★ Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
<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>-----<p>Just published,<head>LIEUT.-COLONEL MATTHEW STEWART'S REMARKS</head>on the PRESENT STATE of AFFAIRS.<lb/>"The Author is, indeed, a pure Whig—but it is on this very account that we<lb/>are anxious to give his tract whatever additional circulation our testimony may<lb/>be sufficient to command. He arrives at our conclusion; and he uses arguments<lb/>which, though we could not use them, may in many quarters be considered<lb/>better than ours. Colonel Stewart, the very able son of a most able<lb/>father (the celebrated Professor of Moral Philosophy), is a distant and calm<lb/>observer of these fierce struggles in the world of politics. This essay will be read<lb/>to its end by every man who once begins it."—No. of the Quarterly Review,<lb/>just published.<lb/>John Murray, Albemarle-street</p>-----<p>Just published, with Wood-cuts, 2 vols. post 8vo. 16s.<head>A YEAR IN SPAIN. -- By A YOUNG</head>AMERICAN.<lb/>"Nothing is easier and more common than to fill a book of travels with<lb/>erudite information, the after gleaning and gathering of the closet; while<lb/>nothing is more difficult and rare than to sketch with truth and vivacity<lb/>those familiar scenes of life, and those groups and characters by the way-side,<lb/>which place a country and its people immediately before our eyes, and make<lb/>us the companions of the traveler. We trust that the extracts we have<lb/>furnished will show the author to possess this talent in no ordinary degree."—<lb/>Quarterly Review, No. LXXXVIII.<lb/></p><p>Lately published,<lb/>A CHRONICLE of the CONQUEST of GRENADA. By WASHINGTON<lb/>IRVING. 2 vols.8vo. 24s.<lb/>John Murray, Albemarle-street.</p>-----<p>NEW SPRING PRESENT.<lb/>Early in March will be published, price 13s.<head>THE DRAMATIC ANNUAL. By Frederick Reynolds,</head>Dramatist.—This work is on a novel plan, and so far dissimilar from the<lb/>other Annuals, that the Dramatic Annual will be published at a different period,<lb/>and consist of a continuous Tale: the one of this year to be called A PLAY-<lb/>WRIGHT'S ADVENTURES. The volume will be elegantly bound, and<lb/>embellished with nearly forty highly-finished Wood Engravings, chiefly Comic.<lb/>Published by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, Paternoster-row.</p>-----<p><head>DR. LARDNER'S CABINET LIBRARY, published in</head>Monthly Volumes, price 5s.<lb/>The following Works will be published in the course of the present Year:—</p><p>ANNUAL RETROSPECT of PUBLIC AFFAIRS for 1831. In 2 vols. to be<lb/>published on the 1st of March and 1st of April.<lb/>N.B. This work, which will be continued annually, will form a connected<lb/>historical view of the times in which we live.</p><p>A VIEW of the HISTORY of FRANCE, from the Restoration of the Bourbons<lb/>to the Deposition of Charles the Tenth. In 2 vols. By T. B. Macauley,<lb/>Esq., M. P.<lb/>N.B. This work will form a Supplement to the History of France published<lb/>in the Cabinet Cyclopædia.</p><p>A LIFE OF PETRARCH, in 1 vol. By Thomas Moore, Esq.</p><p>HISTORICAL MEMOIRS of the HOUSE of BOURBON. In 2 vols.<lb/>N.B. This work will contain a picture of society, illustrated by anecdotes,<lb/>which, though in a great degree excluded from regular history, form a striking<lb/>illustration of all that history records, and are inseparably connected with the<lb/>growth of the most important political institutions.</p><p>Volumes published,<lb/>MILITARY MEMOIRS of WELLINGTON, In 2 vols. Vol. I. By Capt.<lb/>Sherer.<lb/>The HISTORY of the LIFE and REIGN of GEORGE the FOURTH. In<lb/>3 vols. Vol. I.<lb/>N.B. The remaining volumes of these works are in preparation, and will<lb/>speedily be published.<lb/>Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.</p>-----<p>Just published, Part XI. price 6s. and Vol. II. Part II. price 12s.<head>ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA, Seventh Edition, greatly</head>improved and enlarged.—Two volumes of the book have now been<lb/>published with the most perfect punctuality, and the Publishers are happy to<lb/>receive the unqualified approbation of the Subscribers for the manifest improvement<lb/>in the work, not only as regards literary merit, but the beauty and accuracy<lb/>of the typography and embellishments. The third volume being nearly<lb/>finished at press, the Publishers can now calculate, form the additional matter<lb/>they have been enabled to include in the enlarged page, that the book will be<lb/>completed in 20 volumes. Each Part is not only individually valuable as a<lb/>publication of useful and entertaining treatises, by the most distinguished<lb/>Authors of the present day, but the value of the whole is enhanced as the work<lb/>advances, and when completed it will for a digest of human knowledge of<lb/>permanent importance, at the same time that it is one of the cheapest books<lb/>ever published.<lb/>Printed for Adam Black, Edinburgh; and Simkin and Marshall; Whittaker,<lb/>Treacher, and Co.; Hamilton, Adams, and Co.; and Jennings and Chaplain,<lb/>London; and John Cumming, Dublin.</p><p>Of whom may be had,<lb/>An ESSAY on the CIRCUMSTANCES which determine the RATE of<lb/>WAGES, and the CONDITION of the LABOURING CLASSES. By Professor<lb/>MacCulloch. Price 1s. sewed.</p><p>The APIARIAN'S MANUAL; containing all that is important in the Natural<lb/>History of Bees, or useful in their practical Management. By T. M.<lb/>Howatson. 12mo. price 2s. 6d. boards.</p><p>OBSERVATIONS on DERANGEMENT of the DIGESTIVE ORGANS,<lb/>and on their <sic>connexion</sic> with Local Complaints. By Wm. Law, Esq., Fellow of<lb/>the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, Second Edition, enlarged. In<lb/>1 vol. 8vo. 6s. boards.</p> | <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>-----<p>Just published,<head>LIEUT.-COLONEL MATTHEW STEWART'S REMARKS</head>on the PRESENT STATE of AFFAIRS.<lb/>"The Author is, indeed, a pure Whig—but it is on this very account that we<lb/>are anxious to give his tract whatever additional circulation our testimony may<lb/>be sufficient to command. He arrives at our conclusion; and he uses arguments<lb/>which, though we could not use them, may in many quarters be considered<lb/>better than ours. Colonel Stewart, the very able son of a most able<lb/>father (the celebrated Professor of Moral Philosophy), is a distant and calm<lb/>observer of these fierce struggles in the world of politics. This essay will be read<lb/>to its end by every man who once begins it."—No. of the Quarterly Review,<lb/>just published.<lb/>John Murray, Albemarle-street</p>-----<p>Just published, with Wood-cuts, 2 vols. post 8vo. 16s.<head>A YEAR IN SPAIN. -- By A YOUNG</head>AMERICAN.<lb/>"Nothing is easier and more common than to fill a book of travels with<lb/>erudite information, the after gleaning and gathering of the closet; while<lb/>nothing is more difficult and rare than to sketch with truth and vivacity<lb/>those familiar scenes of life, and those groups and characters by the way-side,<lb/>which place a country and its people immediately before our eyes, and make<lb/>us the companions of the traveler. We trust that the extracts we have<lb/>furnished will show the author to possess this talent in no ordinary degree."—<lb/>Quarterly Review, No. LXXXVIII.<lb/></p><p>Lately published,<lb/>A CHRONICLE of the CONQUEST of GRENADA. By WASHINGTON<lb/>IRVING. 2 vols.8vo. 24s.<lb/>John Murray, Albemarle-street.</p>-----<p>NEW SPRING PRESENT.<lb/>Early in March will be published, price 13s.<head>THE DRAMATIC ANNUAL. By Frederick Reynolds,</head>Dramatist.—This work is on a novel plan, and so far dissimilar from the<lb/>other Annuals, that the Dramatic Annual will be published at a different period,<lb/>and consist of a continuous Tale: the one of this year to be called A PLAY-<lb/>WRIGHT'S ADVENTURES. The volume will be elegantly bound, and<lb/>embellished with nearly forty highly-finished Wood Engravings, chiefly Comic.<lb/>Published by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, Paternoster-row.</p>-----<p><head>DR. LARDNER'S CABINET LIBRARY, published in</head>Monthly Volumes, price 5s.<lb/>The following Works will be published in the course of the present Year:—</p><p>ANNUAL RETROSPECT of PUBLIC AFFAIRS for 1831. In 2 vols. to be<lb/>published on the 1st of March and 1st of April.<lb/>N.B. This work, which will be continued annually, will form a connected<lb/>historical view of the times in which we live.</p><p>A VIEW of the HISTORY of FRANCE, from the Restoration of the Bourbons<lb/>to the Deposition of Charles the Tenth. In 2 vols. By T. B. Macauley,<lb/>Esq., M. P.<lb/>N.B. This work will form a Supplement to the History of France published<lb/>in the Cabinet Cyclopædia.</p><p>A LIFE OF PETRARCH, in 1 vol. By Thomas Moore, Esq.</p><p>HISTORICAL MEMOIRS of the HOUSE of BOURBON. In 2 vols.<lb/>N.B. This work will contain a picture of society, illustrated by anecdotes,<lb/>which, though in a great degree excluded from regular history, form a striking<lb/>illustration of all that history records, and are inseparably connected with the<lb/>growth of the most important political institutions.</p><p>Volumes published,<lb/>MILITARY MEMOIRS of WELLINGTON, In 2 vols. Vol. I. By Capt.<lb/>Sherer.<lb/>The HISTORY of the LIFE and REIGN of GEORGE the FOURTH. In<lb/>3 vols. Vol. I.<lb/>N.B. The remaining volumes of these works are in preparation, and will<lb/>speedily be published.<lb/>Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.</p>-----<p>Just published, Part XI. price 6s. and Vol. II. Part II. price 12s.<head>ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA, Seventh Edition, greatly</head>improved and enlarged.—Two volumes of the book have now been<lb/>published with the most perfect punctuality, and the Publishers are happy to<lb/>receive the unqualified approbation of the Subscribers for the manifest improvement<lb/>in the work, not only as regards literary merit, but the beauty and accuracy<lb/>of the typography and embellishments. The third volume being nearly<lb/>finished at press, the Publishers can now calculate, form the additional matter<lb/>they have been enabled to include in the enlarged page, that the book will be<lb/>completed in 20 volumes. Each Part is not only individually valuable as a<lb/>publication of useful and entertaining treatises, by the most distinguished<lb/>Authors of the present day, but the value of the whole is enhanced as the work<lb/>advances, and when completed it will for a digest of human knowledge of<lb/>permanent importance, at the same time that it is one of the cheapest books<lb/>ever published.<lb/>Printed for Adam Black, Edinburgh; and Simkin and Marshall; Whittaker,<lb/>Treacher, and Co.; Hamilton, Adams, and Co.; and Jennings and Chaplain,<lb/>London; and John Cumming, Dublin.</p><p>Of whom may be had,<lb/>An ESSAY on the CIRCUMSTANCES which determine the RATE of<lb/>WAGES, and the CONDITION of the LABOURING CLASSES. By Professor<lb/>MacCulloch. Price 1s. sewed.</p><p>The APIARIAN'S MANUAL; containing all that is important in the Natural<lb/>History of Bees, or useful in their practical Management. By T. M.<lb/>Howatson. 12mo. price 2s. 6d. boards.</p><p>OBSERVATIONS on DERANGEMENT of the DIGESTIVE ORGANS,<lb/>and on their <sic>connexion</sic> with Local Complaints. By Wm. Law, Esq., Fellow of<lb/>the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, Second Edition, enlarged. In<lb/>1 vol. 8vo. 6s. boards.</p><pb/>-----<lb/>PIGOT AND CO'S LONDON, PROVINCIAL AND NATIONAL<lb/>DIRECTORY OFFICE.<lb/>THE Public is respectfully informed, that the above Office is<lb/>removed from No. 17, BASING-LANE, to the extensive Premises, No. 1.<lb/>IN THE SAME STREET, near to Bread-street, Cheapside.<p>PIGOT and CO'S NEW BRITISH ATLAS is just completed: it contains<lb/>the cheapest and most useful series of Maps of the English Counties ever before<lb/>published, being executed upon an entirely novel plan, and of great utility to<lb/>the Traveller and Tourist; added to which, is a large Map of England and<lb/>Wales; also one of the Country round London: the whole engraved on Steel,<lb/>and ornamented with a series of Vignettes, and embellished with letter-press,<lb/>topographical, and general statistical Accounts of each County; comprehensive<lb/>reciprocal Distances, Tables, &c. &c.</p><p>PIGOT and CO'S Fifth Edition of the LONSON and PROVINCIAL DIRECTORY<lb/>is in progress, and will be published as early as possible.</p>-----<p>FAMILY LIBRARY OF FRENCH CLASSICS.<head>MESSRS. TREUTTEL, WÜRTZ, and Co. will commence the</head>publication, early in March, of a FRENCH FAMILY LIBRARY, in<lb/>8vo with Portraits, on a plan of unprecedented cheapness and elegance.<lb/>Prospectuses and Advertisements will be issued in a few days.</p><p>Orders received by all Booksellers in Town and Country.<lb/>30, Soho-square, Feb. 18th, 1831.</p>-----<p>GUIDE THROUGH WALES.<lb/>Just published, in a pocket volume, with two Views, engraved by Finden, and<lb/>Maps, 8s. bound and lettered,<head>THE CAMBRIAN TOURIST; or, Post-Chaise Companion</head>through Wales: containing cursory Sketches of the Welsh Territories,<lb/>and a Description of the Manners, Customs, and Games of the Natives. The<lb/>Seventh Edition, corrected.<lb/>Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave Maria-lane.</p>-----<p>MISS MITFORD'S WORKS.<lb/>A New Edition, in four volumes post 8vo. price 35s. 6d.<head>OUR VILLAGE; Country Stories--Sketches of Rural</head>Character and Scenery. By Miss Mary Russell Mitford.<lb/>By the same Author, in post 8vo. price 10s. 6d.<lb/>DRAMATIC SCENES. Sonnets and other Poems.<lb/>Also in post 8vo. price 8s.<lb/>FOSCARI. and JULIAN. Tragedies.<lb/>Printed for Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave-Maria-lane.</p>----- | ||
142 THE EXAMINER.-----
FAMILY LIBRARY, No. XX.
Just published, illustrated with highly finished Engravings, from the Sketches
of Prout, and Woodcuts from Designs of Titian,SKETCHES from VENETIAN HISTORY, Vol. I."Mr. Murray's Family Library . . . . . .A title which, from the valuable and
entertaining matter the collection contains, as well as from the careful style of
its execution, it well deserves. No family, indeed, in which there are children
to be brought up, ought to be without this Library, as it furnishes the readiest
resources for that education which ought to accompany or succeed that of the
boarding school or the academy, and is infinitely more conclusive than either
to the cultivation of the intellect."—Monthly Review, Feb. 1831.
John Murray, Albemarle street.
-----
Just published, with very superior Maps, 2 vols. 8vo. 30s.THE DORIANS: an Account of the Early History, Religionand Mythology, Civil and Domestic Institutions, Arts, Language, and
Literature of that Race. With new and improved Maps of the Peloponnese
and Macedonia. Translated from the German of C. O. Muller, Professor in
the University of Gottingen, by Henry Tunfel, Esq., and Geo. Cornewall
Lewis, Esq., Student of Christchurch.
Lately published,
BOECKH'S PUBLIC ECONOMY of ATHENS. 2 vols. 8vo. 1l. 6s.
John Murray, Albemarle-street.
-----
QUARTERLY REVIEW.--A New Number of the QuarterlyReview was published yesterday. It contains articles on Reform in
Parliament—On the Introduction of Poor Laws into Ireland—Present State of
Spain—Ancient Scottish Criminal Trials—Herschel's Treaty on Sound—The
Greek Dramatic Poets—The Bishop of Limerick's Edition of Townson—
Memoirs of Oberlin, &c. &c.
On January 26 was published, QUARTERLY REVIEW, No. 87, containing—
I. The Political Economists.—II. Mr. Southey's Lives of Uneducated Poets.—
III. On the Principles of Morality, and on the Private and Political Rights and
Obligations of Man.—IV. Coleridge on the Study of the Greek Classics.—
V. Moore's Life of Lord Byron.—Events of the late French Revolution.—
VII. Moral and Political State of the British Empire.
-----
Just published,LIEUT.-COLONEL MATTHEW STEWART'S REMARKSon the PRESENT STATE of AFFAIRS.
"The Author is, indeed, a pure Whig—but it is on this very account that we
are anxious to give his tract whatever additional circulation our testimony may
be sufficient to command. He arrives at our conclusion; and he uses arguments
which, though we could not use them, may in many quarters be considered
better than ours. Colonel Stewart, the very able son of a most able
father (the celebrated Professor of Moral Philosophy), is a distant and calm
observer of these fierce struggles in the world of politics. This essay will be read
to its end by every man who once begins it."—No. of the Quarterly Review,
just published.
John Murray, Albemarle-street
-----
Just published, with Wood-cuts, 2 vols. post 8vo. 16s.A YEAR IN SPAIN. -- By A YOUNGAMERICAN.
"Nothing is easier and more common than to fill a book of travels with
erudite information, the after gleaning and gathering of the closet; while
nothing is more difficult and rare than to sketch with truth and vivacity
those familiar scenes of life, and those groups and characters by the way-side,
which place a country and its people immediately before our eyes, and make
us the companions of the traveler. We trust that the extracts we have
furnished will show the author to possess this talent in no ordinary degree."—
Quarterly Review, No. LXXXVIII.
Lately published,
A CHRONICLE of the CONQUEST of GRENADA. By WASHINGTON
IRVING. 2 vols.8vo. 24s.
John Murray, Albemarle-street.
-----
NEW SPRING PRESENT.
Early in March will be published, price 13s.THE DRAMATIC ANNUAL. By Frederick Reynolds,Dramatist.—This work is on a novel plan, and so far dissimilar from the
other Annuals, that the Dramatic Annual will be published at a different period,
and consist of a continuous Tale: the one of this year to be called A PLAY-
WRIGHT'S ADVENTURES. The volume will be elegantly bound, and
embellished with nearly forty highly-finished Wood Engravings, chiefly Comic.
Published by Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, Paternoster-row.
-----
DR. LARDNER'S CABINET LIBRARY, published inMonthly Volumes, price 5s.
The following Works will be published in the course of the present Year:—
ANNUAL RETROSPECT of PUBLIC AFFAIRS for 1831. In 2 vols. to be
published on the 1st of March and 1st of April.
N.B. This work, which will be continued annually, will form a connected
historical view of the times in which we live.
A VIEW of the HISTORY of FRANCE, from the Restoration of the Bourbons
to the Deposition of Charles the Tenth. In 2 vols. By T. B. Macauley,
Esq., M. P.
N.B. This work will form a Supplement to the History of France published
in the Cabinet Cyclopædia.
A LIFE OF PETRARCH, in 1 vol. By Thomas Moore, Esq.
HISTORICAL MEMOIRS of the HOUSE of BOURBON. In 2 vols.
N.B. This work will contain a picture of society, illustrated by anecdotes,
which, though in a great degree excluded from regular history, form a striking
illustration of all that history records, and are inseparably connected with the
growth of the most important political institutions.
Volumes published,
MILITARY MEMOIRS of WELLINGTON, In 2 vols. Vol. I. By Capt.
Sherer.
The HISTORY of the LIFE and REIGN of GEORGE the FOURTH. In
3 vols. Vol. I.
N.B. The remaining volumes of these works are in preparation, and will
speedily be published.
Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.
-----
Just published, Part XI. price 6s. and Vol. II. Part II. price 12s.ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA, Seventh Edition, greatlyimproved and enlarged.—Two volumes of the book have now been
published with the most perfect punctuality, and the Publishers are happy to
receive the unqualified approbation of the Subscribers for the manifest improvement
in the work, not only as regards literary merit, but the beauty and accuracy
of the typography and embellishments. The third volume being nearly
finished at press, the Publishers can now calculate, form the additional matter
they have been enabled to include in the enlarged page, that the book will be
completed in 20 volumes. Each Part is not only individually valuable as a
publication of useful and entertaining treatises, by the most distinguished
Authors of the present day, but the value of the whole is enhanced as the work
advances, and when completed it will for a digest of human knowledge of
permanent importance, at the same time that it is one of the cheapest books
ever published.
Printed for Adam Black, Edinburgh; and Simkin and Marshall; Whittaker,
Treacher, and Co.; Hamilton, Adams, and Co.; and Jennings and Chaplain,
London; and John Cumming, Dublin.
Of whom may be had,
An ESSAY on the CIRCUMSTANCES which determine the RATE of
WAGES, and the CONDITION of the LABOURING CLASSES. By Professor
MacCulloch. Price 1s. sewed.
The APIARIAN'S MANUAL; containing all that is important in the Natural
History of Bees, or useful in their practical Management. By T. M.
Howatson. 12mo. price 2s. 6d. boards.
OBSERVATIONS on DERANGEMENT of the DIGESTIVE ORGANS,
and on their connexion with Local Complaints. By Wm. Law, Esq., Fellow of
the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, Second Edition, enlarged. In
1 vol. 8vo. 6s. boards.
---page break---
-----
PIGOT AND CO'S LONDON, PROVINCIAL AND NATIONAL
DIRECTORY OFFICE.
THE Public is respectfully informed, that the above Office is
removed from No. 17, BASING-LANE, to the extensive Premises, No. 1.
IN THE SAME STREET, near to Bread-street, Cheapside.
PIGOT and CO'S NEW BRITISH ATLAS is just completed: it contains
the cheapest and most useful series of Maps of the English Counties ever before
published, being executed upon an entirely novel plan, and of great utility to
the Traveller and Tourist; added to which, is a large Map of England and
Wales; also one of the Country round London: the whole engraved on Steel,
and ornamented with a series of Vignettes, and embellished with letter-press,
topographical, and general statistical Accounts of each County; comprehensive
reciprocal Distances, Tables, &c. &c.
PIGOT and CO'S Fifth Edition of the LONSON and PROVINCIAL DIRECTORY
is in progress, and will be published as early as possible.
-----
FAMILY LIBRARY OF FRENCH CLASSICS.MESSRS. TREUTTEL, WÜRTZ, and Co. will commence thepublication, early in March, of a FRENCH FAMILY LIBRARY, in
8vo with Portraits, on a plan of unprecedented cheapness and elegance.
Prospectuses and Advertisements will be issued in a few days.
Orders received by all Booksellers in Town and Country.
30, Soho-square, Feb. 18th, 1831.
-----
GUIDE THROUGH WALES.
Just published, in a pocket volume, with two Views, engraved by Finden, and
Maps, 8s. bound and lettered,THE CAMBRIAN TOURIST; or, Post-Chaise Companionthrough Wales: containing cursory Sketches of the Welsh Territories,
and a Description of the Manners, Customs, and Games of the Natives. The
Seventh Edition, corrected.
Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave Maria-lane.
-----
MISS MITFORD'S WORKS.
A New Edition, in four volumes post 8vo. price 35s. 6d.OUR VILLAGE; Country Stories--Sketches of RuralCharacter and Scenery. By Miss Mary Russell Mitford.
By the same Author, in post 8vo. price 10s. 6d.
DRAMATIC SCENES. Sonnets and other Poems.
Also in post 8vo. price 8s.
FOSCARI. and JULIAN. Tragedies.
Printed for Whittaker, Treacher, and Co., Ave-Maria-lane.
-----
Identifier: | JB/004/070/014"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 4. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1831-02-27 |
|||
004 |
lord brougham displayed |
||
070 |
|||
014 |
the examiner / sunday, february 27, 1831 / no. 1204 |
||
printed material |
8 |
||
recto |
(130-144) |
||
[[notes_public::"john fonblanques eulogium on brougham" [note in bentham's hand]]] |
1991 |
||