NEW BURLINGTON STREET, 



London, April, 1831. 



NEW WORKS 



PUBLISHED BY 



HENRY COLBURN AND RICHARD BENTLEY. 



A COMPANION TO THE WAVERLEY NOVELS. 



STANDARD NOVELS AND ROMANCES. 



Messrs. Colburn and Bentley beg to acquaint the public, that it is their intention to pro- 

 duce Cheap Editions of the best Novels and Romances, written subsequently to the time of 

 Fielding and Smollett. . . . 



The strong and universal hold which vivid exhibitions of life maintain on the curiosity ot 

 readers of every age and every class, is too well known to require comment ; it is equally cer- 

 tain that he who reads them attentively may acquire, without the bitterness and the danger of 

 experience, that knowledge of his fellow-creatures, which, but for such aid, could, in the 

 majority of cases, only be attained at a. time of life, when it would be too late to turn it to 

 account. But as manners change, and as character (which often depends on manners) varies, 

 the " mirror held up to nature" must change also ; and it follows that those fictions must be the 

 most interesting and profitable to the reader, which present him with pictures of modern adven- 

 ture, and of existing conditions of society in every class of life. _ 



To enable the great mass of the public to enjoy such Works, the possession of which has 

 hitherto been chiefly confined to the wealthy classes, is the object of the present undertaking, 

 for the accomplishment of which, the Proprietors have within their power opportunities which 

 they believe are not at the command of any other publishers. 



The first number, published on the 1st of March, contains the whole of THE PlLOl by 

 Mr. Cooper for 6s. The Second Number, published on the 1st of April, contains the whole 

 of Godwin's celebrated story of CALEB WILLIAMS. 



No III. to be published May 2, will contain the whole of THE SP\ , by Cooper, corrected and 

 revised bu the Author, with a new Introduction and Notes written by himself expressly for this publication. 

 The additional matter thus provided, will be chiefly explanatory of the origin of the lale, 

 and of some of the principal incidents; with an account of the actual individuals from whom 

 the leading characters of the Stories are sketched. fl , T uAnr>T?TT« fWATiQAW" 



No. IV. will contain Miss Jane Porter's Popular Romance of " THADDEUS of WARSAW. 



The Volumes will range in the library with the Waverley Series, but they will comprise 

 a much greater quantity of matter— a quantity indeed equal to two, and sometimes to three 

 ordinary volumes. A number will be published on the 1st of every month, beautifully printed 

 and illustrated with Engravings, from designs by eminent artists, price 6s. neatly bound. 



Orders received at every Bookseller's throughout the kingdom, where also Prospectuses and 

 specimens of the Plates may be seen. 



THE NATIONAL LIBRARY. 



The Proprietors of this Work feel themselves stimulated to fresh exertions, by the distin- 

 o-uished favour with which it has already been received. _ 



The Volumes of the National Library already before the world may be confidently appealed 

 to as proofs of zeal on the part of the Proprietors, to engage, without regard to expense, the 

 assistance of writers of high celebrity, and to present to their readers a series of Productions, 

 which, as they are connected, not with ephemeral, but with permanent subjects, may, years 

 hence as well as now, be resorted to for lively amusement as well as solid instruction. 



The Life of the illustrious Byron, by Mr. Galt, who was personally known to the poet, has 

 now been stamped by the concurrent voice of the public with the character of a standard work- 

 authentic in particulars and dispassionate in judgment. That it should at first .haveme with 

 opposition, was an inevitable consequence of the task, since the very name of Byron conjures 

 up at once a host of angry disputants, who, having each his own theory to support, cannot .all 

 concur in the statements and opinions of the biographer be these what they may. The 

 Memoir in question has, however, been so fortunate as already to rise superior to its assailants. 



