MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITEUATURE. 
53 
siderably enlarged by Sir Henry Ellis, 3 vols, 
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trations, ornamental wvapyr, (pub. at 15s) re- 
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. the same, 3 vols, cloth lettered^ (pub. at 18«) 
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one in 2 vols. 4lo. piiblislied by Sir Henry Ellis in 
1843, with considerable additions, and a copious lii(T«x. 
BRITANNIA AFTER THE ROMANS; being 
an attempt to illustrate the Religious aiul 
Political Revolutions of tliat Province in the 
Fifth and succeeding Centuries. 4to. {only 250 
copies printed) cloth boards, £1. 10s 1842 
the same, Vol. 2, 4to. cloth boards, 10s 1842 
For a sequel to 'his work, sec Neoilinidic Heresy. 
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ALPS, the Pennine, Grainn, Cottian, Rhetian, 
Lepontian, and Bernese, post 8vo. turge nnip, 
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BRODIE'S HISTORY OF THE BRITISH 
EMPIRE, from the Accession of Charles 1. 
to the Restoration; with an Introduction 
tracing the Progress of Society, and of the 
Constitution, from the Feudal Times, 4 vols. 
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reduced to £1. lis 6rf 1822 
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Professor Smyth's Lectures on Mod. Jiitt, 
BROWNE'S (SIR THOMAS) WORKS, com- 
plete ; including his Vulgar Errors, Religio 
Medici, Urn Burial, Christian ftlorals, Corre- 
spondence, Journals, and Tracts, many of them 
hitherto Unpublished ; the whole collected and 
edited, with a New IMemoir, Notes, and Intro- 
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lected. The latter contain passages of great power, 
hardly inlcrior to the finest parts ot the works by which 
his fame is established." — Athenaum. 
" Sir Thomas Browne, the contemporary of Jeremy 
Taylor, Hooker, Bacon, Selden and Robert Burton, is 
undoubtedly one of the most eloquent and poetical of 
that great literary era. His thouuhts are often truly 
sublime, and alway.s conveyed in the most impressive 
language." — Chambers. 
" Dr. Johnson secretly and unremittingly formed his 
style upon the basis of that of Sir Thomas Browne, 
a name in every respect worthy of griitelnl remem- 
brance. Soulluy, in several of his critical labours in 
the Quarterly Review, shows how loudly and familiarly 
he has made himselt acquainted with the prototype of 
Johnson."— Diftdm's Library Compatiivn- 
"A great English writer; he ennobles and conse- 
crates whatever he touches. Past and priseiil, life 
and dissolution, lime and immortality, seem to meet 
in his works as in a fane ' lor festal purpose.' Never 
surely by any other writer has so much sentiment been 
put into the dry bones of antiquity." — 
Retrospective Review. 
"A superior genius is exhibited in Sir 'J'homai 
Browne. His mind was fertile and ingenious: his ana- 
logies original and brilliant; and his learning so much 
out of the beaten path that it gives a peculiar and un- 
common air to all his writmgs." — Ilallam. 
"The Ucligio Medici was no sooner published than 
it excited iliK attention of the public by the novelty of 
its paradoxes, the dignity of senliment, thr quick suc- 
cession of images, the multitude of abstruse allusions, 
the subtlety of disquisition, and the strength of lan- 
gnagc." — Dr. Johruon. 
BUCKINGHAM'S AMERICA, Historical, Sta- 
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— Southern or Slave States, 2 vols. — Canada, 
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£6. 10s 6d) reduced to £2. 12s 6d 1341-43 
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formation, presented to the leader In a clear, unaliected, 
juilicious, and agreeable manner." 
" Mr. Buckingham goes deliberately through the 
States, treating ol all, historically and statistically — 
of their rise and progress, their manufactures, trade, 
population, topography, fertility, re.«oiirces, morals, 
manners, and educaiion. His volumes will be found a 
storehouse of kncivledye." — A thenceum. 
" A very entire and comprehensive view of the United 
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and observaiion." — Literary Ga/.etle. 
" One of the most interesting series of works, de- 
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from the Press. The extensive geographical range of 
the country traversed by our expeiienccd traveller — 
the multiplicity of subjects which have occupied his 
pen — his very agreeable style of composition — the 
ability and tact with which he has blended historical 
and statialical matur with liijht delineations of man. 
ners and customs— combine to produce a book ef 
travels coniaimng litiTartj ana unsurpassed for norelty ^ 
comprehendveness, and interest^ in any extant work.'' 
East India Telegraphy 
BURGESS'S HAND-BOOK FOR TRA- 
VELLERS IN GREECE AND THE 
LEVANT, or Diary of a Summer's Excur- 
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14s) reduced to 5s 1835 
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BURKE'S (EDMUND) COMPLETE WORKS, 
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reduced to £3. 13s 6cZ 1845 
The present edition of Burke's works includes the 
whole of his speeches, and is more complete than any 
one which has liilherto appeared. It comprises the 
entire contents of the former edition of his works in 
sixteen octavo volumes, including two volumes of 
speeches <m the trial of Hastings, published in 1827, 
and which have never before been republished ; also a 
reprint of the work f • titled, " An Account of the 
European Settlemer in America," which though 
published anonymousiy, is well known to have been 
written by Burke, but is not contained in the English 
edition of his works. 
WORKS, with a Biographical and Critical 
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(pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. 10s 1841 
" Shakspeare and Burke arc, if I may venture on 
the expression, above talent. Burke was one of the 
first thinkers, as well as one of the greatest orators, 
of his time. He is without any parallel in any age or 
country, except perhaps Lord Bacon and Cicero, and 
his works contain an ampler store of political and 
mor.d wisdom than can be found in any other writer 
whatever." — Sir J. Mackintosh. 
"The compositions of Burke are master-pieces. Who 
can withstand the fascination and magic of his elo- 
quence? The excursions of his genius iwe immense. 
His imperial fancy has laid all nature under tribute, 
I and has collected riches from every scene of the 
^ creation, and every walk of art. He who can read 
/lis works without pleasure mast resign all pretensions 
to taste and sensibility."— ifofterf Hail. 
BURKE'S ENCYCLOPyli^DIA OF HERAI.- 
DRY, OR GENERAL ARMORY OF 
ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, AND IRE- 
LAND, comprieing a Registry of all Armorial 
