WORKS PRINTED FOR TAYLOR AND WALTON. 



GENERAL EDUCATION. 



EVENING READINGS FOR DAY 

 SCHOLARS. 



By Mrs. Hippisley Tuckfield. 

 Part I.— Selectio.vs FROiM the Bible and Apocrypha. 

 Part II.— Proverbs, Maxims, and Axeceotes. 

 1 vol. 12mo, 34-. 6d. cloth. 



The TTo-k may also be had as follows. ■ — 



I. Scripture Ueadings. 12mo, sewed, I*. 6d. 



In sheets for mounting, 2s. 



As Little Horn Books. In Paper Packets, 4s. 6d. 



II. Proverbs, Maxi.ms, and Anecdotes. 12mo, sewed, 



1^. 6d. In sheets for niomiting, 2^. 

 As Little Horn Books. In Paper Packets, 4^. 6d. 



III. Facts in Natural History. (In the Press.) 



In the Little Horn Books the matter is broken up 

 into Short Lessons, and each Lesson is pasted on thick 

 b^o^\•n paper. These are intended to serve as Night 

 Tasks for Day Scholars. The difficult words in each 

 Lesson are carefully defined. 



LETTERS TO A CLERGYMAN 



On the Best Means of Employing Funds fob the 

 Education of the Lower Orders. 



By Mrs. Hippisley Tuckfield. Fcap. 8vo, 2*. 6d. 



" We are unable to do more than direct attention to 

 Mrs. Tuckfield 's ' Letters to a Clergyman,' although they 

 contain, in a small compass, matter of the deepest im- 

 port." — Westminster Review, No. t)7. 



EDUCATION FOR THE PEOPLE. 



By !Mrs. Hippisley Tuckfield, 

 Containing 



I. Pastoral Teaching. IV. Instruction of the 

 II. Village Teaching. Deaf and Dumb. 



III. The Teacher's Text- ' 



Book. Fcp. 8vo, 5s. 



THE SINGING-MASTER. 



Third Edition, revised and corrected. 8vo, 10*. 6d. 

 cloth lettered ; containing— 



No. 1. First Lessons in Singing and the Notation of 

 Music. Price 2*. 



No. 2. Rudiments of the Science of Harmony. Price 

 1*. 6d. 



No. 3. First Class TxmeBook. Price 1*. 6d. 

 No. 4. Second Class Tune-Book. Price 2*. 6d. 

 No. 5. Hymn Tune-Book. Price 2s. 6d. 



*^ Ai;y Part may be purchased sepai-ately. 



DUTCH AND GERMAN 

 SCHOOLS. 



An Account of the Present State of Education in Hol- 

 land, Belgium, and the German States, with a view to 

 the Practical Steps which should be taken for improv- 

 ing and extending tl.e means of Popular Instruction in 

 Great Britain and Ireland. 



By W. E. HiCKSON. 8vo, 2*. 6d. 



ELEMENTS OF 

 PERSPECTIVE DRAWING; 



Or, the Science of Delineating Real Objects. Being a 

 Slanual of Directions for Using a Set of Models, com- 

 posing a variety of Picturesque Forms. Suitable for 

 the Practice of Beginners. Designed by Augustus 

 Deacon. Illustrated with 8 Plates, 8vo, 4*. 



" The use of solid forms in drawing, instead of sketches 

 or prmts, has been for some time prevalent in the Go- 

 vernment schools of France and Germany. In the well- 

 reasoned and clearly-written pamphlet before us, an 

 attempt is made to increase the chances of success for that 

 method in En^la.nd."—JE:xaminer, Sept. 1641. 



*^* The particulars of the Models willbe/ound at p. 8. 



LINEAL DRAWING COPIES 



FOR the earliest INSTRUCTION ; 



Comprising 200 Subjects on 24 Sheets, mounted on 12 

 pieces of thick pasteboard. By the Author of " Draw- 

 ing FOR Young Children." In a Portfolio, 5s. 6d. 



*^ * These copies consist of Geometrical Figures and 

 Forms of simple objects, with the Roman and Writing 

 Alphabets in Capital and Small Letters. They are 

 printed white on a black ground. They may also be 

 used in teaching the Letters, in teaching Writing, and in 

 giving Lessons on the Elements of Form and Geometry. 



DRAWING COPIES FOR 

 ELEMENTARY INSTRUCTION. 



By the Author of " Drawing for Young Children." 



Set I. 12 Subjects mounted on thick pasteboard. 

 Price 3^. 6d. in a Portfolio. 



Set II. . . Ditto . Ditto. 



*^* The copies are sufficiently large and bold to be 

 drawn from by forty or fifty children at the same time. 



DRAWING MATERIALS. 



A Quarto Copybook of 24 leaves, common paper, 6d. 



Ditto . . Ditto . paper of superior 

 quality, 1^. 3d. 



Pencils, with very thick lead, BB. 2*. per half-dozen. 



Ditto . Ditto . F. at 1*. 6d. ditto. 



Drawing Chalk, 9d. per dozen sticks, in a Box. 



Port-crayons for holding the Chalk, id. each. 



HINTS TO MECHANICS 



ON SELF-EDUCATION AND MUTUAL 



INSTRUCTION. 



By Timothy Claxton. Fcap. 8vo, 4^. cloth. 



" the amusing book before us, which has all the 



ease and simplicity of De Foe, and tlie exemplarj- utiUty 

 of Franklin. To the mechanic it offers at once an example 

 and a pleasant companion in the pursuit of knowledge, 

 and to the general reader it affords a deep insight into 

 those labouring classes which are the sinews of the nation." 

 — Civil Engineer- and Archiied's Journol, Feb. 1839. 



