NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[July 21. 1855. 



BOOKS 

 FOR THE SEA-S1DE» 



POPULAR BRITISH SEA- 



WEEDS ! comprising all the MARINE 

 PI-ANTS. By the REV. DAVID LANDS- 

 BOROXIGH. Second Edition. With Twenty- 

 two Plates by FITCH. 10s. 6d. coloured. 



" The book is as well executed as it is well 

 timed. The descriptions are scientific as well 

 as popular, and tlie plates are clear and ex- 

 plicit. It is a worthy sea-side companion — 

 a handbook for every resident on the sea- 

 shore." — £conomtsU 



" Profusely illustrated with specimens of the 

 rarious sea-weeds, beautifully drawn and ex- 

 quisitely coloured." — Sim. 



" Those who desire to make themselves ac- 

 quainted with British sea- weeds cannot do 

 better than befrin with this elegantly illus- 

 trated manual." — Globe. 



POPULAR BRITISH ZOO- 



PHYTES. By the REV. DR. LANDS- 

 BOROUGH. With Twenty Plates by EITCH. 

 10«. 6d. coloured. 



" With this manual of Zoophytes, and that 

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 glean knowledge from every heap of tangled 

 wee.l that lies in his pathway." — Liverpool 

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POPULAR BRITISH 



CONCHOI OG Y : containine a familiar His- 

 tory of the Molluscs and Shells inhabitins the 

 British Isles. By G. B. SOWERBY, F.L.S. 

 With Twenty Plates. 10s. 6d. coloured. 



" The name of Sowerby is a guarantee that a 

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" The natural history of MuUuscous animals 

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" An excellent little work, eminently popu- 

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POPULAR HISTORY OF 



MOLDTJSCA i or. Shells and their Animal 

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 Eighteen Plates by WING. 10s. 6cl. coloured. 

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PHYCOLOGIA 



BRITAN- 



NICA ; or, the History of the British Sea- 

 weeds ; containing Coloured Figures and de- 

 scriptions of all the Species of Alga3 inhabiting 

 the shores of the British Islands. By WIL- 

 LIAM HENRY HARVEY, M.D., M.R.LA.. 

 Keeper of the Herbarium of the University of 

 Dublin, and Professor if Botany to the Dul)lia 

 Society. The price of the work, complete, 

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£ 8. d. 

 In 3 vols. roj;al 8vo., arranged in order 



of publication - - - - -7 12 6 

 In 4 vols, royal 8vo., arranged syste- 

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 ««* A few Copies have been printed on large 

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 " The ' History of British Seaweeds ' we can 

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A CATHOLIC HISTORY OF ENGLAND. 



The Anglo-Saxon Period. Complete in Three 

 Volumes. 



This Day is published, price 18s., the Third and 

 Concluding Volume of 



A CATHOLIC HISTORY OF 

 ENGLAND. By WILLIAM BER- 

 NARD MAC CABE. 



" In days like these, when so many of our 

 new books are but old ones newly dressed up, 

 a work of original research, and tor which the 

 materials have been accumulated by the 

 writer with great labour and diligence, de- 

 serves especial commenlation. Of such a cha- 

 racter is the ' Catholic History of England ; 

 its Rulers, Clergy, and Poor, before the Re- 

 formation, as described by the Monkish His- 

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 which the third volume, extending from the 

 reign of Edward the Martyr to the Norman 

 Conquest, has just been published. The vo- 

 lumes bear evidence in every page that they 

 are, as the author describes them, ' tlie results 

 of the writing and research of many hours — 

 the only hours for many years that I had to 

 spare from other and harder toils.' Himself a 

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 will deny the charm with which Mr. MacCobe 

 has invested his ' History,' by his admirable 

 mode of making the old monkish writers tell 

 their own story," — Notes and Queries. 



"Mr.MacCabe's mode of composition is as 

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 translated directly from the original, with all 

 their natural vigour of language, are connected, 

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 design and continuity. He then fuses info one 

 whole centuries of observation and narrative, 

 and iu fact revives those dead monks and 

 scribes till they write his book. The plan is 

 not only new, but it was necessary, as the 

 reader will find if he compare the garbled and 

 inaccurate version given by Hume and some 

 other writers, with the original statements of 

 the same events incorporated in these pages. 

 He will also be better able to understand, when 

 this universality of authorities is explained, 

 why this book should be called a 'Catholic 

 History.' The work is of great literary value." 

 — Times. 



"It treats the Anglo-Saxon period under a 

 phase quite ditlerent f : om that in which it is 

 viewed by Lingard in his Anglo-Saxon Anti- 



Suiiies. Lingard describes the doctrine and 

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 therefore, may be regardf d as the complement 

 of the other. Both are indispensable to every 

 English historical collection." _i>M6hn He- 

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T. C. NEWBY, Publisher, 30. Welbeck Street 

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Imp. 8T0., 21. 2s. 



ARCHITECTURAL STU- 



j[\ DIES IN FRANCE. By the REV. J. 

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London : BELL & DALDY, 186. Fleet Street. 



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