76 



NOTES AND QUEKIES. 



[No. 168. 



Now ready, in Seven Volumes, medium 4to,, cloth, pp. 4,167, Price Fourteen Guineas, 



THE ANNALS OF IRELAND; 



From the Original of the Four Masters, from the earliest Historic Period to the Conclusion in 1616 ; 

 consisting of the Irish Text from the Original MSS., and an English Translation, with copious Explana- 

 tory Notes, an Index of Names, and an Index of Places, by John O'Donovan, Esq., liL.D., Barrister at 

 Law ; Professor of the Celtic Language, Queen's College, Belfast. 



Extract from the Dublin Review, 



" We can but hope, within the limited space at our disposal, to render 

 a scanty and imperfect measure of justice to a work of such vast extent 



and varied erudition We would be? the reader, if he be 



disposed to doubt our opinion, to examine almost every single page out 

 of the four thousand of wliich the work consists, in order that he may 

 learn the true nature and extent of Mr. O'Donovan's editori.al labours. 

 Let him sec the numberless minute verbal criticisms ; the elaborate 

 topographical annotations with wliich each page is loaded ; tlie his- 

 torical, genealogical, and biographical notices ; tlie lucid and ingtnious 

 jUustrations, drawn from the ancient laws, customs, traditions, and 

 institutions of Ireland j the parallelisms and discrepancies of the narra- 



tive with that of other annalists, both native and foreign ; the countless 

 autliorities which arc examined and adjusted ; the errors which are 

 corrected ; the omissions and deficiencies supplied ; in a word, tlie 

 curious and various learning which is everywhere displayed. I^et him 

 remember the mines from which all those treasures have been drawa 

 are, for the most part, unexplored ; that the materials thus laudably ap- 

 plied to the illustration of the text are iu great part manuscripts which 

 TJssher and Ware, even Waddy and Colgen, not to speak of Lynch and 

 Lanigan, liad never seen, or left unexamined ; many of them ia a 

 language whicli is to a great extent obsolete." 



A Prospectus of the Work will be forwarded gratis to any application made to the Publishers. 



Dublin : HODGES & SMITH, Grafton Street, Booksellers to the University. 

 London : LONGMAN & Co. ; and SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, & Co. 



Now ready, small 4to., handsomely bound in cloth, il. 2s. ; morocco, 2Z. lit. 5d. 



POETRY OF THE YEAR, 



PASSAGES PROM THE POETS 



DESCRIPTIVE OF 



THE SEASONS. 



WITH TWENTY-TWO COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS 



FROM DRAWINGS BY THE FOLLOWING EMINENT ARTISTS. 



T. CBESWICK, B.A. 



C. DAVIDSON. 



W. LEE. 



J. MULLEK. 



E. DUNCAN. 



BIBKET FOSTER. 



D. COX. 

 H, LE JEUNE. 

 W. HEMSLEY. 

 C. BBANWHITE. 

 J. WOLF. 



C. WEIGALL. 



HARRISON WEIR. 



B. B. 



E. V. B. 



LUCETTE E. BARKER. 



" Christmas has seldom produced a gift-book more creditable to all 

 concerned in it than this beautiful volume. The poetry is well chosen ; 

 the passages being for the most part bits of real description, excellent 

 in their kind, from the writings of our poets, from the time of Lord 

 Surrey to that of Tennyson, with two or three beautiful bits from 

 American authors. Now and then a poem is inserted, which, if not 

 descriptive, is in spirit and feeling akin to the season to which it is 

 referred ; and this gives variety to what might otherwise be too great a 

 mass of description. As a book of extracts merely, it would be an 

 intelligent and creditable selection, made upon a distinct and coherent 

 plan. But the drawings of Messrs. Foster, Davidson, Weir, Creswick, 



Cox, Duncan, and Branwhite, arc a great addition to the volume ; and 

 the coloured engravings have been happy in catching the spirit and 

 character of the artists themselves. ...... 



" Though on a small scale, the feeling of some of the designs is ad- 

 mirable, specially those devoted to the illustration of spring and summer 

 _ the seasons which, both in poetry and painting, have the greatest 

 amount of honour in this volume. The publisher is cntitledto the praise 

 of great care and attention to the appearance of the book ; the colour 

 and texture of the paper, the type, and the binding are unexceptionable. 

 It is a book to do credit to any pvhlhher." — Guardian. 



GEORGE BELL, 186. Fleet Street. 



Printed by Thomas Clark Shaw, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. 5. New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of Txjndon ; and 



fublished by Geoiiok Bell, of No. 18(5. Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Duustau in the West, in the City of London, Publisher, at No. 186. 

 'leet Street aforesaid.— Saturday, January 15. 1853, 



