcher, and his ' Incidents of Travel' will be found a clever, clesultory, and amu- sing fiie-side or travelling companion." — Literary Go- ::eltc. SWIFT'S WORKS, edited by Roscoe, 2 vols, me- dium 8vo. portrait, extra red turkey cloth, full gilt backs, uniform with Fielding and Smollett, (pub. at £1. 12s) reduced to £1. 4s 1845 " Whoever in the three kingdoms has any book* at all, has Swift."— Z/Ord Cheiterfield, MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. n SWINBURNE'S COURTS OF EUROPE AT THE CLOSE OF THE LAST CFNTURY. 2 vols. 8vo. /lortcdiV, exira cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 12s 1841 " In his peculiar way we tliiiik Swinburne equal to Walpole ; and he possesses several things Walpole wanted— ensp, nature, unaflectcd liveliness, and, above all, a heart.''— Spectator. "These are delightful journals. A richer mine of original anecdote has never been given to the public." Atltcnccum. " Two more delightful volumes it is scarcely possible to meet with. They form the most perfect picture of the state of the continent towards the conclusion of the last century that we possess ; and no single worl< ever bofore exhibited such a gallery of illustrious charac- ters.'"— New Monthly Mag. TABLE TALK, containing Selections from the French and English Ana, (Menagiana, Iluetiana, Chevraina, Poggiana, Walpoliaiia, Southeyana, &c.) 18mo. clolh bds. (pub. at 3s tii/) reduced to 2s 1827 TAYLOR'S (W. B. S.) HISTORY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF DUBLIN, its Origin, Progress, and Present Condition, with Bio- graphical Notices of the Eminent Men educated there, 8vo. illustrated by numerous icnod engrav- ings of its Buildings and Academic Costumes, the latter coloured, extra cloth, (pub. at £1.) reduced to 7s 6d , 1845 " This work might be termed, ' A History of the Academic Mind of Ireland for the last two hundred and fifty years.' " " The author has not spared either time, labour, or expense in collecting and arranging this large body of facts, which he must have been years in acquiring, and his work must become a standard of reference to future generations. It gives the best history yet published of this celebrated University ; it embraces all the topics of interest connected with it; and will be read with deep interest as the first work giving to British people an adequate description of that national establishment for developing the intellectual power of the Irish people." Sun, July 7, 1843. TEMPLE'S (SIR W.) LIFE AND TIMES, with his Unpublished Essays and Correspon- dence, by the Right Hon. T. Peregrine CouRTENAY, embellished with an exquisitely beau- tiful portrait after Sir P. Lely, by Uean, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 12s . 1836 TENNENTS' (EMERSON) BELGIUM, 2 vols, post Bvo. 2 plates, extra cbth, (pub. at 14s) re- duced to 7s . 1841 " We cordially recommend this able and instructive work to the immediate and attentive penisal of our readers. It abounds in attractive incident and original remark, and exhibits all the solid qualities of a grave political discourse, pervaded throughout with large and practical generalisations, conducive in no ordinary de- gree to the general welfare of society." — Times. " One of the most valuable, as well as most amusing works of the present day." — Starulard. "An extremely well-written work, full of interesting matter — pleasing for the general reader, and full of valuable matter for the statistician and manufacturer, tlie statesman, and merchant. We recommend these volumes to the popularity they merit." Literary Gazette. THACKERAY'S (REV. FRANCIS) RE- SEARCHES INTO THE ECCLESIAS- TICAL AND POLITICAL STATE OF ANCIENT BRITAIN UNDER THE EMPERORS, 2 vols. 8vo. eitra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to 10s 6ci . 1843 THORESBY'S (RALPH) DIARY AND COR- RLSPONDENCE, comprising a period of forty-five years, from 1677 to 1724, now first published from the Original Manuscripts, by tlie Rev. Josicimi Hunter, F.S.A. author of the History of Hallainshii-e, Doncastor, Yorkshire Glossary, &c. 4 vols. 8vo. portraits, cloth, (puh. at £2. 16s) reduced to 14s _^ 1840 *^* A singularly cheap book, Ralph Thoresby, the Yorkshire topographer, wa? one of tlie most distinguished of our early English Anti- quaries, a great Collector of Books, Manuscrii)ts, and Coins, and niucli esteemed by all the most eminent scholars of the day. Among his correspondents re- corded in these volumes are Evelyn Lister, Dr.Martin Elstob, Mrs. Eli- Hearne, Thomas Milner,Rov.John zabeth Stry]»,Hev.John Sharp, Abp. Hicks, Dr. Geo. Fairfax, Bryan Burnet, Bp. Kennett, Dr. Nicholson, Bp. Matthew Henry Wliite Gibson, Abp. Sloane, Sir Hans Lo Neve, Peter Gale, Dr. Thos. Calamy, Rev. Peck, llev. F. Gale, Roger Edward Hawcs, Abp. Tod's Annals and Antiquities of Rajast'han — See Books of Prints. TOUR IN NORMANDY, Illustrative of the Man- ners, Customs, and Traditions, History, An- tiquities, and Present State of the People. Edited from the Journal of a recent Traveller, by F. Shoberl, Esq. 2 vols, post 8vo. illustrated with 12 plates by Mrs. Dawson Turner and Cot- man, extra cloth, (pub. at £1. Is) reduced to I0s6d . 1841 " A better guide to this interesting French province can hardly be required. It is a book of travels pos- sessed of high pretensions as well as permanent interest. The author enters into an elaborate examination of every thing of importance relating to Normandy, mak- ing the sterling information conveyed by his pages the more entertaining, by dilating on what is most pictu- resque in its antiquities, its legends, and its scenery ; in short, comprehending within his scope all that the reader can require to know of the country and its in- habitants."— ife7v Monthly Mag. TROLLOPE'S (MRS.) SUMMER IN BRIT- TANY, 2 vols. 8vo. with 12 illustrations by Hervieu, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 12s) re- duced to 8s . 1840 " These volumes are those of a clever and intelligent traveller, and we can recommend them both as worthy of perusal at home, and as likely to be of great use to the tourist in Brittany."— Qwar^cW^/ Revleiv. VISIT TO ITALY, in 1841, 2 vols. 8vo. extra cloth, (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 10s 1842 " Presenting a more distinct impression of Italy than any other work we ever met with." — Spectator. " Not only the best of Mrs. TroUope's works, but by far the best account of Italy as it is, which has yet been published." — Salopian Journal. SUMMER IN WESTERN FRANCE, including the Provinces from the Loire to the Dordogne, 2 vols. 8vo. with nine illustrations by Hervieu, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 12s) reduced to 9s . 1841 "The present Tour embraces the land of the English dominion in France, and the scenes of the heroic ad- ventures of Joan de Arc— the field of the no less noble struggle of La Vendee — and of the sanguinary wars of the Huguenots at La Rochelle, and the country of Cognac and Claret, — rendered memorable also as the spot where flourished that terror of the curious. Blue Beard, the equally sanguinary Geotfrey Grand Bent, Diana of Poictiers, ' Les Penitens d'Amour,' and a whole host of historical characters of equal interest,— the attractiveness of the author's materials must be as manifest as that of Mrs. TroUope's name as editor." "These volumes are calculated to be both a useful guide and agreeable companion to any tourist through Western France. AVe like this class of books." Athenavm, 78 TUCKER'S LIGHT OF NATURE PURSUED, with some account of the Lif*3 of the Author, by Sir II. P. St. .lohn Mildraay, Bart. M.P., complete in 2 vols. 8vo. ertra clolh boards (pub. at £1. IO4) reduced to 13s iH42 Dr. Paley, in speaking of this valuable work, says— ' It would be ungrateful not to confess the obligation I am under to the writings of Tucker under the Title of " The Light of Nature Pursued." There is more original thinking on the several subjects that he has taken in hand than in any other, not to say than in all others put together : his talent for illustrations is un- rivalled." " The ' Light of Nature' is a work, which after much consideration, I think myself authorized to call the most original and profound tliat has ever ajipeared on moral philosopliy."— i'j)- Jatnes Mackintosh. "The Liijlit of Nature, one of tlie most attractive books in our language, both to those who read to be them- selves instructed on these questions, and to tliose who read with a view of imparting such instruction to others. So judged Paley in the last generation; and such is manifestly the opinion of Archbishop Whatelv, and of Bishop Copleston, with many other writers of oiir own." Edinhurqh Review. I do not know of any work in the sliajie of a phi- losophical treatise that contains so much good sense so agreeably expressed. I think it impossible for any one not to perceive the beauty, the naivete, tlio force, the clearness, and propriety of his illustrations."— fl^azZtii. Tucker's Light of Nature is "a work in which the noblestphilosophy was brought down bv a master-l)and, and i)feced within the reach of every man of sound un- sUrKXm^."— Robert Hall. LIFE OF THOMAS JEFFERSON, Third President of the United States, with Corre- spondence never before published, 2 vols. 8vo. portrait, extra cloth, (jnib. at £1. 8i) reduced to 7* 1837 TURNBULL'S TRAVELS IN CUBA, with an Account of Porto Rico and the Slave Trade Bvo. map,cloth,bds.{imh. at 15s.) reduced to ^* . Longman, 1840 "Cuba, whellier we consider its extent and geogra- phical position, its magnificent harbours, the fertility of Its soil, or ils mineral riches, well deserves the ap. pellation of 'The Queen of the Western Islands.' bince 1827, when Humboldt published his ' Statistics Of Cuba,' her resources have increased, her population angmenled.and her trade received a great public im- pulse. Mr. TmnbuH's work contains a vast mass of information, relaiii,.; i,> the natural resources of the island, us trade, l■ev^■u!..■,^uve^umenl,— subjects of great interest and but impLiiectly. if at all, known in this country." — Athenmuni. TURNER'S (DAWSON) GUIDE TO THE ROMAN ANTIQUITIES OF THE CITY OF TREVES, translated from the German of Wyttenbach, 8vo. 22 fdates and vignettes, extra clolh, (pub. at 84- 6(/) reduced to 5s 1839 " Few places ofTer more interesting objects for the contemplation and inquiry of the antiquary, than the ancient city of Treves, with its Thernue, Ami)hitheatie, and Palatial rums. These are all fully and ably Illustrated in this vohime."—lAterury Oaiettc. TYTLER'S ELEMENTS OF GENERAL HIS- TORY, Ancient and JModern, with a Table of Chronology and Comjiarative View of Ancient and Modern Geography, new trade edition, 8vo. maps,, extra cloth, 1 4s 1845 URE'S PHILOSOPHY OF MANUFACTURES, being an Exposition of the Scientific, Moral* and Commercial Economy of Great J5ritain, second edition, enlarged. 8vo. with tvood-cuts and steel plates, eitra cloth bds. (pub. at 10s tid) reduced to 7* . 1335 " It is impossible for us to mention a work of more practical us-^fulness, or more valuable information, than this volume by i)r. Vro.-'-LUtrari/ Oazettc. MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LtTKRATTJUE. ^VADE'S BRITISH HISTORY, Chronologically Arranged, compreliending a clas-sified Ai.alysis of Events and Occurrences in Churcii and State, and of the Constitutional, Political, Commercial, Intellectual, and Social Progress of the United Kingdom, from the First In- vasion by the Romans to the Accession of Queen Victoria, with very copious Index and Supplement, second edition, 1 large and re- markably thick volume, roy. 8vo. (1200 pages) extra cloth bds. (pub. at£l. 10s) reduced to I8s 1844 *«• This elaborate work comprises all the principal facts in Uritish History ; Biographical Notices of eminent 1 ublio t;iiaracters ; Tables of the Progress of Taxes, the Ishitional Debt, Agriculture, Commerce, Shipping, and Navigation; Accounts of Variations in Prices, Wages, and Currency; Lists of the Public Statute* from Magna Ghana, and of the Men of Letters and I Science who distinguished each Keign ; with accounts I of Changes in the Manners, Diet, Industrial Pursuits, Amusements, and Costume of the People ; comparative statements of Crime at dilterent periods; and other details tending to exhibit a condensed but complete View of the Rise and Progress of the British Empire, Irom the earliest authentic Era to the Death of Wil- liam IV. I " This volume should be in the possession of every one who has occasion at any time to refer to facts o'r occurrences connected with English hlstorv, whether his object be to ascertain a leading iiaiticular of laiv, finance, statistics, biography, politics, or political events, or to follow out their study. The book is not a mere mass of dry statistical or chronological details, but a powerfully written commentary on characters and oc- currences, as well as a seriatim chronicle of them." Spectator, WALKER'S PRONOUNCING DICTIONARY, corrected and enlarged by the Rev. J. Davis, 8vo. portrait, extra cloth, (pub. at 10s 6d) re- daced to 5s . 1343 the same, with the Key to Classical Pronun- ciation, extra c/ot/t, (pub. at 12s) reduced to 6s WALPOLE'S MEMOIRS OF THE LAST TEN YEARS OF THE REIGN OF GEORGE II., 2 vols. 4to. cloth lettered. (This work has not been published in 8vo.) (pub. at £5. 5s) reduced to £1. 10s . 1822 WARD'S ( REV. W.) VIEW OFTHE HISTORY, LITERATURE, AND MYTHOLOGY OF THE HINDOOS, including a minute Descrip- tion of their Manners and Customs, and Trans- lations from their principal Works; New and improved Edition, 3 vols. 8vo. extra cloth boards, scarce, (pub. at £1. 16s) reduced to i-1- Is . 1822 WARNER'S ANTIQUITATES CULINARLiE, or Curious Tracts relating to Old Enoi.isii CooKKiiv, viz.— 1. The Forme of Cury ; a Roll of Ancient English Cookery, compiled about A.D. 1390, by the Master Cooks of King Richard II.— II. Ancient Cookery, a.d. ISsT, containing ninety-one English Receipts, or Nyms.— III. Recipes in English Cookery, written in tlie Fourteenth Century.— IV. An- cient Receipts to preserve Fruits.— V. In- thronization Feast of George Neville, Arch- bishop of York, in the 6th Edward IV.— VI. Lenten Inthronizatiou Feast of Archbishop Warham, a.d. 1504. Chiefly printed from M.anuscripts, with a pieliminaryr Discourse, Notes, and Illustrations by the Rev. R chard Wakneu, Author of " Tho History of Bath," MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. 7D &c. &c. royal 4to. with two large plates, hut f- bound, olive moroccti, the top edges gilt, 15s 1791 This curious and interesting aniiquarian work was privately printed in the year 1791, and is almost unknown to the pnblic, scarcely a dozen copies of tlie impiession having been parted with. The three or lour which appear to have occurred lor sale by pnblic aiulion have produced upwards of three pounds each. Tlie few copies now ottered were recently discovered in an old wa-eliou»e, where they had remained for nearly liity years, and been forgotten. iVATERSTON'S CYCLOPAEDIA OF COM- iMEKCE, ]\Iercantile Ltiw, Finance, Com- niofcial Geogt'apliy and Navigation, new edition, iiichiding the Niiw Tariff (complete to tlie piet^ent time) ; the French Tarii-f as far as it concerns this Country ; and a Treatise on the IVincipIes, Practice, and History of Commerce, by J. R. Rl'CiiLLOcii, one very thick closely printed vol. Ovo. (900 pages) with four maps, eitra cloth (pub. £1. 4s) reduced to 10s 6d 1846 This capital work will be found a most valuable manual to every commercial man, and a useful book to the general reader. Its contents are so multifarious, that it is difficult to cite even the principal, but the following will give some idea of them : — 1. — Descriptive and Statistical Accounts of Com- nuidilies, with Customs and Excise Regulations, Unties, lk.c. 2.— Commercial Statistics of the different Countries of the World, including their Physical Character, Productions, Trade, Seaports, Monies, Measures, Fi- nances, &c. S.—Colonies, Shipping, Public Companies, Railways, Roads, Docks, Post Office, &c. i. — Summary of the Principles of Commerce, Fi- nance and Banking, with historical and statistical illustrations. 5 — Digest of Commercial Law, including Insurance, Partnershi]), Principal and Agent, Bills of Exchange, Sale, Guaranty, Bankruptcy, Shipping, and Contracts and Obligations in general. ().— Commercial Arithmetic and Accounts, Exchanges, Coins, Measures and Weights, Public Funds, Interest, Annuities, and Assurances, with numerous Tables. 7. — Explanation of Mercantile Terms and Usages; besides a variety of miscellaneous information. "This work has been compiled with care, and gives the most recent and authentic information on tne matters treated of. It will prove a valuable addition to every mercantile library, and be found a useful book of reference in all commercial matters." JthentBum. " A woik of the very highest yalue and importance to the commercial community. All kmds of informa- tion that can by any possibility interest those engaged in raercantde transactions are here collected. The most minute attention is displayed, and the utmost research is manifest in every department of the work. Facts are carefully collected and carefully condensed ; all the useful statistics on any branch of commerce are used ; and, in short, no pains are spared to make each treatise on each subject the most complete that has ever appeared." — Chronicle. " On all (he various subjects on which this useful compendium treats, we have the most copious and satisfactory information; while on all general questions, the views ol the writer appear liberal and enlightened. As a specimen of the manner in which the work is executed, we might refer trf the ditferent articles on Banks, Colonies, Commerce, Exch..nge, Insurance, Interest, Navigaiion Laws, Stock, Shipping, &c on all of which the reader will find correct and compre- hensive views, with copious details, useful in ihem- selves, and corroborating llie geneial sentiments ot the wi]tvT."—E(}inhurgh Jivcniiig Cow-ant. WATSOjS'S PHILIP II. and III. with Dunlop's Philip the 4th, and Charles the 2w\. forming the best tiiitoru of Spain, 4 vols. 8vo. cloth, umjotmhi Uttered, (pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £l. 8s 1839 WELLINGTON, LIFE OF THE DUKE OF, Co.Mi'ii.i;!) riioM TiiK Disi'A itiii s, and otiier atitlieiitic Records and original Documents, by GiiOUGE Soane, A.B., 2 vols. leap. 8vo. handsomclii printed, with pretty woodcuts, elegantlif gill c/<)//i, (pub. at IDs) reduced to tis 1840 " No person of any time ever formcil a more noble subject for the i>en of the historian or the biographer, than the Duke of Wellington ; and never, perhaps, was there an eniintnt jierson of whose actions, and even thoughts, more copious records have existence. The numerous accounts of his military exploits, par- ticularly of his g orious campaigns in the Peninsula, I'S recorded by Napier, and his own extraordinary dispatches and correspondence given to the world under the edit(U'ship ot Col. Gurwood, furnish materials as p(M feet .IS they are authentic ; and of these and other documents Mr. Soano has most ably availed himself: his work is compendiously restrained within the limits of two volumes, and it gives a clear and full narrative of the Duke's great actions, in a style equally energetic and perspicuous." — Argus. DISPATCHES OF THE DUKE OF, during his various Campaigns in India, Den- mark, Portugal, Spain, the Low Countries, and France, from 1799 to 1818, compileti from Official and Authentic Documents, by Lieut. -Colonel Gurwood, the compressed edition^ one thick vol. medium 8vo. elegantly bound in gi/tcWi, (pub, at£l. 5s) reduced to £l. Is 1842 '■ For the Duks of Wellington's Character as a Statesman, let every one read his wonderful Dis- patches, which found a fame far loftier even than the triumphs of the warrior." Lord Brougham's Speech on India, WELLESLEY'S (MARQUIS) DISPATCHES FROJM SPAIN, 8vo extra cloth bds. (pub. at 8s 6d) reduced to 3s 6d Murray, 1838 I "The information in this volume is of the most va- Inable order, and is indispensable to the attainment of a correct acquaintance with the Spanish affairs of that period"- — Literary fiaiette. WELLSTED'S CITY OF THE CALIPHS, and Travels along the Shores of the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean, including a Voj'age to the Coast of Arabia, and a Tour oa the Island of Socotra, Adventures among the Bedouin Arabs, &c., 2 vols. 8vo. map and plates, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 5s) reduced to 12s 1840 " We have seldom met with a book of travels whidf has afforded us more pleasure than the 'City of th? Culiphs.' Full of adventure, of glowing description, and of perilous incident, it excites for itself a species of interest nearly allied to romance— it has in fact all the charm of romance attached to the worth of reality." — Literary Gazette, " A publication of singular interest and entertain- ment. In these days of dull and Hat common-place, it is quite reiieshing to come upon a narrative of strange travel and wild adventure like this, which recnisto mind the exploits of the old voyagers of Spain and England, when half of the world was undiscovered, and the other hi-lt unknown. Oer traveller quits India by em- barking on the Persian Gulf in a trading vessel bound lo Muscat, and ihe first impoilaut features of his narra- tive relate to that remarkable ciiy. Here he commen- ces slave merchant, and embarks lor Ganibrun, visiting, in his way thither, some of the singular islands in the Persian Gulf, and particularly those where the pearl fisheries are established, of which he gives an interest- ing description. In due course he reaches Bagdad, the celebrated ' City of the Caliphs,' remains there a con- siderable lime, and allords many delails of it that are not to be found in the narrative of any other traveller. Among the most interesting of his adventures are those which take place among the Arabi ot the Desert, par- ticularly the Bedouins, with whom he passes a consi- deialde period. Another point of great interest in these sketches is the celebrated city of Damascus, of whicn we have many graphic and i-haraclereslicdescriptions; also of Tripoli, Lebanon, and Baalbcc."— .Vara/ and Military Gazette. p 80 MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. WILSON'S (RAE) TRAVELS THROUGH RUS- SIA, POLAND, etc., 2 vols. 8vo. plates, ettra cloth, (pub. at £1. 4s) reduced to 8s 1828 TRAVELS THROUGH FRANCE AND ITALY, with Sketches of Roman Catholicism, '^ 8\o. plates, extra cloth, (pub. at 17s) reduced to 4s 6d 1835 Rae Wilson's Travels are strictly prohibited in Ca- tholic countries, an accountof hisfree critiques on their ceremonies, of which there are also engraved illustra- tions. " There are, perhaps, few volumes of travels more generally acceptable to the public than those before us. The author is so ardent and enthusiastic on the subjects on which he treats, particularly those connected with religion, that he carries the reader alon^ with hira, and always inspires respect."— iiferari/ Chronicle. W H Y T E ' S HISTORY OF THE BRITISH TURF,/roni the Earliest Period to the Present Day, comprising 6. Accounts of the most approved Method of Breeding, Training, and Managing Race- horses. 6. Notices of celebrated Jockeys. 7. Description of the principal Races and matches. 1. Memoirs and Anec- dotes of remarkable Sporting Characters. 2. The Performances & Pedigrees of celebra- ted Racehorses. S. Descriptions of the Racecoursea in Great Britain. 4. The Plates and Slakes annually run for. every piirticular, technical and otherwif^f to which the Lover of Racing may desire to refer, either as a matter of Business or Amusement, 2 thick vols. 8vo. with 10 plates, extra cloth bds. (pub. at £1. 8s) reduced to 12s " 1840 WILLIS'S PENCILLINGS BY THE WAY, a new and beautiful edition, with additions, fcap. 8vo.^7ie portrait and plates, extra red turkey cloth, richly gilt back, (pub. at 6s) reduced to 4s 6d 1835 " A lively record of first impressions, conveying vividly what was seen, heard, and felt, by an active and inquisitive traveller, through some of the most in- teresting parts of Europe. He has visited France, Italy, Sicily, Austria, the Ionian Isles, Greece, Turkey, the Levant, Switzerland, England, and Scotland. His cu- riosity and love of enterprise are unbounded. The narrative is told in easy, fluent language, with a poet's power of illustration. His work abounds in personal descriptions, and it must be owned that he is a lively poiirtrayer." — Edinh. Review. WRIGHT'S COURT HAND RESTORED, or the Student assisted in reading Old Charters, Deeds, etc. with an Appendix containing the Ancient Names of Places in Great Britain and Ireland; Ancient Surnames, etc. ; seventh edi- tion, small 4to. illustrated by 23 plates, contain- ing examples of Old Court Hand, Set and Com- mon Chancery, Secretary and other old Law Hand, andthe Contractions used in Ma7iuscript,bds. £1.6* 1834 Bo^tl^, OTorks; of Jfictwn, antr Eis!)t l\eatiincj< AINSWORTirS TOWER OF LONDON, an Historical Romance, illustrated by Geouge CuuiKSHANK, thick medium 8vo. new edition, with 95 Jiighly-fiiiished etchings on steel, and fine wood engravings, elegantly bound in cloth, richly gilt on hack and sides ivith new and ajipropritite devices, (pub. at 15s) reduced to lOi 6d 1044 Of this very ELiiCiNr anu popular voll'mk FIFTEEN THOUSAND COPIES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SOLD. " This Unmancu adds miicli new lustru to the aullioi 's oame, and deservedly classes him in llie tbreiiiosl rank of writers in this mingled species of history and fiction. It is a stirring and powerful narrative of some of the most alleclinw tragedies of English History, relicvcmerou8 they are) are executed with great power a«d truth."— Time*. " In the simple and graphic style in which this tale is written, Capt. Marryat has no compotitor— it is the truth and freedom of &mo\\e\.t."~United Service Journal. MARRYAT'S (CAPT.) TRAVELS AND ROMANTIC ADVENTURES OF MONSIEUR VIOLET, among the Snake Indians and Wild Tribes of the Great Western Prairies, 3 vols, post 8vo. extra cloth, full gilt back, (pub. at £1. lis Qd) reduced to 9s Longma7is, 1843 " Extremely entertaining ; full of most extraordinary adventures, where we can plainly enough see the hand and touch of this very clever and very popular author." Athenaum. Diaries and Olla Podrida, pao;e 67. MARTINEAU'S (MISS), DEERBROOK, a Novel, 3 vols, crown 8vo. half bound calf, (pub. at £1. 1 Is 6d) reduced to 9s 1839 MILLER'S GODFREY MALVERN, or The Life of an Author. ^^^By the Author of " Gideon Giles," "Royston Gower," " Day in the Woods," &c, &c.) 2 vols, in 1, 8 vo. ujfi/t 24 clever illustrations by Phiz, extra cloth, (pub. at 13s) reduced to 6s 6(i . 1843 " A most interesting work. It affords us sincere pleasure to bespeak the imblic regards to this new mani- festation of Mr. Miller's literary powers. His account of a poor author struggling in London is evidently drawn from the life ; and it is impossible for us to read it without recognizing many facts and characters. Few living writers can present us with more truth and talent than these pages indicate. Some of Miller's sweet ))oetry is also interspersed throughout the volume." — Literary Gazette. " This work has a tone and an individuality which distinguish it from all others, and cannot be read without pleasure. Mr. Miller has the forms and colours of rustic life more completely under his controul than any of his predecessors." — Athcnc found gxpedieut. New Issue in Monthly Volumes, Atthe Reduced Price of 3s. 6d. per Volume THE COMPLETE WORKS OF THE REV. ROBERT HALL, With a Memoir of his Life, BY DR. GREGORY ; And Observations on his Character as a Preacher, BY JOHN FOSTER, AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS ON DECISION OF CHARACTEB," ETC. WITH A GENERAL INDEX. In six thick volumes small octavo, extra cloth, lettered, HENRY G. BOHN, 1846. This capital edition was published from the Author's corrected copies and manuscripts, for the benefit of his widow who survives. The copyright was disposed of for the large sum of £4,000 and .s now the property of the Advertiser. The greater portion of the work is still copyright, and in'virtue of the recent act, will continue so for many years ; and, as sev ral of the early pieces were printed only for private d-tr.bation and not published, or were printed as orally delivered, without consent of t e auth'or, these also are protected. But as ,he copyright of some o earlier works has expired, it is now deemed advisable to repubh.h e whole in an authentic edition, at such a price as can leave little temptation to others to assume that portion which is unprotected. . m present edition, in small 8vo, is a reproduction of the elegant lar.e letter edition in 6 vols, demy 8vo, of which copies may still be had at the reduced price of 7s. per volume, or £2. 2s. for the set. The volumes may be depended on monthly, as they are all pr^nted and ready for delivery. Indeed, those v^ho M to take the 6 vols, at once, may have them immediately. TBSTIMOWSA. "Whoever WISHES TO see the English Language in its rER- n.xnv MUST READ the WRITINGS OF THAT GrEAT DlVlKE-ROBMU H™ He 'oMBINES THE BEAUTIES OE JoHNSON AomsON. ANO Burke without their iuvE^T^cri0^s."-Dugala Stewart. u i pannot do better than refer the academic reader to the immortal .. irRoBERT Hall. For moral grandeur, for Christian truth, and ''°h^in^itv we may doubt whether they have their match in the sacred 1:^1} any TgJor country." ?J. Sebg wick (i« his Discourse on the Studies of the University.) " The Sermons and Discourses of Robert Hall are won- derful COMPOSITIONS ; wonderful both for the scale and the variety of the powers they display ; a head so metaphysical, seeming to have httle in common with an imagination so glowing ; declamation so impassioned, with wisdom so practical : touches of pathos so tender, with such caustic irony, such bold invective, such spirit-stirring encouragements to heroic deeds ; and all conveyed in language worthy to be the vehicle of such diverse thoughts, precise or luxuriant, stern or playful — that most rare but most eloquent, of all kinds of speech, the masculine mother-tongue of an able man, which education has chastened, but not killed; constructed after no model of which we are aware ; moke massive than Addison, more e/vsy and unconstrained than johnson, more sober than Burke. " The bold diction, the majestic gait of the sentence, the vivid illus- tration, the rebuke which could scathe the offender, the burst of honest in- dignation at triumphant vice, the biting sarcasm, the fervid appeal to the heart, the sagacious development of principle, the broad field of moral vision — all these distinguish the compositions of Robert Hall, and we bear our most willing testimony to their worth." — Quarierlij Review. " In THE ELOQUENCE OF THE PULPIT, ROBERT HalL COMES NEARER MaSSILLON THAN EITHER CiCERO OR ^SCHINES TO DEMOS- THENES."— Lord Brougham. " Here is intellectual food for the scholar, the philosopher, the states- man, and the divine ; and expressed in the surpassing language of Robert Hall. He who shall give these volumes a place on his table, will not fail of satisfaction, on whatever page his eye may chance to rest ; and his MIND IS LITTLE TO BE ENVIED, IF FROM THE PERUSAL OF THEM, HE DO NOT FIND HIMSELF A MORE ACCOMPLISHED, A WISER, AND A BETTER MAN." — Church of England Quarterly Reviejv. " I will give my general opinion of this divine in the words that were employed to describe a prelate, whose writings, I believe, are familiar to him, and whom he strongly resembles in fertility of imagination, in vigour of thinking, in rectitude of intention, and holiness of life. Yes, Mr. Hall, like Jeremy Taylor, ' has the elociuence of an orator, the fancy of a poet, the acuteness of a scjhoolman, the profoundness of a philosopher, and the piety of a saint.' " Parr {Spital Sermon). " The excellence of Mr. Hall does not consist in the predominance of one of his powers, but in the exquisite proportion and harmony of all. The richness, variety, and extent of his knowledge, are not less remarkable than his absolute mastery over it. His style is one of the clearest AND simplest — THE LEAST ENCUMBERED WITH ITS OWN BEAUTY — OF ANY WHICH EVER HAS BEEN WRITTEN.— London Magazine. " His sermons are distinguished by solid and profound philosophy, and breathe a spirit of humility, piety, and charity, worthy of that pure and divine religion, to the defence of which the author has concentrated his talents. His eloquence is of the highest order, the natural effusion of a fertile imagination and of an ardent mind, while his style is easy, various, and_animated. On a review of all his various excellencies, we cannot but expect with confidence that the name of Robert Hall will BE PLACED BY POSTERITY AMONG THE BEST WRITERS OF THE AGE, AS WELL AS THE MOST VIGOROUS DEFENDERS OF RELIGIOUS TRUTH, AND THE BRIGHTEST EXAMPLES OF CHRISTIAN CHARITY." Sir J. Macintosh, INDEX. Abbott's Teacher, 31 Abenietliy's Works, 21 Ackwoilh's Vocabuhivy, 31 Adams on Carriages, 51 on St. Peter, 37 .ajsop's Fables, 31 Ages of Female Ueauty, 1 Aikin's Calendar of Nature, 31 Ainsworth's Tower of London, 81 Windsor Castle, 81 Latin Dictionary, 25 Albert (Prince), Music by, 30 Alexander's Lecture, 37 Andrews' Heaths, 13 Angler's Souvenir, 1 Aphorisms and Reflections, 51 Arabian Nights, Pictorial edit. 1 Aristophanes. NotJB Bekkeri, 25 ■ Plutus, and the Frogs, 25 Birds, by Gary, 25 Aristotle's Rhetoric, 25 Arraes et Arraures, 1 Art of Needlework, 51 Arthur O'Leary, by Lever, 83 Artis's Antediluvian Phytology, 13 Artist's Book of Fables, 1 Atlas, Wilkinson's General, 25 Classical, 25 Lizar's General, 51 Asmodeus, 81 Austria and the Austrians, 51 Authors of England, 1 Bacon's (Lord) Works, 51 Essays, &c. 51 Bakewell's Philos. Conversations, 31 — Evidences, 37 Bank's Dorm, and Extinct Baronage, 51 Barbauld, Lecons,31 Baretti's Italian Dictionary, 25 Barrow's Travels, 51 China, 51 Barton's Flora Medica, 13, 22 Barwell's Elder Brother, 32 Bateman's Orchidaceae, 20 Bateman on Cutaneous Diseases, 21 Battles of the British Navy, 51 Bauer's Ferns, Vi Baxter's Works, 37 Beaumont and Fletcher, 70 Beechey's Voyage (Botany of), 13 . (Zoology of), 13 Bell's Great Operations, 21 Phenomena of Nature, 31 Ben Jonson's Works, 70 Bennett's North Wales, 52 Whaling Voyai;e, 52 Bentley's Works, 25 Bewick's Select Fables, 1 ■ JEso'p, 1 Large Wood-cuts, 1 Bible, by Caunter, 37 Biblia Hebraica, 25 Bickersteth's Companion to the Font, 37 Biddulph on the 51st Psalm, 37 Bingham's Works, 37 Bingley's Useful Knowledge, 31 Select Vocalist, 35 Binning's Works, 37 Blackley's Sermons, 37 Blair's Sermons, 37 Bland's Problems, 2-1 Blessington's Thoughts, 52 . France, 52 Italy, 52 Boccaccio's Decameron, 52 Bolingbroke's Works, 52 Bolton's British Song Birds, 13 Bonner, Life of, 145 Esnnycastle's Newfoundland, 52 Book of Gems, 1 Raphael Cartoons, 1 Shakespeare Gems,l ^ of the Court, 52 Table Talk, 52 Booth's Analytical Dictionary, 52 Bos Ellipses Grecae, 25 Bostock's Physiology, 21 Boston's Crook in the Lot, 38 Boswell's Johnson, 52 Bourrienne's Napoleon, 52 Hoys' Paris, &c. 2 Brand's Popular Antiquities, 52 Brees's Glossary, 2, 24 Bremer's (Miss) Novels, by Howitt,81 Diary, and Strife and Peace, 81 Home, 81 Neighbours, 81 President's Daughter, and Nina, 81 H— . Family, Tralinnsn., &c- 81 Rritannia after the Romans, . Britton's Lincoln Cathedral, Christ Church, 2 Brockcdon's Italy, 2 Passes of the Alps, 2 — — Excursions in the Alps, 5» Brodie's Brit. Commonwealth, . Brown's Jewish Antiquities, 37 1 British Conchology, 13 I British Butterflies, 13, 31 Browne's (SirThos.) Works, 58 Buckingham's America, 53 Bulwtr's Pilgrims of the Rhine, 2 Disowned, 82 Devereux,82 Pelham, 82 Leila, or the Siege of Granada, 2 Student, 82 Bunyan's Pilgrim, 37 Burgess's Greece, 53 Burke's Works, 53 Life, by Prior, 73 Burke's Ency. of Heraldry, 53 Burmeister's Entomology, 13 Burnet's Lives, 37 Burns' Complete Works, 54 (Dr.) Surgery, 21 Burroughs on Hosea, 37 Rare Jewel, 37 Burrow's Conchology, 13 Elgin Marbles, 2 Bussey's Napoleon, 8 History of France, 9 Butler's Lives of the Saints, 37 CsEsar, Oberlini, 25 Caleb Stukely, 82 Calmet's Dictionary of the Bible, 38 Campbell on the Miracles, 88 Campbell's Life of Petrarch, 54 Cardinal de Ketz, 82 Carleton's Valentine M'Clutchy, 82 Traits and Stories, 82 Carter's Ancient Architecture, 2 Sculpture and Painting, 2 Gothic Architecture, 2 Cary's Dante, 54 Pindar, .54 Early French Poets, 54 Lives of English Poets, 54 Lexicon to Herodotus, 27 Lexicon to Sophocles, 29 Testimonies of tho Fathers, 38 Memorials of the Civil War, 54 Castle on Poisons, 21 Catherwood's Views in Yucatan, &c. 21 Cailin's North American Indians, 2 Portfolio of Do. 2 Caulfields Portraits, 2 Cecil's Works, 38 Celsus, ed. Milligan, 21 Latin and English, 21 Chamberlaine's Royal Drawings, 3 Chambers' Scottish Songs, 75 James I. 54 Chandler's Asia Minor, 54 Plain Reasons, 38 Channing's Works, 34 Charlesworth's Mag. of Nat. Hist. 13 Charnock on the .Vttributes, 38 Chateaubriand's Eng. Literature, 55 on Revolutions, 55 Chatham Papers, 55 Chatterton's Works, 55 Chivalry and Charity, 83 Chorley's Music in France, &C. 55 Christian Souvenir, 3 Evidences, 38 Treasury, 38 Literature, .38 , Chronological Tables (The Oxford), 24 CImrton's Univ. Amanuensis, 55 Gibber's Apology, 55 Cicero's Life 4c Letters, by Melmoth,23 Offices, by Cockman, 2(5 Epistoloe ad Atticum,2li Notic Var. in Oliveti, 20 City Scenes, 31 Clarke's Travels, 55 Claude Liber Veritatis, 3 Cobbin's Book of Popery, 39 Coesvelt Picture Gallery, 3 Coghlan's Comp. to the Scriptures, 30 Colburn's Standard Novelists, 82 Coleman's Myth, of the Hindus, 55 Collection of Eng. Sonnets, 55 Companion to the Almanac, 55 Oouder's Views of all Religions, 31 Coney's Foreign Cathedrals, 3 Conolly on Insanity, 21 Conquest of Peru, 5T> Cook's View of Christianity, 39 Cooke's Shipping and Craft, 3 London and its Vicinity, 3 Thames Scenery, 3 Cookery, Jenning's Family, 56 Ladies' Own Cookery Book, 5(1 Coombe Abbey, 82 Cooper's (Sir Astley) Life, 23 Cooper on Hernia, 21 Surgical Essays, 21 Cooper's American Navy, 56 Coplestoni Prselect. Acad. 28 Copley's Hist, of Slavery, 50 Cornwall Illustrated, 12 Coronation of George IV. 3 Corpus Poetarum Lat. 20 Cortes, Life of, 56 gostello's Early French Poetry, .50 Cotman's Sepulchral Brasses, 3 Etchings, 3 Courtney's Com. on Sliakespeare, 50 Gowper's Works, by Southuy, 50 Poems, by Stebbing, .^0 Poems,by McDiarmid,5r) Crabbe's New Pantheon, 31 Cramer and Wickh. Alps P. 26 Crawford's Siam and Cochin Cliina, 56 Ava, 57 Crichton's Lives of Converts, 39 Croker's Songs of Ireland, 57 Croly on Divine Providence, 80 Croly's George IV., 57 Crowquill's Pictorial Grammar, 31 Cruden's Concordance, 39 by Hannay,39 Cruikshank's Three Courses, 57 Omnibus, 15 "At Home," and odd vol. 82 Plates to Fielding, &c. 3 Curtis's Flora Londinensis, 14 Daille on the Fathers, 39 Philippians and Colossians, 3i) Dallaway s Architecture, 57 Darner's Tour in Greece, 57 Daramii Lexicon Hom. 26 Daniell's Oriental Scenery, 3 Animated Nature, 3 Daniel's Mcrrie England, 82 Davidson's Upper India, 57 Davis's Sketches of China, .57 Davison's Poetical Rhapsody, 57 Dawe's Miscellanea Critica, 20 Dawnings of Genius, 32 De la Bechns Geological Mem. 14 Denny's Anoplura Brit. 14 Psela4ihida; Brit. De Quincey's Polit. Economy, 57 De Wette on the Scriptures, 39 Diary of Charles 11.57 'George IV. 58 Dibdin's Bibliomania, 58 Bibliophobia, 58 Bibliotheca Spenscriana, 58 Cassano Catalogue, 58 Tour, Plates to, 3 Dick on Digestion, 21 Dickens's Pic-Nic Papers, 82 Dilettanti Specimens of Sculpture, S D'lsraeli's Amenities of Literature, S9 Doddridee's Expositor, 39 Works, 40 Dodwell's Greece, 3 Pelas^ic Remains, 4 Don's Gardener's Dictionary, 14 Hortus Cantabrigiensis, M Donne's (Dr.) Works, 50 Donovan's Insects of India, 14 Insects of Ciiina, 14 Works on Natural History, 14 Don Quixote, 3 Doyle's Cyclop, of Husbandry, 14 Drake's Shakespeare and Iiis Times, 53 Draper's Juvenile Naturalist, 31 Drummond'sOrigines, 58 Drury's Foreign Entomology, 14 Duncan's Dukes of Normandy, 58 Dunlop's Memoirs of Spain, 58 Earl's Eastern Seas, 58 Eckel's Doetrina Num. 'Vet. 8 Edgar's Variations of Popery, 40 Edgeworth's Patronage, 82 ■ Harrington, &c. 82 Ormond, 82 Education, Works on, 59 Edwards's (Jonathan) Works, 49 Edwards on Free Will, by Taylor, 49 Egypt, Col. Vyse's Pyramids, 4 Perring's Views, 4 Egyptian Antiq. in Brit. Museum, 4 Ellendt's Lexicon to Sophocles, 29 Ellis's 'Voice from the Vintage, 59 Ellis on Insanity, 21 Encyclopedia of Manners, 31 English Boy at the Cape, 31 — — Causes Celebres, 59 Country Life, 59 Entertaining Philosopher, 31 Equestrian Manual lor Ladies, 31 Espy on Storms, 24 Euripides* Four Plays, 26 Hippolitus and Aleestis, 26 Evelyn's Bylva and Terra, 15 Faber on Trinitarianism, 40 — — on Transubstantiation, 40 Fain's Napoleon Memoirs, 70 Falconer's Marine Dictionary, 24 Fanshawe's (Lady) Memoirs, 59 Farington's Lakes, &c. 4 Fenn's Pafton Letters, .59 Ferguson's Astronomy, 24 Fielding's Works, 59 Finney on Revivals, 40 Fisher's Warwickshire, 4 Bedfordshire, 4 Juvenile Scrap Book, 31 Flavel's Sermons, 40 Flavel's Homer, iEschylus, & Hesiod, 4 Acts of Mercy, 4 Lord's Prayer, 4 Lectures on Sculpture, 4 Fleming's British Animals, 15 Fortunes of Frank Fairfield, 32 Foster's,Essays on Decision of Char. 59 on Popular Ignorance, 59 Foulis's Catalogue of Pictures, 59 France and the French Revolution, 59 Frank Mildmay, by Marryatt, 82 Franklin's Works, 59 Frater's Koordistan, 60 Freytagii Lexicon Arabicum, 26 Fry's History of the Church, 40 ■ on Job, 40 Fuller's (Andrew) Works, 40 Fuscli's Life and Lectures, 4 Gaelic Dictionary, 26 Gallery of Portraits, 4 Garland of Scotia, 86 Gazetteer (New Edinburgli), 60 Oell and Gandy's Poniiiciana, 4 Gell's Topography of Rome, 00 Geologist, 15 Georgian Era, 60 Geramb's Palestine, 60 (iibbon's Rome, 60 Gil Hlas, illu.strated by Gljtoux, 5 Gillie's History of Greece, 60 Gilpin's Works on the Picturesque, 5 Glees, a Selection of, 3(1 Glelg's Warren Hastings, 60 Chelsea Pensioners, Index. Glimpses of the Wonderful, 32 Goethe's Faust, by Retzsch, 5 Goldsmith's Works, 60 Citizen of the World, 61 Golownin's Japan, CI Goodwin's Domestic Architecture, 5 Child of Light, 41 Gordon's Greek Revolution, 60 Gore's Rose Fancier's Manual, 15 Graham's Power of Faith, 40 Granville's Spas of England, 22, 61 Spas of Germany, 22, 61 Graves' (Dean) Works, 41 on the Pentateuch, 41 on the Trinity, 41 Greaves's Ess. for Sabbath Re.ading, 50 Greek Pros, by Spitzner & Goettling, 20 Gospe?s, by Hoole, 26 Grcenhill on Ezekiel, 41 Gregory's Conspectus, Lat. et Eng., 22 Letters, 41 Greville's Cryptogamie Flora, 15 Grindlay's Views in India, 5 Grotius on the Chr. Religion, 41 Guild's Moses Unveiled, 38 Gullivers' Travels, Pict. Edit., 5 Gwilt's Anglo-Saxon Grammar, 26 Hack's English Stories, 32 Grecian Stories, 32 Winter Evenings, 32 Hall's (Bishop) Works, 41 Contemplations, 42 Hard Texts, 42 Hall's (Robert) Works, 42 Hall's Patchwork, 32, 61 Napoleon in Council, 70 Hall's Animal Kingdom, 15 Hamilton's Vases, 5 Hamilton's (Lady) Memoirs, 61 Hanmsr's Life and Corre.spondence, 62 Hansard's Archery, 5 Harcourt on the Deluge, 42 Harris's Aurelian, by Westwood, 15 Harry Mowbray, by Knox, 82 Havell's Birds of Paradise, 15 Hayden's Canzonets, 36 Head's Narrative, 62 Heath's Caricature Scrap Book, 5 Belgium, 5 Hebrew Psalter, 26 Hederici Lexicon, Blomfiield, 27 Heeren's Histl. Researches in Africa, 61 Asia, 61 History of Europe, 61 Ancient Greece, 62 Historical Treatises, 62 Ancient History, 32, 62 Ancient Geography, 62 Henry's Bible, by Bickersteth, 43 Herbert's Attila, 62 ■ — — Miscellaneous Works, 62 Heretic, by Lajetcliinikoff', 82 Hermann's Manual of Antiquities, 27 Herodotus, 3 Books, by Edwards, 27 Gary's Lexicon to, 27 Hill's (Rowland) Memoirs, 42 History of Greece, L. U.K., 02 of Switzerland, 62 Hobhouse's Albania, etc., 62 Hogarth's Works, engraved by liiraself, 5 Musical Drama, 36 Hogg's Jacobite Relics, 62 on the Carnation, 15 Holbein's Court of Henry VIII, 5 Home's Comparative Anatomy, 22 Hood's Comic Album, 82 Hook's Gurney Married, 82 Sayings & Doings, 1st, 2d, & 3d, 82 Adventures of an Actor, 82 Hooker & Greville, Icones Filicum, 15 and Bauer, Ferns, 13 Exotic Flora, 15 Musci Exotici, 16 Botanical Miscellany, 10 British Jungermannia, 10 Journal of Botany, 16 Flora Boreali Americana, 10 Hope's Costume of the Ancients, 6 Architecture, 6 Morbid Anatomy, 22 Coleoiiterist's Manual, 10 Hopkins's (Bishop) Works, 42 Hopkins on Sin, &c., 38 on Regeneration, 38 Vanity of the World, 38 Almost Christian, 38 on the Commandments, &c., 39 Miscellaneous Sermons, 39 Horatius, Doering, 27 Horace, translated by Haughton, 27 Hoskins' Great Oasis, 62 Housman's Collection of Sonnets, SS Howard on Colour, 6 Howe's Works, 43 i Living Temple, 43 Howitt's Jack of the Mill, 82, 83 Wanderings of a "Tailor, 83 German Experiences, 83 (Mary) Fable & Verse Book, 34 British Preserve, 32 Hughsons London & Westminster, 6 Huish on Bees, 16 Hume and Smollett, 63 Correspondence, 63 Hunt's Tudor Architecture, 6 Parsonage Houses, 6 • Gale Lodges, 6 Architettura Campestre, fl (Leigh) Indicator, 63 Hunter's Sacred Biography, 43 Syria, 63 Hallamshire Glossary, 63 Huntingdon's (Lady) Memoirs, 43 Hutchinson's Meteorology, 24 Button's Mathematics, 24 Life, 63 Illustrated Fly Fisher, 6 - Commentary, 43 Illustrations of the Royal Progress, 6 Imitations of Celebrated Autliors, 6.1' Inglis's Ireland, 63 Norway, Sweden, &c., 63 Switzerland, &c. 63 Ireland's Paganism & Christianity, 43 Irish Tourist, 63 Italian School of Design, 6 Jackson on Wood Engraving, 6 Jacobs on Precious Metals, 63 James's Life of William III., 63 Jameson's Diary of an Ennuyee, 63 Jamieson's Mechanics, 24 Hermes Scythicus, 27 Jardine's Naturalist's Library, 16 Jardine and Selby's Ornitlwlogy, 16 Jarves's Sandwich Islands, 63 Jebb's Economy of the Church, 43 Jetfrey's (Judge) Memoirs, 63 Jenkyn and Manton's Expositions, 43 Jenner's Life and Correspondence, 32 Jenyn's (Soame) Evidences, iic, 36 Jerrold's Cakes and Ale, 83 Joe Miller's Jest Book, 63, Johnson's English Dictionary, Highwaymen, 63 Stranger in India, Johnsoniana, 64 Jones' (Owen) Views on the Nr.e, Brecknockshire, 64 Joyce's Scientific Dialogues, 32 Juvenal and Persius, by Gifford, 27 Keightley's History of England, 64 Kelly's Cambist, 64, 24 Kelly's Religion of the Heart, 43 Lives of Quakers, 43 Kendall's Gothic Architecture, 6 Kcnni(m's Examples of Trees 6 Keppel's (Admiral) Life, 04 Kerr's Melodies, SO Kiloh's Ancient History, 32 Kirby's Wonderful Museum, 64 Kirby's Entomologiu Americana, 16 Kitto's Travels in Persia, 88 Pictorial Palestine, 8 Knight's Pictorial London, 6, 04 British Museum, 32, 0 Journey Books of England, 64 Store of Knowledge, 04 Musical Classics, 30 I^ibrary for the Young, 32 (Gaily) Normans in Sicily, 64 Saracenic & Norman Keraains, 6 ' Ecclesiast. Architecture of Italy, fl Knowles's Diseourses, 43 Kiigler's History of Germany, 7 Kulnoel, Cora. In Not. Test., 27 L. E. L. Traits ond Trials, 32 Laconics, 55 Laird »f Logan, 05 Lamb's Worlds, 65 Tales from Sliakespeare, 33, 05 Essays o( Elia, 05 Lamarcli'< Concliology, 18 Lamartine, Souvenirs, 27 Lambarde's Kent, 65 Lune's Modern Egyptians, 66 Lanpon's (R;iron) Evenings, 70 La FlHce's Mecaniqne Celeste, 21 Larclier's Notes on Herodotus, 37 Lardner'8(Dr. N.) Works, 43 Larlneron Uie Dif.& Int. Calculus, 24 Latham's Birds, 17 Lutrobe's Solace of Song, 65 Mexico, 65 North America, 65 Lauder s Royal Progresses, 6 Lawrence's (Sir Thos.) Life, 6 Lawrence on the Eye, 22 Lawson's History of the Church of Scot- land, 44 Laycock's Portuguese Grammar, 27 Portuguese Fables, 27 Leake's Travels in the Morea, 65 Researches in Greece, 65 Ledyards Life and Adventures, 65 Lee's Hebrew Grammar, 27 Heb. Chald. and Eng. 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Wales, 17 Lewis's (Monk) Life, &c. 66 Library of Anecdote, 66 Lieber's Political Ethics, 66 Life of Cln-ist, 44, 33 Life of Jack Sheppard, 66 Lindley's British Fruits, 17 Lady's Botany, 20 Lister's Life of Clarendon, 66 Granby, 82 Little Lays for Little Learners, 36 Livius Drakenborchii, 28 Livy, in English, 28 Lizar's Anatomical Plates, 22 Locke's Philosophical Works, 66 Lockhart's Conquest of Mexico, 66 Lodge's lUusts. of British History, 66 Londina lUustrata, Wilkinson, 7 London (New) Med. Pocket Book, 22 Surgical Pocket Book, 22 Chemical Pocket Book, 22 Longfellow's Poetical Works, 66 Longworth's Circassians, 66 Loudon's (Mrs.) Ent. Naturalist, 17,33 Loudon and Westwood's Insects, 17 Lover's Legends of Irel.and, 83 Handy Andy, 83 Treasure Trove, or, £ s. d., 83 Lumisdcn's Rome, 6 Luther on the Psalms, 45 Lyson's Magna Britannia, 7 Environs of London, 7 Gloucestershire, 7 Mac Geoghan's Ireland, 66 Macgillivray's Rap. Birds, 17 Mill, and Cirri. 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Greece, 28 Mundy's Sketches in India, . 0 Murchison's Silurian System, 18 Murphy's Arabian Antiquities, 8 Batalha, 8 Murray's Truth of Revelation, 46 Pictorial Thames, 9 Museum Criticism, 28 Music by Prince Albert, 36 Musical Bijou, 38 93 Musical Cabinet, 35 Musical Forget me Not, 35 Musical Gem, 3(j Musical Library, 35 Musical Talisman, 36 Napier's Montrose and Covenanters, 70 Napoleon in Council, by Basil Hall, TO Memoirs, by Baron Fain, 70 Rapp's Memoirs, 70 Langon's Cambaceres, 70 Caulincourt's Recollections, 70 Napoleon (iallery, 12 Nares's Memoirs of Ld. Burghlev, 70 Natural Philosophy, by L. U. li., 24 Neo-Druidic Heresy, 70 New Arabian Nights, 85 Neuman and Bar. Span. 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