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A CONCORDANCE to the WORKS of ALEXANDER POPE.

By Edwin

ABBOTT, formerly Head Master of the Philological School. With an Introduction by EDWIN A. ABBOTT, D.D., Author of “A Shakespearian Grammar," &c

This Concordance applies to all the Poems contained in the first authorized edition of Pope's Completed Works, edited by Warburton in 1751, except the Translations from Greek and Latin, the Adaptations of Chaucer, and the Imitations of English Poets. It consists of forty thousand references, whole lines being always quoted, and contains every word in the Poems, so that a glance will show whether or not Pope uses a given word; for example, "also "never occurs, nor does "towards."

The Introduction, in addition to a general criticism of Pope's style, investigates the peculiarities of his English, which are classified under Words, Idioms, and Metre.

To the Concordance is prefixed a List of Irregular or Unusual Rhymes.

From the ATHENÆUM, Oct. 23.

"It would be difficult to praise too highly the Concordance to the Works of Alexander Pope, which Mr. E. Abbott has compiled and DrAbbott has edited. It is a most valuable contribution to the knowledge of English Literature. Of course, we have had the book in our hands too short a time to have thoroughly tested it, but we have found every word we have looked for, and we have looked for a good many. The Introduction is excellent, so far as it goes, but it might have been fuller. We cordially agree with what Dr. Abbott says of the perfection of Pope's workmanship, and we would recommend modern versifiers who inundate us with uncorrected trash to read Dr. Abbott's remarks. ....An interesting essay might be written on the thoughts which this volume suggests."

LANDOR'S WORKS.

The LIFE and WORKS of WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR. With Portraits and Illustrations. A New Edition in the press, to be completed in 8 vols. demy 8vo. The first Volume will contain a New and Revised Edition of the Life, by JOHN FORSTER, and will be issued on December 1.

A NEW EDITION OF

By John Forster. In 2 vols. demy 8vo.

The LIFE of CHARLES DICKENS.

With Illustrations.

[In the press.

The EIGHTEENTH CENTURY: its Institutions, Customs, and Costumes. France, 1700-1789. By PAUL LACROIX. Translated from the French by C. B. PITMÁN. Illustrated with 21 Chromo-lithographs and 251 Wood Engravings, price 21. 28. [Now ready.

The LIFE and TIMES of PRINCE CHARLES STUART, Count of Albany,

commonly called the Young Pretender. From the State Papers and other Sources. By ALEXANDER CHARLES EWALD, F.S.A. 2 vols. demy 8vo. price 238. [Now ready.

The HISTORY of GREAT BRITAIN during the REIGN of QUEEN ANNE.

By FREDERICK WILLIAM WYON. 2 vols. demy 8vo.

[In November.

DYCE'S SHAKESPEARE.

A NEW EDITION of DYCE'S SHAKESPEARE, being the Third, with Mr. DYCE'S final corrections. The latest employment of Mr. DYCE'S life was the present revision of his Second Edition.

The WORKS of SHAKESPEARE. Edited by the Rev. Alexander Dyce. To be

completed in 9 vols. demy 8vo. Vol. VII. now ready.

A NEW LIBRARY EDITION OF

The HISTORY of ENGLAND from 1830 to the RESIGNATION of the GLADSTONE MINISTRY. By the Rev. W. NASSAU MOLESWORTH, M.A. Carefully revised, and carried up to March, 1874. 3 vols. demy 8vo. [Nearly ready.

DEDICATED by EXPRESS PERMISSION to H.R.H. the PRINCE of WALES. INDIA and its NATIVE PRINCES: Travels in Central India and in the Presidencies of Bombay and Bengal. By LOUIS ROUSSELET. Carefully Revised and Edited by Lieutenant-Colonel C. BUCKLE. and containing 316 Illustrations and 6 Maps, price 31. 38. [Now ready.

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The ENGLISH CYCLOPÆDIA is the LARGEST, BEST, MOST COMPLETE, and CHEAPEST CYCLOPÆDIA in the English Language.

The ENGLISH CYCLOPÆDIA is, as its name implies, a

work which is the production of English writers for English people. In its construction the unwise economy of largely interpolating translated articles from foreign Cyclopædias has had no place-nor has any portion of its space been wasted by the intrusion of diffuse and unnecessary scientific treatises or ethical discourses, each of which is alien to the purposes of a Cyclopædia. The aim of its conductors has been to make it a DICTIONARY of UNIVERSAL INFORMATION, worthy to be esteemed as an indispensable Library Companion and an invaluable work of reference to every one engaged in the Political, Professional, and Commercial world. To the essential requisites of a Cyclopedia,-comprehensiveness of treatment; fullness and originality of information; clearness of arrangement and accuracy,-it may well advance a claim, and recommend itself alike to the Philosopher and the Student, the Littérateur and the Divine, the Scientific Enquirer and the Classical Scholar; and especially to the General Reader, as a vast storehouse of information which has been gathered from every quarter of the entire field of knowledge, and which, in quantity as in quality, is elsewhere unequalled.

The ENGLISH CYCLOPÆDIA is the LARGEST CYCLO

PÆDIA in the English language. It consists of 15,000 Quarto pages, with 7,000 Wood Engravings; has a complete Atlas of Maps; and contains 60,000 separate articles and special subjects, including Biographical Memoirs and Notices. The extent of the work may be gathered from a comparative analysis of the numbers of type-letters contained in each of the following Encyclopædias :

THE ENGLISH CYCLOPEDIA

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ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA
CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPEDIA

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54 MILLIONS.

So that the ENGLISH CYCLOPEDIA contains nearly one-fifth more matter than is to be found in the Encyclopædia Britannica,' although it is sold at less than half the price; and exceeds, by nearly three times, the amount of information that is in Chambers's Cyclopædia.'

The ENGLISH CYCLOPEDIA is the BEST CYCLO

P.EDIA in the English language. Its articles are written by those who are by their distinctive training the best qualified to describe or to give information upon their respective subjects. These are entirely original in their formation, embodying the experience or containing the discriminating results of the matured study of their writers. Its divisional arrangement is clear, distinct, and compact, bringing together, in one view, all the information upon each subject and branch of knowledge; and so sparing the reader the bewilderment arising from the necessity of having to turn from one volume to another in search of the particular thing required. Accuracy of detailed description being a primary requisite in any CYCLOPÆDIA, has been attained in the ENGLISH CYCLOPEDIA by the employment of contributors possessed of special knowledge.

London: BRADBURY, AGNEW & CO. 8, 9, 10, Bouverie Street.

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The ENGLISH CYCLOPÆDIA is the MOST COMPLETE

CYCLOPÆDIA in the English language. The subjects embraced by it include the entire domains of Science, History, and Art, and every portion is so fully treated as to provide all the points of information which an educated man desires to have brought before him, or to be conversant with. The glaring deficiencies of an ENCYCLOPÆDIA aiming at a merely "popular" use are not experienced in the ENGLISH CYCLOPEDIA. It gives exhaustiveness of detail instead of superficial sketchiness-a wider and fuller treatment of all Scientific subjects-more comprehensive views of history and its teachings—a higher appreciation of educational requirements, and an enlarged conception of the variety of miscellaneous topics which a work intended for daily reference ought to contain.

The ENGLISH CYCLOPÆDIA is the CHEAPEST CYCLO

PÆDIA in the English language. No work of the kind has ever been produced containing so large a body of information of such a high character, and offered at comparatively so small a price. With its 12 large and handsome volumes, in which are 15,000 pages, containing 140,000,000 type-letters; illustrated with 7,000 Wood Engravings, giving information upon 60,000 subjects; and possessing a COMPLETE ATLAS of 44 COLOURED MAPS, the ENGLISH CYCLOPÆDIA may fairly claim to be by far the cheapest work of its kind ever produced.

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1

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"This is a publication for antiquaries to linger over. Not a little uncertainty surrounds the date and even the authorship of this famous work, the earliest extant survey of our metropolis, if we except the pictorial view of London and Southwark by Van Wyngrede, and the small maps of Braun and Norden. But two genuine copies are known to exist, the one in the Guildhall, the other in the Pepysian Collection at Cambridge.

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alterations, by a Dutch artist, in the reign of King William, and from these later plates, Vertue, the well-known engraver of the middle part of the last century, tinkered up' his fabricated reproduction of an original map of 1560, of which all subsequent editions of Agas, till the present. have been simply copies. If the original was, indeed, the work of the surveyor of Stoke-by-Nayland, it could not, as we may gather from the doggerel rhymes annexed to his Map of Oxford in the Bodleian. have been begun before 1588, and was, probably, completed about 1591. Mr. Overall, however, seems half inclined to connect the Guildhall map with the Carde of London,' the receipt of which from Gyles Godhead appears in the registers of the Stationers' Company for 1562-3, when Agas was only twentyone. On all these points, as well as on the specific discrepancies between the two genuine copies and the fabrication of Vertue, the reader will find ample information in the editor's introductory critique. To less scrupulous antiquaries, however, the map itself, though rather on too large a scale for convenient handling, will be the chief attraction. An hour, indeed, can hardly be more amusingly spent than in comparing its faithful reproduction of the streets and buildings of sixteenth-century London with the same space in the modern map of our PostOffice Directory."-Graphic.

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