articles on subjects of General I,ilerature, Science, and Art, every new work of merit, in each 

 these branches of liberal pursuit, will be analysed and described in such terms as the unfette) 

 judgment of the Reviewer may dictate, without reference to party interests or to private viewj 

 as the Proprietors of The Sphynx include neither political partisans nor interested publishers 

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In a third department of the same Paper will be presented a faithful Chronicle of Public £iv.., 

 whether foreign or domestic, literarj' or political, condensed and arranged in such a mannei- as t 

 comprise every thing important, in the fewest words compatible with clearness and fidelitv ; aild 

 accompanied with comment and illustration wherever it may be deemed necessary. In this ilt- 

 partmcnt will also be comprehended the original communications of public writers from every 

 part of the globe, especially from France, Italy, Germany, and Spain, including some of tlK 

 leading political and literary characters in each; and these communications will occasionally 

 appear in the languages of the respective countries, wherever this may be thought useful, to 

 preserve the accuracy and spirit of the original, either in thought or expression. From the most 

 distant parts of Asia, Africa, and America, information will also be given, especially that which 

 relates to the capabilities of new marts for British capital and industry in regions so unjustlv 

 closed to the enterprise of Englishmen, though open to every other flag that floats upon the sea.' 

 To embrace this copious variety of interesting topics, and at the same time to admit ol 

 space sufficient to do justice to them all, The Sphynx will be printed on the largest sheet of 

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 purpose : but, for the ease of reading and the convenience of preservation as a Record, it will be 

 published in a quarto fonn, including sixteen pages in each number, which will be of an interme- 

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 each of these it will unite and improve, without exceeding either of them in price, which, with the 

 stamp necessary to secure free circulation by post, is one shilling per weekly number. It will 

 thus form, every year, two royal quarto volumes, of upwards of tour hundred pages each, with 

 titles, indexes, &c. ; making a complete and handsome set of books for the library, at a cost of two 

 guineas and a half per annum, though including as much labour, research, and original writing, as 

 in the same number of quarto volumes, printed and published in the ordinary manner, would pro- 

 duce at least ten times that amount of price. 



The Sphynx will be placed under the editorship and management of Mr. Buckingham, 

 the author of Travels in Palestine, Syria, and Slesopotamia, whose experience, connections, 

 correspondence, and character, are already sufficiently known. The powerful support of other 

 literaiy and political pens has also been secured ; and with this union of varied powers and 

 resources, it will form the constant aim of its contributors to select, trom the myriads of succes- 

 sive objects that float before the public eye, such only as are calculated to promote the great 

 interests of their country and mankind. On this principle, it will join to its discussions on the 

 leading topics of Politics and Literature, a careful attention to the operations of that new arm 

 of power, which jNIercantile and ilanufecturing intelligence and wealth have elevated to an 

 equal rank with Landed and Agricultural property in the State, whether as respects its contribu- 

 tion to the resources of the nation, or its influence on the happiness of the people ; and keeping 

 constantly in view the characteristic charm of the Colossal Work which it has chosen for its model, 

 and the importance of mingling pleasure with information in all its details, it will endeavoiir so to 

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The Paper will be printed on Saturday, in order to admit of its including a complete analysis, 

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required supply. ■ ~ 



OiVice of Publication, No. 147, (between Waterloo Bridge and Somerset House,) Strand. 



rrlnled by D. S. Maurice, 147, Strand. 



