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THE

FINE ARTS.
NEW PUBLICATIONS.

No. VII.

distinguished reputation of being the birth-
place of Columbus. Its distance is about
eighteen miles from Genoa. Whilst the author The Passes of the Alps. By W. Brockedon.
was resting at Cogoleto for refreshment, he
was invited to visit the house, and even the
chamber, in which the great discoverer was
born. That the state of Genoa attaches belief
to the evidence that this was the place of his
nativity, is shewn in the fact that a civil
officer, a préposé, is stationed here, a part of
whose duty it is to shew the house to strangers.
The following inscriptions painted on the front
of the house, in the Contrada Guiggioli, mark
its situation, and point out its importance :-
Con generoso ardir dall' Arca all' onde
Ubbidiente il vol Colomba prende,
Corre, s' aggira, terren scopre, e fronde
D' olivo in segno al gran Noé ne rende.
L' imita in ciò COLOMBO, nè s' asconde,
E da sua Patria il mar solcando fende,
Terreno alfin scoprendo diede fondo,
Offerendo all' Ispano un nuovo Mondo.
Li 2. Dicembre, 1650.

Prete Antonio Colombo.

Hospes siste gradum: Fuit Hic lux prima Columbo
Orbe Viro majori; Heu! nimis arcta Domus!
Unus erat Mundus; Duo sunt, ait ISTE, fuere.'

All the deep love that o'erflows thy breast
Lies midst the hush of thy heart at rest,

Like the scent of a flower in its folded bell, When eve through the woodlands hath sighed farewell.

present Number of this highly interesting work contains the Pass of the Cornice, being Rest!-the sad memories that through the day the route on the shores of the Mediterranean, With a weight on thy lonely bosom lay from Genoa to Nice. "The sudden thoughts of the changed and dead, "Strictly speaking," Mr. Brockedon observes, "it is not a Pass of That bow thee as winds bow the willow's head. the Alps, but rather a road by which the Alps The yearnings for voices and faces gone are avoided. Its situation, its object, and its All are forgotten!-sleep on-sleep on! importance, however, require that it should Are they forgotten?-no, 'tis not so hold a conspicuous place in these illustrations; Slumber divides not our hearts from woe; for it was one of the earliest passes known be- E'en now o'er thine aspect swift changes pass, tween France and Italy; and, from its recent Like lights and shades over waving grass. completion as a carriage-road, is likely to be- Tremblest thou, dreamer? Oh, love and grief, come one of frequent use, particularly for in- Ye have storms that shake e'en the closed-up By the route of the Cornice, the invalid, who leaves England even in the depth of winter, may reach the warm and genial climate of Italy, without encountering the Alps in his passage.' The plates in the seventh Number are at least equal in excellence to any of their predecessors. Pont Saint Louis, near Menton, Bordighera, Mortole, Ruins of the Trophæa Augusti at Turbie, and Nice, are especially romantic and picturesque.

valids.

of Fourteen English Cathedrals, with the
Plans and Arms. Arranged by J. Britton,
F. S.A. &c. Drawn by C. Hacker; engraved
by G. F. Storm.

A Print, containing Views of the Interiors of
Fourteen Cathedrals, with a Border of Ar-
chitectural and Sculptural Ornaments. De-
signed and arranged by J. Britton, F. S. A.
&c. Drawn by C. Hacker; engraved by
C. Storm.

"In an able and very interesting inquiry into the birth-place of Columbus, by Mr. Washington Irving, in his Life and Voyages of Columbus, recently published, he concludes Outlines from the Ancients. Etched by T. C. that Columbus was born in the city of Genoa. Lewis. With Descriptions by G. CumberMr. Irving admits, however, that at one time land, Esq. Part III. Septimus Prowett. Cogoleto bore away the palm from other places GRACEFUL motion, dancing motion, floating which also claimed the honour of having given motion, celestial or gliding motion, violent birth to Columbus. Mr. Irving's researches have invalidated all other claims except those action, and enthusiastic action, form the subof Genoa and Cogoleto; but his arguments Jects of the twenty plates of which the present have not removed the honour from the latter part of this tasteful publication is composed. place. In a foreign country, every native of They must all be extremely valuable to the the little republic was a Genoese; and Co-artist; and some of them, such, for instance, as lumbus would have described himself as a No. 46, Two Sketches from Bas-reliefs; No. Genoese, and not as a native of Cogoleto. No. 58, Hercules contending with a Stag, &c. 50, Sagittarius; No. 51, A Medea or a Circe; Mr. Irving considers the strongest evidence in favour of the city of Genoa to be found in the are admirable examples of energy, grace, and declaration of Columbus in his will, executed dignity. in 1498, Siendo yo nacido in Genova, IA Print, containing Views of the West Fronts being born in Genoa.' If this will had been written at Genoa, he might have said, I being born at Cogoleto;' but in Spain, where the locality of Cogoleto was unknown, he writes as a Genoese: even now, every wandering boy from the state of Genoa, without regard to the place of his birth, replies to the inquiry, Whence did you come ?'' Genova ;' and every native of the state, from Sarzanne to Ventimiglia, is a Genoese.' In reply to one remark of Mr. Irving's, it may be said, that the great Andrea Doria, with as much pa- WE have seldom seen two companion prints triotism as Columbus, and more power, never so interesting and amusing as these. The idea exercised it in favour of Oneglia, his birth of comprehending so much curious matter in place, but of Genoa, his country. Mr. Irving two sheets of paper does Mr. Britton great mentions a codicil, executed by Columbus six- credit; and the manner in which this multiteen days before his death, in which he leaves farious matter has been arranged exhibits his a book to his beloved country, the republic of usual perspicuity and taste. The opportunity Genoa ;' and he admits that one or both of the thus afforded, on easy terms, of comparing, by two admirals named Columbo, with whom a glance of the eye, the beauties, external and Columbus sailed, was a native of Cogoleto; internal, of so many of our noble and venerable but the circumstance, also mentioned by Mr. cathedrals, must prove highly gratifying, not Irving, of the preservation of the portrait merely to the architect or the antiquary, but of the great discoverer by the families who to every person of cultivated understanding and claim him at Cogoleto, is strongly in their patriotic feeling. favour. It is not pretended that this portrait represents any other than Christopher Columbus, the discoverer of America; and this fact, in connexion with the tradition which has through successive generations pointed out the house in which he was born, and upon which the above eulogies were painted nearly 200 years since, by a member of his family, goes far to justify the claim of Cogoleto to the honour of being the birth-place of Columbus."

ORIGINAL POETRY.

THE DREAMER.

« There is no such thing as forgetting possible to the
mind. A thousand accidents may and will interpose a
veil between our present, conscious, and the secret in-
scriptions of the mind; but alike, whether veiled or
unveiled, the inscription remains for ever."-English
Opium Eater.

REST from thy griefs! thou art sleeping now
The moonlight gleam is upon thy brow;

leaf.

On thy parted lips there's a quivering thrill,
As on a lyre e'er its chords are still;
On the long silken lashes that fringe thine eye
There's a large tear gathering heavily-
A rain from the clouds of thy spirit pressed,-
Sorrowful dreamer, this is not rest!

It

is Thought at work amidst busied hours,
It is Love keeping vigil o'er perished flowers -
Oh, we bear within us mysterious things
Of memory and anguish, unfathomed springs,
And passion, those gulfs of the heart to fill
With bitter waves, which it ne'er may still.
Well might we pause e'er we gave them sway,
Flinging the peace of our couch away;
Well might we look on our souls in fear,
They find no fount of oblivion here;
They forget not, the mantle of sleep beneath
How know we if under the wings of death?

June 12th, 1828.

SONG: THE NAMING OF THE WINE. "Cato ideò propinquos feminis osculum dare jussit, ut Pliny.

scirent an temetum olerent: hoc tum vino nomen erat."

AH! talk not of Love-'tis a bubble so fair,
We bless it, then swiftly it fades into air,
That pleases the eye, lightly sailing above;
Like joys we delight in, and pleasures we love.
But give me the cup of illusion, that cheats
E'en Love's magic eyes of their tyrannous
And o'er the dull region of memory fleets
pow'r,

To drown the mind's sting in its magical
shower!

And bless'd be the man who invented a juice
To elevate life's sorry tenement here,

As, pressing the grape, he discover'd its use,

In driving out care by its own ruddy tear! Yes, roses shall bloom o'er the Bacchanal's shrine,

And incense his vespers, as, reeling in bliss,
He blesses the name of that liquor divine,
The honest sage tells us was born in a kiss.
S.

SIGHTS OF LONDON. SECOND VISIT TO BROOKES's.

THE Brookes's which we visit is a very dif. ferent place from that Brookes's, of statesmen and card-players' resort, where M.P.'s do congregate in body politic, and "rattle bones" of a description more likely to illustrate the anatomy of the soul, than to develop (excepting the elbow) the various parts and uses of the body. Those thrown from the dice-box, and those exposed by the removal of muscle and tendon, afford indeed very opposite lessons ;the neatly-figured cube and the ugly skeleton clatter with extraordinary dissonance, the one all excitement, pleasure, and passion-and

must come at last.

MUSIC.

NEW PUBLICATIONS.

Fortunato l'uom che prende agni. Sestetto. Arranged as a Rondo. By C. Hopwood. Collection of Melodies, entitled the Loves of MOZART's air in Cosi fan tutti is here well Goulding and D'Almaine. the Butterflies. The Poetry by T. H. Bailey, Esq. the Symphonies and Accom-treated, and excellently adapted for young paniments by Alexander Lee. Volume I. performers; being at once of easy execution and of great musical interest.

:

A. Lee and Lee.

THE popularity of "I'd be a Butterfly" pro-
bably led to this extension of the ephemeral
species; but the idea, though well enough for

DRAMA.

KING'S THEATRE.

the other the stirless finale of all human excitement, pleasures, and passions. The trays and the catering, the sighs and the deuces, the A grimacing and the sinking of the club-house, are vastly unlike the cold ribs and fleshless joints, the silence and the juiceless anatomy, the grinning and chop-fallen horrors, of the surgical resurrections from the house appointed for all living. Yet to this complexion all On Tuesday Mr. Robins had to begin his labours with many strange preparations, and of farther successful cultivation. At least the benefit of M. Laurent, and the house was dea single song, does not seem to be susceptible ON Thursday Tancredi was produced for the exhibited a number of " organs," certainly not lyrical genius of Mr. Bailey has failed in pro- servedly crammed in every corner, were it only fit to be played upon, though some of them longing it, and the Loves of the Butterflies in return for Mr. L.'s conduct towards the were called "tunica," (lots 4, 5, &c.) and have produced, in poetry, little better than English Theatre in Paris. The part of Tanothers (such as lot 15) possessed" chords." grubs and caterpillars. Some of the airs, credi was played by Pasta, and Amenaide by In 16 the vas deferens was purchased by a however, are very sweet; though others boast Sontag (whose last night of singing it was), Cockney apothecary, at a higher price than lot of but small attractions. The prettiest are, upon both of whom the public were rather hard 14, in which the same anatomical substance No. 2, the Butterfly Beau; No. 5, the Butter- for encores. A bad divertissement was then occurred; but he mistook it for a vast differ-fly was a Gentleman; and No. 8, One morn I given, which was unanimously hissed, and then ence, and so fancied he had bought a bargain. left my boat: though the last is a familiar old impudently applauded by the dancers them"Lot 46, a very fine and large specimen of air, such as Mr. Lee has often the good taste selves behind the curtain. The Swiss Family scrofulous affection," was knocked down to a to adopt, though rarely, if ever, the candour followed, in which Sontag and Mons. and Mad. lady in recent weeds; while lot 5, compart to acknowledge. Schutz supported the chief characters to adment D," the dried larynx of a monkey," miration. The stage was so crowded with the was achieved by a dandy of the first tie. This overplus of the pit, that it was with dif being St. Swithin's day, we need hardly menficulty the performers could move about. Had tion, that the entire sale, including the lungs the season ended last night, it would have of a toad, 59, and the leg and foot of a Chinese been a splendid finale to a splendid year. lady, 89, consisted of "wet preparations."

The Lay of Poor Louise. The Words from
Sir W. Scott's Fair Maid of Perth: the
Music by W. Eavestaff. W. Eavestaff.
A VERY peculiar and very beautiful compo-
in the time. It will be much liked.
sition, with many original and striking changes

Fantasia, &c. By Frederick Lemare.
F. T. Latour.

to the composer.

On Wednesday there were nothing but skeletons, &c. of Mammalia: many very curious specimens, the bare preservation of which seemed to be enough to have occupied the most able and industrious anatomist a busy life-time. A SHEWY, and yet a sweet piece for the pianoThe various orders, genera, and species, were forte, on an original air: it does great credit skilfully classed; and Mr. Robins's Greek and Latin tongue sorely tried with nycti, cerco, and semno-pithecus, lagostomus-tricodactylus, hydromys chrysogaster, pseudostoma and diplostoma, cynomys and genomys, helamys and ctenomys, echinothrix, erithizon, and onychura, hydrochærus-capybara, and other equally palatable names, fit only for a mouth educated at Eton or Rugby.

Non Piu Andraig as a Duet, &c. By
V. Novello.

THIS well-known and much-admired air, from
Mozart's Figaro, is happily arranged as a duet,
which every one of our fair friends will find to
be set in very easy and very beautiful style.

The Irish Harper. By J. Watson. Mori and
Lavenu.

On Thursday, the ninth day (but there was no end to the nine days' wonder), anatomical parts, exquisitely prepared, were continued. markable calculi; diseased livers, of which Freeman; and it has been sung with great apThe first compartment embraced some re- THE words of this ballad are by Mr. C. H. the patients died; spleens which had long plause at the Melodists' Club, for which it was ceased to trouble their owners; a fibula, composed. It is one of the most touching and stolen or taken most sacrilegiously by Sir An- pathetic airs which has appeared under the thony from the coffin of Duke Humphrey, auspices of this institution; and confirms our in St. Alban's cathedral; a beautiful prepara-high opinion of the skill and talents of Mr. tion of a Thumb (not Tom); a tattooed skin, Watson. We hope to see many musical publinot a drum; "a preparation of a cauliflower- cations of equal beauty from the same source. excrescence from the skin," enough to turn one's stomach from that elegant vegetable for ever, as would "the contents of a tumour situated beneath the skin, having the resem. blance of boiled rice," from that grain; and a preparation of the human toes, certainly not one of the kickshaws most pleasant to behold. Yesterday Mammalia were again the order of the day: several superb stuffed skins of animals were in the list; and as many horns as would stock Doctors' Commons for half a score of years, and afford both doctors and proctors plenty of fees; the taxing of which would perplex the other Commons for quite as many sessions, when brought forward by Joseph Hume, and rebutted by Dr. Phillimore.

To-day the sale is most interesting to the comparative anatomist, consisting of ears, eyes, &c. &c.; but as we cannot à priori have heard Mr. Robins, nor seen the effects of his persuasive powers, we will not, as hitherto, describe the result.

Oh! come, dear Louisa. A Ballad. By J.
Cowen, Esq. Composed by C. Salaman.
Willis and Co.

WE find this a little insipid in practice, though
there is no saying what a very fine voice might
do with it.

Trip it, trip it, gentle Mary. Words and
Music by the same.

Willis and Co.

SUNG with much applause by Mrs. Feron; is
a pretty and lively thing, and well adapted for
the stage, though, like the foregoing, rather
monotonous for private singing.

ENGLISH OPERA HOUSE.

ON Thursday a very amusing and pleasant piece, considerably altered and improved, from le Menteur Véridique, was produced at this theatre, under the title of He lies like Truth, and was completely successful. The burden of the scene lay upon Wrench, the liar, and Benson Hill, the clincher; and they made it a light and laughable burden to the audience. Miss Goward, Miss Gray, Mr. Bennett, and Mr. Baker, sustained the other parts. The adapter is, we believe, a Mr. Kimpton; and we are indebted to him for a very agreeable

variety to the very agreeable and popular entertainments which nightly fill this theatre.

FRENCH PLAYS.

Chacun de son Côté, La Gageure Imprévue, THE last representation of French plays took place on Monday, with the following pieces, and Valérie; and we need hardly add, went off with the same éclat as on former nights. The house was very well attended. Mdlle. Mars, though no stranger to the British public, has been too long so to the British boards; and we can only hope that she may have found her reception here sufficiently encouraging to induce her to repeat her visit next season.

THE FINE ARTS: PUFFING MADE EASY.

WHENEVER any art is carried to, or very near to, perfection, it deserves the notice of observers, whose business it is to mark the improvements in science, the progress of knowledge, and "the march of intellect." If the fact of the schoolmaster's being abroad, with his horn-book in one hand and his birch-rod in the other, was of sufficient consequence to attract parliamentary comment and the memorable denouncing of Mr. Brougham; surely the mountebank's being abroad, with his nostrums at one side, and his zany at the other, is of Leonara. C. T. Sykes. Goulding and Co. consequence enough to provoke literary obGay, gay is the Heart. The same, servation and the compliments of a journal of A SERENADE of much sweetness. We could Bell-lettres. This subject is suggested by the not expect less from the arranger of "Gay, glorious puffs which it is the fashion of the gay is the heart that with liberty glowing," time to circulate in the advertisements of Vauxwhich is extremely beautiful and animated, hall, some of the minor theatres, and other and quite equal to the best of the Swiss me-plaçes of public resort. These attracting comlodies. positions are evidence of the civilisation, re

finement, and gullibility of the period at which (son), that he was so fond of conferring the | We confess that we are rather incredulous on we have the good fortune to live; and as distinction, he had laid it upon the very car- the subject.

At Astley's, the Battle of Waterloo has suspended the Battle of Navarino; and the "anxious inquiries" of "many distinguished military officers" are thus happily answered.

Vauxhall takes the lead in their production, riages of the country (a Jaunting Car and a Roman Antiquities. At a country-house we shall pay our first tribute to the matchless Gingle); but what would have been said if the called Arensburg, in the neighbourhood of the accomplishments of the suburban literati. One" late Mr. Simpson" had been be-sirred in that Hague, an important discovery has lately been of the merits of modern Vauxhall seems to be, land of bulls and blunders? Considering the made of the ruins of a Roman edifice, the that the wetter the weather is, the more wetness of the spot where he gained his spurs, baked bricks of which bear the marks of the crowded are the walks, and the more splen- it would be thought that pedestrianism natu- tenth, sixteenth, and thirtieth legions; as well didly do the fire-works explode: nothing can rally followed the carriage routine, and so a as those of the army of Lower Germany. damp a genuine puff; and if it were possible night or knight of Vauxhall might pass for a There was found at the same time a large for torrents of rain to do so, it ought to be bog-trotter. quantity of fragments of oil and wine-bottles, remembered, that the writing is written before The voluptuous seductions of this highly furniture, ornaments, &c. The building itself the rain hath fallen, though it can only appear favoured and over-flowing spot, have detained is similar to the Ville Romanæ, the ruins of in the newspapers of the ensuing morning. The us so much, that we must be very brief with our which have been discovered in this country. Times of Thursday exhibits an exquisite spe- other examples of the sublime art of puffery. The Cherokees.-The Cherokees, hemmed cimen of these qualities. Wednesday, be it At the Coburg," the development of naval in on every side by a white population, and observed, was a chilly and showery night, suc- horrors" is hailed with rapturous applause; being no longer able to subsist by hunting ceeding an afternoon of very heavy rain; yet and in another piece (a picture), General Su- and fishing, were compelled to betake themthus truly and grandiloquently begins the cri-warrow, "with a boot on one leg, and a slipper selves to agriculture and the mechanical arts; tique!! "The alluring combination of all on the other," probably the only leg-slipper in which, during the last twenty years, they that can gratify the senses, delight the fancy, ever seen-rivets universal sympathy, and re- have made surprising progress. They inhabit or exhilarate the heart, which constitutes the ceives undivided suffrages of numerous specta- commodious houses, united in villages; and peculiar charm of these gardens, has been sel- tors. The crowds brought by these admirable many of them possess farms of thirty or forty dom put forth more effectively than at the productions are so immense, that if you do not acres, perfectly cultivated, and abundantly gala given yesterday evening, in honour of the go before "a before 7," you may just as well stocked with horses and cattle of all kinds. coronation anniversary." The impartial re- stay at home, with your own slippers on your The Baptist, Moravian, and other missionaries porter then proceeds to state, that as the rain legs. have succeeded in converting a great number had ceased before night-fall, and did not, of of them to Christianity. They have now their course, continue to pelt upon the heads and schools, where five hundred of their children clothes of the delighted visitors, there was nolearn to read, write, and cipher. They will thing to find fault with, "except the moist soon have a library and a museum. A printcondition of the open walks ;" but," in con- Our Surrey and Sadler's Wells bills having ing-office has also been established in their sequence of the present arrangements," by dropped off somehow, we can only mention capital, where an Indian publishes in his which the gardens are closed up and covered (from memory), that though the former has the native language, accompanied by an English in, this out-of-doors evil "was one of very cleverest of children not long from their wet- translation, a weekly sheet called The Che. partial operation.”—“ The performances com- nurses; and though the aquatic spectacles of the rokee Phonix! The territory occupied by menced, as usual, with extraordinary feats of latter boast of almost as much wet as Vauxhall, the Cherokees consists of about 14,000 square dexterity," a species of exhibition (it is (where the Noyades, or drownings, are given miles. The population amounts to 15,060 inadded) particularly germane to the place;" gratis thrice a week), they are stated to make dividuals; viz. 13,563 natives, 147 white men, which is literally the truth, and may fairly be an equally deep impression on the public; so and 73 white women, and 1277 slaves. New acknowledged, since the first and greatest feat that full audiences run to be convulsed with Echota is the name of their principal town. of dexterity must have been to get together laughter, or drowned in tears, every evening. On the 26th of July, 1826, they adopted a "a crowded audience," on such a night, to And our general conclusion is, that the En-form of government somewhat like that of the witness any thing in such a soaking scene and glish people are excessively fond of dramatic United States. dripping condition! Ching Lauro's "antics," entertainments, whatever may be pretended to "the broad jokes of the vaudeville," and other the contrary. spectacles, are next panegyrised to the echo; not forgetting "the fire-works, which would have done credit to the creative ability of Medal. The King of Prussia has ordered Mephistophiles himself, whom we (i. e. the medal to be struck, to commemorate the Times, for there is no prefix of the word Russian declaration of war against Turkey. advertisement, often so creditable to that One side of the medal is to represent a bust journal), suppose to possess the double of the Emperor Nicholas the other a warrior, powers of chief master of the ordnance (the office armed as at the period of the Crusades, and of Lord Beresford, who must have been su- of the Christian religion. This medal is to receiving his sword from a female, the emblem perseded for his Lisbon correspondence), and head magician to the world in general"!!! have the following inscription :-Accinge feThe summing up of this eulogium is not un- mori gladium tuum. worthy of its preceding fidelity and beauty: St. Petersburgh, it appears, that in the three America has lately appeared at Paris, revised and edited "The voluptuous character of the entire scene" -the voluptuous character of a tumbler's years, 1824, 1825, and 1826, the balance of imtricks, moist walks, and aqueous fire-works!portation and exportation was in favour of Rus"united to produce the most enlivening effect sia, to the amount of no less than 112,578,999 on the spirits, and the company were in a rubles. Russian commerce is evidently making concatenation accordingly." Tony Lumpkin great strides. is quoted as an authority for the latter elegant phrase; but unless the company were of the not dubious description which we remarked on our visit to these quondam gardens, the obvious sense of it is by no means so clear as a rocket

66

VARIETIES.

Russia. By official documents published at

that attempts were making in Germany to ap-
Lithochromy.—We some time ago mentioned,
ply the lithographic process to the purpose of
imitating pictures in oil. It appears that a
M. Malapeau has gone further than any of his
competitors in these efforts. To complete one

LITERARY NOVELTIES.

. We have, of late, declined the insertion of a multitude of unauthenticated notices of new publications and announcements of works preparing. The former ought to possess public interest, and come to us from known parties, otherwise we cannot give them place as Literary News in this division of our Journal. The latter must not be advertisements in disguise.

A new edition of Mitford's History of Greece, in eight volumes octavo, is now in the press, with many additions and corrections by the author, and some corrections and his Brother, Lord Redesdale, with an Apology for some Account of the Author, and of his pursuits in life, by additions, chiefly chronological, by the Editor. A Short parts of his work which have been objects of censure,

will be prefixed.

Robertson's America.-A new edition of Suard and Mo

rellet's translation into French of Robertson's History of by M. de la Roquette. It is enriched by notes from

Humboldt, Bullock, Warden, Clavigero, Jefferson, &c.

In the Press.-The Anecdotonian, containing a great variety of Popular Anecdotes.An Essay on the Science of Acting: with Instructions for Young Actors, illus trated by Recollections, Anecdotes, Traits of Character, and Events connected with the Drama: by a Veteran Stager.-First Principles of Arithmetic, from the French Henry Ottley. of M. Condorcet: with Alterations and Additions, by

LIST OF NEW BOOKS.

Dr. Parr's Works, edited by Dr. Johnstone, 8 vols. 8vo. Teaching, 8vo. 58. bds.-Caddick's Tales of the Affections, 12mo. 78. bds.-Ebers's Seven Years of the King's TheE. H. Barker, 8vo. 16s. bds.-Brande's Journal of a Voyage to Peru, 8vo. 128. bds.-Lanktree's Roman Antiquities, 18mo. 3s. bds. Something New on Men and Manners, 8vo. 10s. bds.-Notes of a Journey in the North

71. 78. royal 8vo. 121. 12s. bds. - Pillan's Letters on

or a Roman candle. To this extravagant piece of his imitations, the stone has to pass twenty-atre, 8vo. 18%. bds.-Parriana, or Notices of Dr. Parr, by of fudge, is added a hint, that somebody of the name of Simpson, an "Inspector" of these seven times under the press; and it is said, shows, has been knighted; to the no small that he thereby produces all the variety of satisfaction" of the Times newspaper!! This, colouring of which a painting is susceptible. indeed, would be carrying the chivalrous honour of knighthood to its acmé. It was facetiously said of a Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, when he knighted a celebrated tourist and a famous musician (Sir John Carr and Sir John Steven-recorded!

The bills are equal to the newspapers: according to
them, the gardens are "one entire scene of light,'
"form one blaze of splendour;" and, it is most wonderful
to repeat! "the proprietors have no hesitation in recom-
mending the public at large to visit Vauxhall." This is
surely one of the most disinterested acts of kindness ever

of Ireland, in 1827, 12mo. 68. bds.-Rules for Drawing in Perspective, 8vo. 78. sewed. Little Jack, by P. O. Skene, French and English, 12mo. 4s. 6d. bds.-Dialogues on Prophecy, Vol. II. 8vo. 98. bds.-Abbey (the) of Innismoyle, 18mo. 38. 6d. bds.-Grier's General Councils of the Church, 8vo. 98. bds.-Book of Job, in conformity to the Masoretical Text, 8vo. 58. 6d. cloth.-The Board. ing-School Ciphering Book, 4to. 38. bds.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

Connected with Literature and the Arts.

BRITISH INSTITUTION, PALL

MALL. The Gallery, with a Selection of the Works of the Italian, Spanish, Flemish, and Dutch Schools, is open daily, from Ten in the Morning until Six in the Evening. Admittance, 1s-Catalogue, ls. WILLIAM BARNARD, Keeper.

The Fall of Nineveh, Deluge, &c. &c.

HE EXHIBITION of the above PIC

THE

This day, small 8vo. 10s. 6d. illustrated with numerous
Engravings on Wood,

Feast," is now open, at the Western Exchange, Old Bond Street,
from Nine O'Clock till Six.
Admittance, 1s.-Catalogue, 1s.
Subscriptions for the Prints of the Fall of Nineveh, and Deluge,
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PORTRAITS OF MADAME VESTRIS,

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HE ANTI-PAUPER SYSTEM, exemplifying the postive and practical Good realised by the Relievers and the Relieved, under the frugal, beneficial, and lawful Administration of the Poor Laws, prevailing at Southwell, and in the neighbouring District; with Plans of the Southwell Workhouse, and of the Thurgarton Hundred Workhouse; and with Instructions for Book-keeping.

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BSERVATIONS on LORD GREN. A PRAXIS on the LATIN PREPOSI-the rapid attainment of the French Language, as the exercises

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