326 



List of New Works. 



[MARCH, 



The Georgics of Virgil, edited by W. 

 Sotheby, esq., with Metrical Translations 

 in the Italian, Spanish, French, German, and 

 English Languages, in one volume. Royal 

 folio. Price 51. 5s. 



Mercantile Time Table, shewing at One 

 View the number of Days to every Day in 

 the Year from any other Date, chiefly de- 

 signed to assist Bankers, Merchants, cfec. in 

 the calculation of Interest on Accounts Cur- 

 rent. By J. J. Lightfoot. 7s. 6d. boards. 



Remarks on Certain Modern Theories re- 

 specting Rents and Prices. 3s. 



Parliamentary Review for the Session of 

 1826. 8vo. 7s. 6d. boards. 



The Phrenological Journal. No. XIII. 

 Price 4s. 



The Pocket Encyclopaedia of Natural 

 Phenomena, for the Use of Mariners, Shep- 

 herds, Gardeners, Husbandmen, and others j 

 being a Compendium of Prognostications of 

 the Weather, Signs of the Seasons, Periods 

 of Plants, and other Phenomena in Natural 

 History and Philosophy. By T. Forster, 

 M.B. F.L.S. M.A.S. and M.M.S., &c. 12mo. 

 10s. 6d. 



The Sovereignty of the Great Seal main- 

 tained against the One Hundred and Eighty- 

 eight Propositions of the Chancery Commis- 

 sioners ; in a Letter to the Right Hon. The 

 Lord High Chancellor. By Francis Paul 

 Stratford, esq. 8vo. 3s. 



Flagellum Parliarnentarium ; being Sar- 

 castic Notices of nearly 200 Members of the 

 first Parliament after the Restoration, A.D. 

 1661 to 1678. Neatly printed from a con- 

 temporary M.S. in the British Museum. In 

 small 8vo. 4s. 



Catholic Emancipation Considered on 

 Protestant Principles. In a Letter to the 

 Earl of Liverpool. By an Irish Member of 

 Parliament. Is. 6d. 



A Letter to Viscount Milton, M.P. By 

 one of his Constituents. 2s. 



Historical References. By Henry Howard, 

 (of Corby Castle) esq. Is. 



Views on the Subject of Corn and Cur- 

 rency. By Thomas Joplin, esq. 4s. 



NOVELS, TALES, &C. 



Letters from Cockney Lands, containing 

 an Identification of the Author of Almack's 

 and other Subjects. 1 2mo. 4s. 6d. boards. 



Dame Rebecca Berry, or Court Scenes 



and Characters in the Reign of Charles II. 

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Tales of a Pilgrim. Post 8vo. 10s. 6d, 

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The Valleys, or Scenes and Thoughts from 

 Secluded Life. 2 vols. 12mo. 10s. boards. 



Alma Mater, or Seven Years at the 

 University of Cambridge. By a Trinity 

 Man. In 2 vols. post 8vo. 18s. 



Truckleborough Hall. A Novel. In 

 3 vols. post 8vo. 11. 8s. 6d. 



The Natchez, an Indian Tale. By the 

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Holland Tide, or Munster Popular Tales. 

 In one volume, small 8vo. 8s. 6d. boards. 



Rockavon. A Tale of the Thirteenth 

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A School for Grown Chidren, in Five Acts. 

 By W. Morton. 



Stories of Chivalry, and Vagaries in quest 

 of the Wild and the Whimsical. By Pierce 

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POETRY. 



Dyche's Specimens of British Poetesses. 

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Alma and Brione. A Poem. Cantos I. 

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The Return of Theseus. A Dramatic 

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Crockford House, a Rhapsody, with a 

 Rymer in Rome, 1826. 



Valentine Verses, or Lines of Truth, Love, 

 and Virtue. By the Rev. Richard Cobbold, 

 A.M. containing two Portraits, and illustrated 

 with upwards of one hundred Original De- 

 signs, drawn and executed by the Author. 

 In one volume, 8vo. 30s. boards. 



TRAVELS, &C. 



Sketches of Persian Life and Manners 

 from the Journal of a Traveller in the East. 

 In 2 vols. post 8vo. 



Travels in Mesopotamia, including a 

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 Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon. By J. S. 

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 Palestine, &c. In one volume, 4to. with 

 maps and engravings. 31. 13s. 6d. 



Scenes and Occurrences in Albany and 

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JollifPs Letters from Greece. 8vo. 10s. 6d. 

 boards. 



BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS OF EMINENT PERSONS. 



MISS BENGER. 



By the death of this truly estimable wo- 

 mnn, the literary world has been deprived 

 of one of its most useful ornaments ; and her 

 extensive circle of attached friends, has ex- 

 perienced a loss which will not easily be 

 repaired. By an affectionate tribute to her 

 memory, from the pen of Miss Lucy Aikin, 

 we learn that Elizabeth O. Benger, wus 



born in the city of Wells, in the year 1778. 

 Her father was a purser in the navy ; and, 

 having experienced many reverses of for- 

 tune, he, at his death abroad, in 1796, left 

 his wife and his daughter, the subject of this 

 sketch, with a very slender provision. For 

 some years after this event, Miss Benger 

 continued with her mother in Wiltshire, 

 where her friends and relations were nu- 



