( 13 ) 



^ogages anir ®xabel& 



VI. 



THE COLUMBIA RIVER ; or, Scenes and 

 Adventures during a Residence of Six Years 

 the Western Side of the Rocky Mountains, 

 among various Tribes of Indians hitherto un- 

 known: together with Journey across the Ame- 

 rican Continent. By Ross Cox. (Just 

 ready.) 



II. 



NARRATIVE of a RESIDENCE in ABYS- 

 SINIA. By Nathaniel Pearce, to which is 

 prefixed a Memoir, written by himself. In S 

 vols, post 8vo. (Nearly ready.) 



III. 



CAPTAIN BEECHEY, R.N. 



A VOYAGE to the PACIFIC and BEH- 

 RING'S STRAIT, for the purpose of Discovery 

 and of Co-operating with the Expeditions under 

 Captains Parry and Franklin, performed in 

 H.M.S. Blossom, in the Years 1825, 26, 27, and 

 28, by Captain F. W. Beechey, R.N. F.R.S. 

 In 1 vol. with numerous Plates engraved by 

 Finden. 



" This work is a lasting; monument of his own abi- 

 lities, and an honour to big country. We have not 

 seen a production which could reflect greater lustre 

 upon the talents and character of an individual, than 

 this does upon the talents and character of Captain 

 Beechey. The designs and drawings, excellent in their 

 original forms, are here admirably multiplied by the 

 genius of E. Finden, and other distinguished artists." 

 — Literary Gazette. 



" It is full of valuable information."— Athen2eum. 



IV. 



MAJOR THE HON. GEORGE KEPPEL. 



NARRATIVE of a JOURNEY ACROSS 

 the BALCAN, by the two Passes of SELIMNO 

 and PRAVADI, and of a Visit to Azani, and 

 other Newly-discovered Cities in Asia Minor, 

 in 1829-30. By Major the Hon. George Keppel, 

 F.S.A. In 2 vols. 8vo. with Maps and Plates. 



" Major Keppel's narrative is altogether so amusing 

 that the reader is quite carried away by the manner 

 as well as the matter. Interesting information, enter- 

 taining anecdote, and clear description vary every 

 page, and render these volumes an extremely pleasant 

 contribution to the class of travels."— Literary Gazette. 



" A work abounding in information and entertain- 

 ment." — Athenaeum. 



SIR ARTHUR DE CAPEL BROOKE, BT. 



SKETCHES IN SPAIN AND MOROCCO. 

 By Sir Arthur de Capell Brooke, Bart. 

 F.R.S. containing an Account of a Residence 

 in Barbary, and of an Overland Journey 

 from Gibraltar to England. In 2 vols. 8vo. 

 with Plates. (Nearly ready.) 



MRS. COL. ELWOOD. 



NARRATIVE of a JOURNEY OVER 

 LAND from ENGLAND to INDIA. By Mrs. 

 Elwood. In 2 vols. 8vo. with Plates. 



" Mrs. Colonel Elwood is the only lady who ever un- 

 dertook so hazardous an enterprise. In her passage 

 through the deserts and wildernesses, by the solitary 

 shores of the Red Sea, and over perilous ranges of 

 mountains, her faculty of observation seems never to 

 have forsaken her. The whole account of her adven- 

 tures is, indeed, something new in personal history." — 

 Sun. 



" These volumes are perfect models in their way. 

 They are charming and instructive, combining, with all 

 the agreeable qualities of the woman's mind and heart, 

 the better part of man, his thinking and reasoning fa- 

 culty. The work is just such a work as is creditable 

 to an accomplished and cheerful woman. * * * * 

 Jt is a work which has given us real pleasure, and which 

 we recommend to the consideration of all persons 

 who desire to be held as intelligent readers."— Atlas. 



VII. 

 THE WILD SPORTS OF THE WEST. 

 In 2 vols. 8vo. with numerous Plates. (Nearly 

 ready.) 



VIII. 



TRAVELS in GREECE and ALBANIA. 

 By the Rev. T. S. Hughes, B.D. of Emmanuel 

 College, Cambridge. Octavo Edition, in 2 

 vols, with numerous Additions and 33 Illustra- 

 tions. 32s. 



" Since the publication of Eustace's interesting Tour 

 in Italy, no book, perhaps, has appeared which has 

 created a more general interest than this work. It 

 may undoubtedly be considered as the most per- 

 fect and best digested book on Greece which has yet 

 been published." — Courier. 



" Unquestionably a work of considerable value in 

 many points of view, whether considered with refer- 

 ence to Greek travel, to the modern state of the coun- 

 try, or to its ancient literature and classic remains." — 

 Lit. Gaz. 



" The second edition in octavo of this valuable work 

 on Greece, which has taken its stand as an universal 

 companion to the Grecian historians and poets, is illus- 

 trative not only of the topography and antiquities of 

 Albania, the Morea, and the Archipelago, but is equally 

 comprehensive as regards the cradle of the Muses — Sicily. 

 No scene of any famous event, no mountain or valley, 

 lake or river, hallowed by the poets, — no renowned edi- 

 fice, or magical piece of sculpture, is left unexplored or 

 unexamined by actual research on the spot." — Globe. 



IX. 



CAPTAIN ALEXANDER'S TRAVELS to 

 the SEAT of WAR in the EAST. In 2 vols. 

 8vo. with Map and 20 Illustrations. 



" Information could not be presented in a pleasanter 

 form than in this officer's travels. Gossip, military and 

 social, takes its turn with adventure and description ; 

 professional observations are mixed up with personal 

 anecdotes ; the scenes are varied, the objects curious, 

 the subject important, and the people he travels among 

 imperfectly known, and in every point of view interest- 

 ing." — Spectator. 



" His information cannot fail to be regarded as very 

 valuable."— Mon. Rev. 



