FIRST SERIES. 



21 



Books, notices of new, ^ 



Marriott on the Co-operative Principle, xi. 276. 



Marsden's Lectures on Archasology, v. 430. 



Martin's Bibliograpliical Catalogue, vi. 544. 



Matthew Paris's Chronicle, x. 76. 



Matthew of Westminster's History, viii. 90. 186. 



May Flowers, xi. 416. 



Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor, 



iv. 413. 

 Mayne's Voyages in the Arctic Regions, xi. 75. 

 Mayo's Popular Superstitions, iii. 173. 

 Mediajval Costume of England, iii. 215. 293. 510. 

 Men of the Time in 1852, v. 190; in 1853, vii. 394. 

 Merlet's Dictionary of French Difficulties, iv. 478. 

 Michaud's History of the Crusaders, v. 286. 

 Miles' Nordufari, or Rambles in Iceland, x. 336. 

 Miller's Fly-leaves, viii. 656; xi. 40. 

 Mitchel's Orbs of Heaven, iv. 303. 

 Jlitford's Notes on Beaumont and Fletcher, xii. 442. 

 Moore's History of British Ferns, v. 18. 

 Moorland Cottage, ii. 523. 



Morgan's (Prof, de) Book of Almanacks, iii. 381. 

 Morgan's History of Caldicot Castle, x. 76. 

 Mormonism (Traveller's Library), x. 196. 

 Mormons, or Latter-day Saints, iv. 303. 

 Morris's Selections from Daniel's Works, xi. 355. 

 Mother and Son, a tale, xi. 19. 

 Mottoes, the Book of, iii. 31. 

 Mouse and her Friends, xi. 19. 

 Muffing's Constantinople and St. Petersburg, xi. 



216. 

 Munch's Chronicle of Norway, ii. 430. 

 Munch's Scandinavian History, ix. 410. 

 Murray's Hand-Book of Church and State, x. 536. 

 Murray's Hand-Book of Modern London, iv. 126. 



Murray's Official Hand-Book of Church and State, 

 V. 142. 



Murray's Railway Readings, v. 383; vii. 465. 



Museum of Classical Antiquities, vii. 513. 



Museum of Science and Art, ix. 66. 



Musgrave's Rambles through Normandy, xi. 115. 



Myvyrian Archaeology of Wales, iii. 253. 



Myrtle's Home and its Pleasm*es, v. 213. 



National Cyclopaedia, iii. 341. 



National Gallery Report, Protest against, xi. 356. 



National Miscellany, vii. 490; Vol. L, viii. 577. 



Neale's Islamism, its Rise and Progress, x. 40. 



Neander's General History, Vol. VI., v. 69, 



Neander's General History of the Christian Religion, 

 iv. 126. 



Neander's History of the Church, iii. 414. 526. 



Neander's Planting of the Christian Church, iv. 

 303. 



Netherclift's Autograph Miscellany, ix. 289. 



Newland's Seasons of the Church, xii. 462. 



Newman's Regal Rome, v. 285. 



Newton's Map of London and Westminster, xii. 441. 



Nicolini's History of the Jesuits, x. 176. 



Nineveh : the Buried City of the East, iii. 311. 



Noctes AmbrosianfB, xii. 216. 355. 



Notaj Ferales, a few Words on the Modern System 

 of Interment, iv. 14. 



Oersted on the Soul in Nature, v. 382. 



Official Catalogue of the Great Exhibition, iv. 459. 



Books, notices of new, — 



Ogilvie's Supplement to the Imperial Dictionary, xi. 



136. 376 ; xii. 56. 

 Old Roads and New Roads, vi. 450. 

 Old Week's Preparation, xi. 456. 

 Oliphant's Plea for Painted Glass, xi. 296. 

 Ordericus Vitalis' Ecclesiastical History, viii. 5£8. 

 Ovid's Fasti, translated, iii. 526. 

 Ovid's Metamorphoses, translated, iv. 303. 

 Owen's translation of Aristotle, viii. 90. 

 Oxford Pocket Classics, xi. 456. 

 Paleario on the Benefit of Christ's Death, xii. 75. 

 Palgrave's History of Normandy, iii. 293. 

 Paragraph English Bible, xii. 356. 

 Parkei-'s edition of the Classics, xii. 196. 442. 

 Parker's Church Calendar, xii. 442. 

 Fault's K(3nig iElfred und seine Stelle in der Ges- 



chichte Englands, iv. 166. 

 Pauli's Life of Alfred, vii. 562. 

 Pennsylvania, History of, xii. 315. 

 Penny Maps, ii. 398. 



Pepys's Diary and Correspondence, ix. 234. 

 Pereira's Lectures on Polarised Light, x. 316. 

 Petit's Architectural Studies in France, ix. 313. 

 Pfeiffer's (Madame) Voyage round the World, ir. 

 373. 



Philobiblon Society Miscellany, xi. 395. 



Philo-Judaeus' Works, x. 256. 516; xi. 156. 



Phippen's Practical Experiments, viii. 138. 



Pindar's Odes translated, v. 69. 



Planche"s Pursuivant of Arms, or Heraldry founded 

 upon Facts, iv. 459. 



Plato, translated by G. Burges, iii. 399. 



Pliny's Natural Histoiy, translated, xi. 276. 496. 



Poetry of the Year, vi. 593. 



Polo (Marco), his Travels, x. 396. 



Poole's Horae Egyptiacse, iii. 398. 



Postulates and Data, vi. 234. 



Price's Norway and its Scenery, vii. 561. 



Prior's Life of Edmund Burke (Bohn), xi. 296. 



Procter's History of Common Prayer, xi. 256. 



Pryce's Memorials of the Canynges, ix. 138. 



Pulieyn's Etymological Compenciium, vii. 465. 



Pulman's Book of the Axe, ix. 387. 



Pumphrey's Photographic Illustrations, vi. 593. 



Raine's Memoir of Robert Surtees, vi. 66. 



Ranke's History of Servia, viii. 607. 



Redding's History of Modern Wines, iv. 365. 



Bedding's The Stranger in London, iv. 166. 



Reeve's (Dr.) on an Ancient Irish Ecclesiastical 

 Bell, ii. 142. 



Remains of Pagan Saxondom, viii. 577. 



Remembrance of Drachenfeld, xi. 216. 



Retrospective Review, vi. 450; ix. 162. 458. 



Reumont's Carafas of Maddaloni, ix. 210. 



Reynard the Fox, vii. 273. 369. 465. 



Reynolds' (Sir Joshua) Works, v. 430. 



Rhind's British Antiquities, xii. 156. 



Rich's Legend of St. Peter's chair, iii. 254. 



Richardson on the Study of Language, x. 536. 



Riddle's History of the Papacy, x. 395. 



Rimbaull's Musical Illustrations of Percy's Re- 

 liques, iii. 46. 



Kimbault's Songs and Ballads, iii. 470. 



