498 LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. 



For some moments Mr. Turner lay upon the rock insensible ; but a voice from 

 two Europeans, exclaiming, " Turner's killed !" roused him, and, jumping up on 

 his feet, he cried out, " I'm worth twenty dead men yet ! " — Being taken into the 

 camp, his wounds were carefully examined and dressed, and happily pronounced 

 not mortal. The result justified the decision, for, by careful treatment, Mr. Tur- 

 ner so far recovered as to be able to re-visit the scene of the battle, in about a 

 month from the period when it took place. The dead body of the Tiger was 

 found, the morning after the affray, upon the bank of a small rivulet, whither 

 he had gone to quench his thirst. Mr. Turner very naturally observes, that the 

 recollection of this perilous conflict, though more than thirty years have now 

 rolled over since its occurrence, is still frequently attended with mingled emotions 

 of wonder and terror. 



LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. 



Messrs. Longman & Co. announce that they have in the press a work entitled 

 Sketches of Natural History, by Charles Waterton, Esq., the well-known 

 author of Wanderings in South America. — Mr. T. Gisborne, M.A., has published 

 Considerations on Modern Theories of Geology (London : Cadell, 1837), which we 

 may perhaps be able to notice further on a future occasion. 



END OP THE SECOND VOLUME. 



