| <head>142 THE EXAMINER.<!-- The text on this page is divided into two columns and is fully justified. --></head>-----<p>FAMILY LIBRARY, No. XX.<lb/>Just published, illustrated with highly finished Engravings, from the Sketches<lb/>of Prout, and Woodcuts from Designs of Titian,<head>SKETCHES from VENETIAN HISTORY, Vol. I.</head>"Mr. Murray's Family Library . . . . . .A title which, from the valuable and<lb/>entertaining matter the collection contains, as well as from the careful style of<lb/>its execution, it well deserves. No family, indeed, in which there are children<lb/>to be brought up, ought to be without this Library, as it furnishes the readiest<lb/>resources for that education which ought to accompany or succeed that of the<lb/>boarding school or the academy, and is infinitely more conclusive than either<lb/>to the cultivation of the intellect."—Monthly Review, Feb. 1831.<lb/>John Murray, Albemarle street.</p>-----<p>Just published, with very superior Maps, 2 vols. 8vo. 30s.<head>THE DORIANS: an Account of the Early History, Religion</head>and Mythology, Civil and Domestic Institutions, Arts, Language, and<lb/>Literature of that Race. With new and improved Maps of the Peloponnese<lb/>and Macedonia. Translated from the German of C. O. Muller, Professor in<lb/>the University of Gottingen, by Henry Tunfel, Esq., and Geo. Cornewall<lb/>Lewis, Esq., Student of Christchurch.<lb/>Lately published,<lb/>BOECKH'S PUBLIC ECONOMY of ATHENS. 2 vols. 8vo. 1l. 6s.<lb/>John Murray, Albemarle-street.</p>-----<p><head>QUARTERLY REVIEW.--A New Number of the Quarterly</head>Review was published yesterday. It contains articles on Reform in<lb/>Parliament—On the Introduction of Poor Laws into Ireland—Present State of<lb/>Spain—Ancient Scottish Criminal Trials—Herschel's Treaty on Sound—The<lb/>Greek Dramatic Poets—The Bishop of Limerick's Edition of Townson—<lb/>Memoirs of Oberlin, &c. &c.</p><p>On January 26 was published, QUARTERLY REVIEW, No. 87, containing—<lb/>I. The Political Economists.—II. Mr. Southey's Lives of Uneducated Poets.—<lb/>III. On the Principles of Morality, and on the Private and Political Rights and<lb/>Obligations of Man.—IV. Coleridge on the Study of the Greek Classics.—<lb/>V. Moore's Life of Lord Byron.—Events of the late French Revolution.—<lb/>VII. Moral and Political State of the British Empire.</p>
| |