1827.] 



Lift of New Works. 



6,57 



about 800 different sorts of Plants, in a high 

 state of preservation, with their various de- 

 scriptions, in the hand-writing of J. J. Rous- 

 seau. It is extremely curious. 



A very superior edition, in 6 vol.. 4to. (the 

 price not to exceed 6 guineas), of Matthew 

 Henry's Commentary on the Old and New 

 Testaments, with an Introduction by the Rev. 

 E. Bickersteth, Assistant Minister of Wheler 

 Chapel, author of Scripture Help, &c., is in 

 the press, and will be speedily published. 



Early in June will be published, Rambles 

 in Madeira and Portugal in the early part of 

 1826, with an Appendix, illustrative of the 

 Climate, Produce, and Civil History of the 

 Island, in post 8vo. 



Also, Views in the Madeiras, executed on 

 stone, by West a 11, Nicholson, Viileneuve, 

 Harding, Gauce, <fcc. ; from drawings taken 

 on the spot, illustrating the most remark- 

 able scenes and objects in the islands. 



A new and copious General Index to the 

 edition of Calmet's Dictionary of i he Bible, 

 in 6 vols.4to., edited by the late Mr. C.Tay- 

 lor, is in the press. 



A Vocabulary to the CEdipus Tyranuus of 

 Sophocles, with the derivation and compo- 

 sition of the Words, with References and 

 Explanations, by George Hughes. M. A., is 

 nearly ready. 



Mr. Butler, of Hackney, has in the press 

 his Questions in RToman History. 



Messrs. Christ and Co. (late of Ft ankfort- 

 on-1he-Main, and now of London), have dis- 

 covered a meibod of enamelling cards, and 

 printing on them in ink, gold, silver, and 

 other metals. These enamelled cards for 

 visiting, invitation, aad other purposes, have 

 an extremely elegant appearance, and for 

 painting on they answer all the purposes of 

 ivory. A card lately printed printed fur 

 Messrs. Treuttel and Wurtz, in gold, is very 

 beautiful. 



Mr. W. B. Coo ke announces Thirty Views 

 in Rome, drawn and engraved by M. Pinelli, 

 of Rome, and printed in gold, by the newly- 

 discovered process. 



A History of the Cities of London and 

 Westminster, the Borough of Southwark, and 

 Parts adjacent, is in course of publication, in 

 weekly numbers. By Thomas Allen, author 

 of the History of Lambeth, <fec. <fec. Illus- 

 trated by numerous engravings of Rare Plans, 

 Antiquities, Views, Public Buildings, cfee. 



Mr. W. I. Thorns announces, in continua- 

 tion of his series of Early Prose Romances, 

 which he is publishing in a very agreeable 

 form, that very rare and curious fiction, 

 which treats of the " Life of Virgilius and of 

 his Death, and of the many Marvayles that 

 he did by Whyche-crafte and Negromaucy, 

 through the help of the Devils of Hell.'' 



A Solemn Appeal to the Common Sense of 

 England, against the Principles of the Right 

 Hon. George Canning, and his Associates, 

 by an English Protestant, is on the eve of 

 publication. 



A member of the University of Cambridge 



M.M. New Scries. Vol.. III. No. 18. 



has in the press, The Elements of Euclid, 

 containing the first six and the eleventh and 

 twelfth books, chiefly from the text of Dr. 

 Simson ; adapted to elementary instruction 

 by the introduction of Symbols. 



Mr. J. P. Neale will, in the course of the 

 ensuing autu.nn, resume the publication of 

 his work of Noblemen and Gentlemen's 

 Seats, which has been suspended for a few- 

 months, in consequence of the time required 

 to collect views and information relative to 

 the respective mansions. 



Mr. Elijah Galloway announces a History 

 of the Steam-Engine, from its earliest inven- 

 tion to the present time ; illustrated by nu- 

 merous Engravings from original Drawings. 



Some Account of Llangollen and its Vici- 

 nity, including a Circuit of about Seven 

 Miles, is in the press. 



The Rev. Dr. Russell will shortly publish, 

 in 2 vols. 8vo., the Connexion of Sacred and 

 Profane History, from the Death of Joshua 

 until the Decline of the Kingdoms of Israel 

 and Judah ; intended to complete the works 

 of Shuekford and Prideaux. 



Mr. W. Harvey announces an Account of 

 Hayti, from the Expulsion of the French to 

 the Death of Christophe. 



A volume of Original Prose Fictions, by 

 various authors, entitled, Tales of all Na- 

 tions, is in the press. 



The Poetical Works of Collins, with ample 

 Biographical and Critical Notes, by the Rev. 

 Alexander Dyce, is nearly ready. Also, the 

 Dramatic Works of John Webster ; now first 

 collected, with Notes, by the same Gentle- 

 man. 



The Angelo Anecdotes, containing Me- 

 moirs of the celebrated Fencing Master, An- 

 gelo, from the middle of the last Century to 

 the present time, with a muitiiude of Con- 

 temporary Notices, will be shortly published. 



The first number of a Series of Lithogra- 

 phic Views in the Brazils, together with 

 Scenes of the Manners, Customs, and Cos- 

 tume of the Inhabitants, from Drawings by 

 Maurice Ruguedas, a German artist, is on the 

 eve of publication. It will be accompanied 

 by letter-press description, under the super- 

 intendence of Baron Humboldt. 



A new work of the celebrated Le Brun, on 

 Comparative Physiognomy, is about to be 

 offered to the public. It consists of thirty- 

 seven large Designs in Lithography, by En- 

 gelmann and Co., developing the Relation 

 between the Human Physiognomy and that 

 of the Brute Creation ; with a Dissertation on 

 the System. 



The third number of Views in Scotland, 

 from Drawings by F. Nicholson, Esq., will 

 be shortly published. 



LIST OF NEW WORKS. 



EDUCATION, &C. 



The Elements of Plane Trigonometry, da- 

 signed for the Use of Students in the Uni- 

 veisity. By John Hind, M.A., late Fellow 

 4 P 



