486 LITfillARY ANNOUNCEMENTS. 



The Odes of Anacreon. By James Usher, Hebrew Professor to 

 the Eclectic Society of London ; Author of an Elegy on General 

 Moore, &c. &c. 



The Life, Times, and Correspondence of Isaac Watts, D,D. ; with 

 Notices of many of his Contemporaries, and a Critical Examination 

 of his Writings. By the Rev. Thomas Milner, A.M., Author of the 

 " History of the Seven Churches of Asia." In one thick Volume 8vo. 



A popular History of Priestcraft, in all Ages and Nations. 



My Ten Years' Imprisonment in Italian and Austrian Dungeons. 

 By Silvio Pellico. Translated from the original, by Thomas Roscoe. 

 In one Volume. 



The Gardener and Forrester's Record of the Culture and Manage, 

 ment of Fruits, Vegetables, Forest Trees, and of all Subjects con- 

 nected with the above Arts, calculated for information and improve- 

 ment therein. Conducted by Joseph Harrison. Price 6d . To be 

 continued monthly. 



A Compendious History of Modern Wines, together with Direc- 

 tions for their Cellaring and Preservation; to which are added, the 

 most approved modes of Distillation, remarks on home-made Wines, 

 and on the process of Fermentation; together with Receipts for 

 making the most approved Liqueurs ; with Tables, &c. In one Vo- 

 lume 8vo., with Engravings. 



The Tyrol. By the Author of " Spain in 1830." In two Volumes. 



Waltzburgh ; a Tale of the Sixteenth Century. In three Volumes. 



Shipwrecks and Disasters at Sea. By Cyrus Redding, Esq. With 

 several Engravings. In two Volumes, forming Nos. 78 and 79 of 

 Constable's Miscellany. 



The Book of Butterflies, Sphinxes, and Moths. By Captain Brown, 

 F.R.S.E., c. Vol. III. with 60 Engravings, 48 of which are co- 

 loured ; being the 80th No. of Constable's Miscellany. 



Travelling Observations on the United States and Canada, during 

 1830. By the Rev. Isaac Fidler. In one Volume. 



History of the Middle and Working Classes, with an Exposition 

 of the Causes which have influenced the past and present Condition 

 of the Industrious Orders. 



Sunday in London; with Illustrations, by George Cruikshank; 

 and a few Words by a Friend of his. 



AGRICULTURAL REPORT. 



UPLAND farmers and the cultivators of sound and dry soils, are probably 

 full as forward in their operations, as is usual at this season of the year ; in 

 fact, they have had little to impede them throughout one of the mildest 

 winters within memory, to the first week of the present month : those of 

 the above class then,who prefer early sowing of those crops which will admit 

 of it, have enjoyed an opportunity utterly denied to the heavy and lowland 

 farmer ; to this latter class, February throughout proved a blank, or worse. 

 According to our own Middlesex Meteorology, there were few days in Fe- 

 bruary, on which it did not rain. In many other districts, no day or night 

 of that month passed without its portion of rain, which sometimes descended 

 in deluges, accompanied by high winds, rendering all attempts abortive to 

 approach the soil to any beneficial purpose of manuring, or bestowing upon 

 it the finishing operations, in order to prepare it for the reception of the 



