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five acts, was produced here, entitled, Wo- is a very young man, should one of these days ing his Majesty's brig Chanticleer, dated man's Love, or the Triumph of Patience. write an excellent play. Let him burn this Monte Video, September 22, up to which Andrea, Duke of Saluzzo, having married a immediately, and go to work on a more pleasing time all the scientific objects of the voyage maid of low degree, doubts the sincerity of her and probable story; make his characters do had proceeded very satisfactorily. The meri. love, and tries her affection and obedience, more, and talk less; acquire a proper horror of dian distances had been determined between first by spiriting away their only child, then all walking gentlemen and ladies; and we Falmouth and Funchal, Teneriffe, St. Antonio, divorcing her for not bearing more children, will venture to say there is that in him which St. Paul's Rock near the Equator, the island sending her back in her peasant's garb to her in these degenerate days may do the stage of l'ernando Noronha, and between the latter father's house, pretending to marry a young some service. Who would have supposed from and Cape Frio, Rio de Janeiro, St. Catharine's, princess of Bologna, and, lastly, obliging her to reading the Hours of Idleness that Lord Byron and Monte Video, at which latter place a satis appear at the wedding and officiate as mistress would ever have written Don Juan? factory set of pendulum experiments was comof the ceremonies to her rival. The new Gripleted. The Chanticleer was expected to sail selda, obeying most submissively all these de. about the beginning of October towards the licate commands, and suffering every indignity south, in the further prosecution of the ob that her fond husband can devise to inflict jects of the voyage.-Hampshire Telegraph. upon her and her family with unshaken patience and undiminished affection, Duke An. drea, at length, vouchsafes to be convinced that she loves him for himself, and not for his dignity; and, therefore, informs her that she is still Duchess of Saluzzo, and that the young lady he talked of marrying is no other than their own daughter, the little Rosamond, of whose murder he has been deemed guilty by WE understand that the English Opera House his loving wife and loyal subjects for nearly is likely to open very early in January, having seventeen years! Such is the outline of the been again arranged for the performance of most improbable plot of this very, very dull French plays. The company, we are glad to drama, the two first acts of which passed hear, is superior to that of last season; and, over in solemn silence-the pause before the storm which must have ensued but for a lucky among other novelties, the popular Coulon is

ness.

THE second performance of the pupils of the
Royal Academy of Music, well headed and
led by De Begnis, took place on Thursday,
when Rossini's opera L'Inganno Felice was
produced. Miss Childe and Mr. E. Seguin
particularly distinguished themselves, and ob-volume of the Archæologia of the Society of Antiquaries
tained great applause. Mr. A. Sapio, Mr. is, we understand, in the progress of printing, under the
Hodges, and Mr. Brizzi, were also very suc- care of Henry Ellis, Esq. the joint secretary, and may
cessful.

engaged.

FRENCH PLAYS.

VARIETIES.

LITERARY NOVELTIES. Antiquities. The second portion of the twenty-second

be expected by the members upon St. George's day next. Among the more curious articles which it contains, will be found a Fragment of a New Chronicle of the reign of Painted Chamber, made for the Society by the late King Edward III.-The drawings from the walls of the Charles Stothard, Esq. in 1820, are also, we understand,

in the hands of the engraver.

Dr. Andrew Ure, M.D. F.R.S., &c. has in the press a in which the Great Revolutions of the Earth and Ani

large octavo volume, entitled a New System of Geology, mated Nature are reconciled at once to Modern Science and Sacred History. The author has undertaken to

solve, on the known laws of physics and chemistry, without invoking comets or any astronomical fictions to his aid, the various enigmas relative to the temperature of the antediluvian globe, and to the gradation of the organic remains of its successive strata, which Cuvier, Humboldt, and other philosophers, have regarded as beyond the scope of science to explain.

Nearly ready for publication, Commentaries on the History, Constitution, and Chartered Franchises of the City of London, by George Newton, Esq. Advocatethe City of London: edited by Edward Tyrrell, Esq. Deputy Remembrancer of the City of London.

General of Madras, late one of the Common Pleaders of

There is announced to be published, by subscription, and in Parts, MN 777, or the Road of Faith; being a complete Catechism of the Jewish Doctrines, Rites, and Belief, arranged as Dialogues, in the purest Hebrew, by the late Rev. Dr. R. Meldola, chief Rabbi in London, and accompanied by a correct English trans

lation.

The Rev. J. D. Parry, M.A. of St. Peter's College, Cambridge, has in the press the Legendary Cabinet; a Selection of British National Ballads, Ancient and Modern, from the best Authors, with Notes and Illustrations.

The Second Series of Hood's Whims and Oddities, new impression.

which has been some time out of print, is extant in a

Glass. The commission of the French Academy, to which the specimens of crown and flint glass presented to the Academy by Messrs. Thibaudeau and Bontemps had been referred, has adjourned its report until it receives additional specimens, in which the flint glass is to possess greater density, and the crown glass to be of larger dimensions. M. Arago, in order In the Press-Natural History of Enthusiasm.-The to shew still more how unfounded is the gene-drawn from Real Life, by Piers Shafton, Gent.; and Female Character Illustrated, in Tales and Sketches ral opinion of the ease with which crown glass also, the second edition, Snatches from Oblivion. can be fabricated, informed the Academy that he knew an optician in Paris who was stopped in the construction of an important instrument, by the impossibility of procuring for it pieces of crown glass of sufficient size.

apology made by Mr. Bartley for Mr. C. Kem-
ble, who laboured under a distressing hoarse-
The remaining three acts improved a
little in action, and the dialogue now and then Lithography.-Several important improve-
approached the verge of poetry. But Dul-ments in the art of lithography having been
ness still sat upon it like an incubus; and the communicated to the French Academy by
only feeling its strongest situations were cal- Messrs. Chevalier and Langlumé, the mem-
culated to awaken was of so unpleasant a bers of the Academy to whom the consideration
description, that we cannot account, for the of the subject was referred, have reported that
unmixed applause which, we are bound to say, those improvements appear to them to approxi-
accompanied the falling of the curtain. The mate the art as nearly to perfection as it is
insults and injuries heaped upon the heads of capable of arriving.
Bianca and her family by the cruel and ca-
pricious duke, are of so vile a character as to
render their submission ridiculous, if not cri.
minal. Aurelio, the brother of the persecuted
lady, it is true, bounces and Hectors, some-
thing in "Ercles' vein;" but he is a mere
talker, and is put down by one word from the
foolish old tyrant, who has voluntarily lived
seventeen years under suspicion of infanticide,
for the purpose of ascertaining whether his
wife loves him or not! Mr. Kemble, despite
of his severe cold, did all that man could do to
redeem such a character from supreme con-
tempt: we could almost quarrel with him,
indeed, for wasting such fine acting on so
revolting a subject,-to say nothing of three
most picturesque and classical dresses. Miss
Jarman was the Bianca, and Mr. Warde the
Aurelio, and, with Mr. Bartley and Mrs.
Egerton, shared the rest of the dialogue be-
tween them; for our lively friend Green was
thrust into a part of about a dozen silly lines;
and the remainder of the dramatis persona,
to the number of eight or ten, had nothing to
do but literally to walk through the piece, much
in the way that we once saw Wilkinson in a
farce of Peake's at the English Opera. Mr.
Diddear and Mrs. Vining, Mr. Raymond and
Miss Scott, Mr. Baker and Mr. Blanchard,
with three or four attendants, set out from
Bologna, hand in hand, and walk once or
twice in each act across the stage, till, in the
last, they arrive at Saluzzo-no doubt with
excellent appetites for the banquet his grace
has fortunately prepared for them. Such are
the defects of this play; and yet we should not
wonder if its author, whom we have heard Scientific Voyages.Letters have been re.
(and if not, we should have guessed as much) | ceived from Captain Henry Foster,

The second general assembly of the Société de Géographie, under the presidence of the Baron Cuvier, took place on Thursday, and was numerously attended. The chief attraction, however, appeared to be the presence of the celebrated voyager, Auguste Caillé, to whom the society awarded a prize of 12,000 francs some time since, for having penetrated as far as Timbuctoo.-Our Paris Letter.

New Settlement.-The Sunday Times, which has had good intelligence respecting the New Settlement on the west side of Australia, says: "It is not, at present, proposed to send out persons from England as settlers. The course to be pursued, we believe, is this:-The survey concluded, should the report be favourable to the project, it will be left to the governor of New South Wales to decide what step shall be taken. It is anticipated that he will send colonists from Sydney, to lay the foundation of the new community."

LIST OF NEW BOOKS.

2 vols. 8vo. il. 18. bds.-The Castilian, by the Author Memoirs of Scipio de Ricci, translated by Roscoe, of Gomez Arias, 3 vols. post 8vo. 14. 11s. 6d. bds.-Hungarian Tales, by the Author of the Lettre de Cachet, 3 vols. post 8vo. 11. 118. 6d. bds.-Elements of Geography, 12mo. 2s. hf.-bd.-Belfrage's Counsels for the Sanctuary, post 8vo. 78. 6d. bds.-English History made easy, on a the Life of Christ, 18mo. 28. 6d. hf.-bd.--Winter Evenings Popular Plan, 18mo. 38. 6d. hf.-bd.-Conversations on at College, 2 vols. 18mo. 8. hf.-bd.-Wadd on Corpulency, &c. with plates, 8vo. &s. 6d. bds.-Saul at Endor, a Dramatic Sketch, by Rev. E. Smedley, 8vo. 38. 6d. sewed.A Sunday Book, Moral Discourses for Young Persons, vols. 18mo. 98. cloth.-Merry Thoughts for Merry Motion of Songs, 12mo. 4s. 6d. bds.-The Nightingale, a ments, oblong folio, 58. sewed.-The Thrush, a CollecCollection of Songs, 12mo. 4s. 6d. bds.-McGavin's Scots Worthies, Vol. II. 8vo. 118.; Vol. 1. sixth edition, 8vo. 118.-Protestant Reformation Vindicated, by the Author of the Protestant, 4s. bds.

2

TO CORRESPONDENTS. We agree with Clericus in most of his remarks on pulpit eloquence; but his letter is too long for insertion; and he is certainly mistaken, when he attributes the theatrical manner of a popular preacher to his having taken lessons of Mr. Jones, of Drury Lane Theatre. We have had opportunities of witnessing his method of tuition with a near connexion of our own; and we can assure Clericus, that Mr. Jones inculcates a dignified, solemn, and devout style-and is most cautious to repress the least appearance of extravagance in tone or gesture.

To several inquiries addressed to us this week, we beg to say that we have not yet had time to investigate the

command-matters sufficiently to answer them.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

AUTOMATA.

Connected with Literature and the Arts. Now open, at the Horse Bazar, King Street, and Baker Street, Portman Square, the splendid Exhibition of Musical and Mechanical Autonata, comprising nearly Twenty different Subjects, including the velebrated Musical Lady, Juvenile Artist, Magician, Rope Dancer, and Walking Figure; also a magnificent Classic Vase, made by order of Napoleon, together with a Serpent, Birds, Insects, and other Subjects of Natural History. The whole displaying, by their exact imitations of Animated Nature, the wonderful Povers of Mechanism.

Open from Eleven till Six.

Admittance, 1s. 6d.-Children, 1s.

N.B. The whole of the Exhibition for Sale; also, several
Self-acting and other Musical Instruments.

THE C

HE Rev. S. C. EDGELL, who has been for more than Twenty Years in the constant habit of Instructing Foreigners, begs leave to state to those who are desirous of acquiring a correct and expeditious Knowledge of the English Language, with an elegant Pronunciation, that he has recently Removed to No. 2, Union Place, New Road, Regent's Park, where he continues to receive a few Foreign Gentlemen. The most satisfactory References can be given in England and on the Continent.

THE LEVELS of the CITIES of LONDON

and WESTMINSTER, and their Environs, to all the Public Buildings, Reservoirs, &c. above the Trinity High-Water Mark of the River Thames; from actual Survey and Admeasure

ment.

By Mr. FREDERICK WOOD, of 28, Queen Street, Brompton,
and Mr. WILLIAM MOFFAT, 8, Middle Row, Knightsbridge,
Land Surveyors.

To be had at Mr. J. Gardner's, Map Seller, 163, Regent Street,
London; and all the principal Booksellers.
Price One Guinea, on a Sheet, 40 inches by 27 inches.

MUSIC.

Just published by Preston, 71, Dean Street, Soho.

Jennings's Paris.

On the 15th of December was published, No. IV. price 18. plain,
India 2s. containing Four Views, of

PARIS and its ENVIRONS, displayed in

a series of Picturesque Views, from Original Drawings
taken expressly for this work, under the direction of A, Pugin,
Esq. The Engravings executed under the superintendence of
Mr. C. Heath, the literary department conducted by L. T. Ven-
touillac.
Wakeman, Dublin; Paris, Treuttel and Würtz, Rue de Bour-
London, Robert Jennings, 9, Poultry; and sold by W. F.
bon, No. 17.

Walpole's Anecdotes of Painters and Engravers.
In 5 vols. royal 8vo.

ANECDOTES of PAINTING, ENGRAV

ING, and ARCHITECTURE in ENGLAND, with
some Account of the Principal Artists, and incidental Notes on
the other Arts; including a Catalogue of Engravers who have
been born or resident in England, collected by the late Mr. George
Hon. Horace Walpole; edited and much enlarged by the Rev.
Virtue; digested and published from the Original MSS. by the
James Dallaway. In 5 vols. royal 8vo. embellished with Two
Hundred Portraits, Views, &c.

Plates, 15. 158.
Price 107. 108. in boards, or with India proof impressions of the

A few Sets are left for sale of the Portraits, India proofs,
bebre the letters, in 4to. for illustration, price 187. 188. From
the superiority of their execution, it is presumed they will enrich
the portfolio of the amateur with a most desirable collection of
characteristic prints. The woodcuts are also struck off on India
paper, price 41. 48.
London: Robert Jennings, 2, Poultry.

Wild's English Cathedrals.

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OUNSELS for the SANCTUARY and for CIVIL LIFE; or, Discourses to Various Classes in the Church and in Society.

By HENRY BELFRAGE, D.D. Printed for Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh; and Geo. B. Whittaker, London.

Of whom may be had, by the same Author, uniformly printed with the above, of the Aged. 8s. boards. Discourses on the Duties and Consolations

A Monitor to Families; or, Discourses on some of the Duties and Scenes of Domestic Life. 2d edition, 75. 6d. boards. Practical Discourses, intended to promote the Improvement and Happiness of the Young. 3d edition, 78. 6d. boards. A Guide to the Lord's Table, in the Cate

chetical Form. 18mo. 9d.

Christmas Present.

WELVE SELECT EXAMPLES of the A SELECTION of TALES in ITALIAN,

TWEL

LAND; consisting of Plates carefully Etched, Aquatinted, and
ARCHITECTURE of the MIDDLE AGES in ENG-
Coloured, in imitation of the original Drawings made on the Spot
by Charles Wild, Esq.; being intended to correspond in style and
execution with his Select Specimens of Ecclesiastical Architec.
ture in France.

Those already published are:

Two Views of York Cathedral, Interior and Exterior.
Henry the VII.'s Chapel, Westminster Abbey.
View of the Transept of Ely Cathedral.
Interior of King's College Chapel, Cambridge.
Choir of the Cathedral Church, Oxford.

Price 1. 1. each, carefully coloured and mounted.
The following are in a state of forwardness:-

for YOUNG LADIES and SCHOOLS. piacevoli, da Autori celebri Inglesi e Francesi tradotte, ad uso PASSATEMPI MORALI; ossia Scelta di Novelle e Storie delle Giovani studiose dell' Italiana favella. In 1 vol. 68. boards; and may also be had handsomely bound.

"A series of tales, interesting in the quality of their subjects, and useful in their moral tendency."-Literary Gazette. Published by N. Hailes, 168, Piccadilly.

PUBLISHED THIS DAY, at HAILES'S

JUVENILE LIBRARY, 168, PICCADILLY, opposite BOND STREET.

cinq

BOHEMIAN MELODIES. Songs of the The Choir of St. George's Chapel, Windsor-the West Front of 1. Leçons pour les Enfans de trois à eing

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par Pierre Blanchard. Price 2s. 6d.

2. L'Esope des Enfans; ou, Fables nouvelles en prose, composée pour l'Instruction morale de l'Enfance, par Pierre Blanchard. Price 2s. 6d.

with Questions for Examination, and Explanatory Notes, by the 3. A Compendium of British Geography, Author of " First Lessons in Geography." Price is. 6d. sewed. 4. First Lessons in Geography, in Question

CLIBRARY, SEGAL CIRCULATING The First Series, shewing the different States of Europe, Asia, and Anavier, by Lady, dedition, griep hy iewed.

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BOOKS PUBLISHED THIS DAY.

Vol. II. in 8vo. price 16s. boards,

HE WORKS of JAMES ARMINIUS, Leyden. Translated from the Latin. To which are added, Brandt's Life of the Author, with considerable Augmentations, By JAMES NICHOLS, Author of "Calvinism and Arminianism Compared," &c. London: Printed for Longman, Rees, and Co.; and C. and J. Rivington. "Calvinism and Arminianism Compared in their Principles and Tendency' is a book which ought to have a place in every historical and in every ecclesiastical library. Mr. N. has also published the first volume of a translation of the works of Arminius, with a great deal of important matter in the prolegomena and notes."-Quarterly Review.

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Peace, by Congress, in 1815; and exhibiting Parry, Ross, and
teemed Authorities, to illustrate Ancient History and the Classic
Franklin's Discoveries, to the present period. The Second Series,
or Ancient Department, has been compiled from the most es-
Authors. The whole has undergone the most careful Revision
by several eminent Geographical Scholars. In Eighty-four Plates,
engraved by Rest Fenner. Price, coloured, 17. 118. 6d.; plain,
1. us.

Either Series may be had separate. Modern, coloured, 17. 18.;
plain, 148. Ancient, coloured, 12.; plain, 98.
London: Robert Jennings, Poultry; and sold by Hurst, Chance,
and Co. St. Paul's Churchyard.

NI

Keepsake Illustrations.
INETEEN EMBELLISHMENTS to the
KEEPSAKE for 1899, engraved by Mr. Charles Heath
guished Artists:-Sir Thomas Lawrence, P.R.A.; J. M. W.
and others, from Pictures and Drawings by the following distin-
lon, R.A.; T. Stothard, R.A.; F. P. Stephanoff; J. M. Wright;
E. Landseer; H. Corbould; R. Richter; J. Holmes.
Proofs, 21. 28.; India proofs, with the writing, 31. 8s.; India
proofs, without writing, 4. 45.; proofs on India, with the etch-
ings, 51. 5s.
A very few Copies of the Illustrations for 1828 are left
for Sale.
Published by Robert Jennings, 2, Poultry.

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Life at Sea-Sunday at Sea-Advice to Midshipmen-Battle of Part I. The Captain's Story-Leaving Home-Going on Board Trafalgar-Catching a Spark-Sea Saturnalia-Crossing the Line -Cockpit Court Martial-Cockpit Chronicle-Naval Theatricals The Captain's Return to England-Levee at the Admiralty-The -Wreck-Boarding a Galliot-Passing Lieutenant-The DuelCaptain Abroad-Matrimony.

Part II. The Master's Story-The Shipwreck-The Smugglers
-Impressment-Desertion-Scenes at Portsmouth-Pay-day en
Board-Sailing-St. Helena.

Genealogy-The Boatswain in Love-The Discovery-The Boat
Part III. The Boatswain, a Forecastle Yarn-The Boatswain's
Cruise in Point Street after Pay-day-The Boatswain's Spell st
swain in London-Playing Noah-Cruising in the Channel-A
New Orleans-Ship in Harbour.

Prisoners of War in France-Scenes in a French Fortress-
Part IV, The Prisoner of War's Story-Losing a Ship-English
Escape-Scraps from the Memorandum Book of a Prisoner of
Printed for Henry Colburn, 8, New Burlington Street.

War.

In post 8vo. 91.

VIEWS in ENGLAND and WALES, THE LIFE and REMAINS of WILMOT

from Drawings by J. M. W. Turner, Esq. R.A. With
Descriptive and Historical Illustrations, by H. E. Lloyd, Esq.
Parts I. to IV.
Royal 4to. 14. each; imperial 4to. proofs, 1. 1.; imperial
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Russia.

In 2 vols. 8vo. with Engravings, price 1l. 48. boards, dedicated,
by special permission, to the King,
RAVELS in RUSSIA, POLAND,

TRA

and FINLAND.

By WILLIAM RAE WILSON, Esq. F.S.A.
With the Trial of the Conspirators for Burning Moscow, and
original Letters of the Emperor Nicholas, and Mary Queen of
Scots, discovered by the Author.

a mass of information is contained in these vols. that it would
"Mr. Wilson is a most copious and excellent informant. Such
require a catalogue to enumerate the valuable and multifarious
contents. There is excellent sense in the remarks concerning
representations of God in sculpture and painting."-Gentleman's
Magazine,

Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green.
Of whom may be had, by the same Author,

WARWICK.

Edited by his Friend HENRY VERNON. "In fact, it is a novel, and a novel of a very superior order It consists of a series of tales, picked up among, and written from cleverly written, are aptly chosen, and possess many gems of sem incidents during an excursion into the country. His tales are timent. The Haunted Mill,' and the Smuggler, are of a very powerful description, particularly the latter. The Wig' is the most lengthy, and for a portraiture of its own peculiar feelings is one of the most accurate delineations we ever perused."--Graf,'# Mag. for the present Month.

See also the New Monthly Magazine and Monthly Review. James Ridgway, 169, Piccadilly; Bell and Bradfute, Edinburgh, and, by order, of every Bookseller.

Impediments of Speech-Brosterian System,
7th edition, price 2s. 6d.

HE PROGRESS of the SYSTEM for the
CIATIONS, &c.; from which emanates an entire New Art of
BAD ARTICULATION, LISPS, GUTTURAL PRONUN-
Reading and Speaking.

Discovered by JOHN BROSTER, F.A.S.E. M.R.S.L.
Late of Edinburgh, removed from 41 to 73, Cadogan Place,
London; and may be had of Messrs. Longman and Co. 30, Pater
noster Row; Mr. Cawthorn, Cockspur Street, Charing Cross;

Travels in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. Mir, Blackburn, Edinburgh, Mr. Milliken, Dublin; and Mr.

In 1 vol. 8vo. if. L.

Galignani, Parfs.

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Edited by F. MANSEL REYNOLDS.

List of Contributors.

Sir Walter Scott, Sir James Mackintosh, Lord Normanby, Lord Morpeth, Lord Porchester Lord Holland, Lord F. L. Gower, Lord Nugent, W. Words Forth, R. Southey, S. T. Coleridge, William Roscoe, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Henry Luttrell, Theodore Hook, J. G. Lockhart, T. Crofton Croker, R. Bernal, M.P., Thomas Haynes Bayly, W. Jerdan, Mrs. Hemans, Miss Landon, M. L., James Boaden, W. H. Harrison, F. Mansel Reynolds, and the Authors of " Frankenstein," "Gilbert Earle," the "Roué," and the "O'Hara Tales."

Ten of the Plates are engraved by Charles Heath, the remainder by W. Finden, F. Engleheart, C. Rolls, R. Wallis, H. R. Smith, E. Portbury, J. Goodyear, and Westwood.

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London: Published for the Proprietor, by Hurst, Chance, and
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Where may be had,

The few remaining Copies of the Keepsake

for 1828,

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By M. ROLLIN,

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Moore's Lalla Rookh, small edition, with Four Engravings
after Westall.

LA

The 14th edition, foolscap Bro. 14s. boards,
ALLA ROOKH. An Oriental Romance.
By THOMAS MOORE, Esq.
With Four Engravings, from Paintings by R. Westall R.A.
Another edition of this Work, in 8vo. price 14s.; and illustra-
tions by Westall, 8vo. 12s.

Also, by the same Author,

The Loves of the Angels. The 5th edition,
in 8vo. 98. boards; and Illustrations of the Poem, 54.

Late Principal of the University of Paris, Professor of Elo-
quence in the Royal College, and Member of the Royal Academy
of Inscriptions and Belles Lettres. Translated from the French.
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Memoirs of the Life of the Right Hon.

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New Week & Preparation, with considerable Improvements,
by the Rev. Samuel Wix.

Ir Two Parts, 28. 6d. each, neatly bound in black; or complete,
58. neatly bound in calf,
NEW WEEK'S PREPARATION

THE

a recommended and appointed by the Church of England; and Companion at the Altar, directing the Communicant in his Behaviour and Devotions at the Lord's Table; with Instructions how to live well after receiving the Holy Sacrament.

Revised by SAMUEL WIX, A.M. F.R. and A.S.

Vicar of St. Bartholomew-the-Less, London.
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No

up by a Travelling Bachelor.

"We have read these volumes with the most unmingled satisfaction. The writer is no other than Cooper, the well-known national novelist of America."-Monthly Magazine.

"Mr. Cooper's book is the best that has yet been written on America."-London Weekly Review.

T

Printed for Henry Colburn, 8, New Burlington Street.

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By the Author of " Pelham." In 4 vols. post 8vo. 2. The Castilian. By Don Telesforo de Trueba y Cosio, Author of " Gomez Arias." In 3 vols. post 8vo.

Let 'em call it mischief; When it is past, and prosper'd, 'twill be virtue.

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3. Tales of the Great St. Bernard. 3 vols.

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By the Author of "Stories from the History of England." All books of geography (which I have met with) begin with the more abstruse and difficult, and postpone the more easy and technical parts of the study. This order I have reversed. I endeavour to impress upon the mind, in the first instance, those things which are the subject of memory alone, and for which no reason need be, or can be assigned. There is no reason why the capital of England might not have been named Paris instead of London, or why Poland should not be called Italy, or the Danube the Volga. No reason can be given why a peninsula of the particular shape of Spain and Portugal, should have been placed at the Death of George II. the south-west of Europe, rather than at the south-east. The names themselves, and the appropriation of them to places, are (in this view) purely accidental and arbitrary. It seems, therefore, proper to begin by charging the memory with those arbitrary distinctions and divisions, which require no reasoning, and which, if not learned by rote in early youth, are seldom thoroughly, and never without much difficulty, learned afterwards."-Author's Preface.

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CURTIS'S BRITISH ENTOMOLOGY

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AKDALE COTTAGE; or, the Christ-culation." Edinburgh Review, No. 71.

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THE NEW the Church of England; containing an
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This edition has been printed at the request of several Clergymen, who are desirous of distributing this little work among their poorer parishioners. By the same Author,

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The First Number, containing the Portraits and Memoirs of Sir Philip Sydney, from the Duke of Bedford's Gallery-Queen Anne Bullen, from the Earl of Warwick's, at Warwick Castleside. All the New Books of note are Reviewed, and Specimens and Archbishop Cranmer, from the British Museum, will be Dedicated, by permission, to the King's most Excellent Maje given. The Drama is Reviewed in a spirit of benevolent though free Criticism; and Music is treated at once scientifically and published on the 1st of January; and persons desiring to sub. names either to the Publishers or to their respective Booksellers popularly as an elegant Art. University, Clerical, Military, and scribe for the earliest impressions, are requested to forward their Mercantile Information of all kinds. The "Spectator" being in any part of the Kingdom, but with directions to have them sent to the London Publishers forth with, because the best imelegantly printed, in Sixteen pages, foolscap folio, will, when bound, form the handsomest volume for the Library, as, on less Orders are registered in the Subscription Book at the Pub. preservation, and of receiving the especial patronage of respect-lishers, the earliest impressions cannot be ensured. grounds of morality and taste, it aims at being thought worthy of pressions will be appropriated to the first Subscribers; and unLondon: Harding and Lepard, Pall Mall East. Sold by every Bookseller in the Empire, by whom Specimens will be shewn upon application, and from whom a Prospectus and Catalogue of Two Hundred of the Engravings, forming part EPORT of the Speeches and Proceedings of the Collection, may be obtained gratis. Country Booksellers desiring the agency of this work are reat a Dinner to Commemorate the Abolition of the Sacramental Test, on Wednesday, the 18th day of June, 1828, atquested to apply to the Publishers, free of expense. Freemason's Hall.

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In the press, and speedily will be published, in 1 vol. 8vo.
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THE LITERARY GAZETTE,

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1928.

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containing entertaing outerinerary necesita kes, Ac Wi. -1. have struck na minst fores be.
of the actual period of the revist and of Meala"! not partic'ar se the writers, but
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Jar ev's to Whitehall, tos nefrow, and goes not to W - daar till the middle of Mw, whumps alus the camp opers at H wrakow. Our ozuariu all go for Ii at vary to-morrow.

16. Apt 6 **The busy time of doen. di linne krunt, and var na tra la of the man. Did is now over Lære 1 a tua eats, Good furna bers of the age, with are every day, as the him, one of the seatingent ; teti fi murs in a day time when they existed becomes more distant, sometimen The court returns from M. aturng ndo timual value. It is true the Letters, whơn thươy do us a relve great events, are frequentay flied only with the gmp of the car. 1 and al mon ety, but it a mand he re, the t..'wered, that it is để mộ 1. atalı tanır as 1 bear poor. Prinsesa. Ann is sadly team that by sanry is very mandy casemmes, I abat a new deviaration in matter of faith, are til adı, "vused to Jotin Ein, kap a c dia... so that at last it is agreed to atter bing in termi ancestor of Lise editor't, and form a toler. best I hope it may not be thus: say nothing New equtage in great spiler.demar və Lov. 5 y from the beginn ag of Janary 10NG every where to be sort, exeually their mato the end of Desverber 16, with the ex-ep. jest-en" Her myjesty is won tereful glorious tata of alimat deven months, from. At cong 1507, her own apparel. Here is arrived an Itaŭsm to Ajtu, jhon, during w`b javad tuere la ani. Prince of P. m'ann, the greatest spetud) * * PIPE interruptim of the currenpot=60# them in the world reckoned, for he has consumIENĖ

REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS. The Filsa Correspondence. Latters worstion during the Years 1686-7-8, and addressed to John Fura, Esq., Secretary to the Crua. miinoners of Revenue in Treiant; ry. We trust to render the weirncy of 1' is de- the greatest part of a patrimonial extatm, af bg ting Partu ulars of the Revdatum, and scription evident by the exirais wanh we 150 gonc per annum, and the temamure of throm Aucobons of the History and Manners of shall make, and which we shail divide into pomes Bo it seven not that we toed fæur bas Li and Track Existed from the Omnit, two parts; 1 tone relative to cremacances potato wish Noten and a Preface, by the Hack may be dow of hist cal, and 2. than Ael 20. * On Hunday at Buanded's George Agar Lilla, vain Bra London, wash machine per van to be case of private chapel came in a bediene presst...m, 1529. M. CoPura, quecdote, and are i" strutive of persona and being langhing and maring, an onluer Ma. K1119 has already dist.grutaled himasM, manners, Het, rẹ dùng 1°38, we have Y to and gratified the pu`a“, by his taste for his- remark, that a god amunt of the Eus fà. tesond researches, and by the a' ¦ ues he has m. is pron xed, may in itself be eceered an dupla vend in ose m ưumí ng their res ilia. I æ ej fare of the state of sui elv a l'ese change, pineul work adás to my công sâu 4, and • a ate and trailed times, fur ▲ 78% un tiers, tema of the Rev era, „Abe#gh the (arené ut, Event, ið runt, edest was I cats (iar way as these kerendy, Pepin, and other eminent arm! ;» » posar evnstømt,porary writers, have tần van ther. Janies li in l'etated, đi, tu ne allng • gì ta over ita ei os ponta® and es. træ of the W. L. tim rẻ ...ary features.

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