54 
MISCELLANEOUS ENGLISH LITERATURE. 
Bearings, Crests and Mottoes, from the ear- 
liest period to the present time, including the 
late Grants by the College of Arms. With an 
Introduction to Heraldry, and a Dictionary of 
Terms. Third Edition, with a Supplement ; 
one very large vol. imperial 8vo. beautifully 
printed in small type in double columns by 
Whittingham, embellished ivith an elaborate fron- 
tispiece, richly illuminated in gold and colours ; 
also woodcuts, extra cloth boards, full gilt bach, 
(pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. 5s 1844 
The uiost elaborate anil useful work of the kind 
ever published. It contains upwards of 30,000 ar- 
morial bearings, and incorporales all that have hitherto 
been given by Guillim, Eilmondson, Collins, Nisbet, 
Berry, Robson, and others ; besides many thousand 
names which have never appeared in any previous 
work. This volume, in fact, in a small compass, but 
without abridgment, contains more than four ordinary 
quartos. 
This book is interesting to every man in society. 
The contents not being merely of the day, there is no 
danger of its becoming obsolete, but like its prototype 
Edmondson, it must always remain a library book. 
BURNS' (ROBERT) COMPLETE POETICAL 
AND PROSE WORKS, including his 
Reliques, with an Account of his Life and 
Writings, and some Observations on the Cha- 
racter and Condition of the Scottish Peasantry, 
by James Currie, M.D. F.R.S., 7iew edition, 
with considerable Additions, including further 
particulars of the Author's Life, and new 
Notes, illustrative of his Poems and Letters, by 
his brother, Gilbert Burns, 5 vols. Svo. illus- 
trated by fine portrait by Nasmyth, facsimile of 
his hand-uniting, and 16 beautiful engravings 
after the designs of Thomas Stothard, extra gilt 
cloth, (pnh. at £3. 13s 6d) reduced to £1. 5s 1820 
BURNS' WORKS, complete, with Life by Allan 
Cunningham, and Notes by Sir Walter Scott, 
Campbell, Wordsworth, Lockbart, &c, royal 
8vo. fine portrait and plates, cloth lettered, (uni- 
form with Byron, (pub. at l"8s) reduced to 10s 6rf 
1842 
the same, morocco eitra,full gilt, £\. 
This is positively the only complete ediiion of Burns, 
in a single volume, Svo. It coniains not only every 
scrap which Burns ever wmle, whether prose or veise, 
butalso a considerable number of Scutch national airs, 
collected and illustr:ited by him (not given eUewhere) 
and lull and interesting accounts ol llie occasiuns and 
circuinstjncex ot his various wiitinas. The very com- 
plete ^ind interesting Life bj Allan Cuniiintiham alone 
occii|<ie> lOJ pa^es, and the Indiies and Glussary aie 
very copious. The whole forin'i a thick elegantly printed 
volume, eMeiiding in all ii.848 pages. The other eili- 
tion>, includiiii one publisiied in ^iinil.ir >hape, with 
an abrid-jcmmt of the Life by Allan (!iinnini;hatn, 
colnpli^ed in only 47 piges, and the whole wjlimie in 
only 504 pages, do nut contain above two-ihiirls of the 
abi.vt*. It seems the more necessary to call attintion 
to tlii-3 fact, as the edition referred to has lately been 
put forth as " the only complete edition." One mi- 
nute's comparison will be snflicieul to undeceive in this 
respect. 
CAMPBELL'S LIFE AND TIMES OF PE- 
TRARCH ; with Notices of Boccaccio and his 
illustrious Contemporaries. Second Edition, 
2 vols. 8vo. fine portraits and plates, extra cloth 
(pub. at £1. lis Gd) reduced to 12s 1843 
"The standard lite of Petrarch. The fortunes and 
career of the pott are traced with admirable distinct- 
ness ; his devoted passion for Laura is finely developed 
»nd characterized ; and his poetical character is ana- 
lyzed and estimated with all the pc-wer ot a kindred 
genius. Tiiis work must take it^ place in our libraries 
as one of the most interesting and important hiiturical 
works of our lime." — Athencfum, 
GARY'S MEMORIALS OF THE GREAT 
CIVIL WAR IN ENGLAND, from 1646 to 
1652, edited from Original Letters in the Bod- 
leian Library, of Charles I., Charles II., Queen 
Henrietta, Prince Rupert, Prince Maurice, 
Prince Charles Lodovic, Duke of York, Hyde 
Earl of Clarendon, Abp. Sancroft, Marqtiis of 
Worcester, Earl of Derby, Oliver Cromwell, 
Sir Thomas Fairfax, Sir Walter Strickland, Sir 
Arthur Haslerig, General Monk, General 
Poyntz, General Skippon, Colonel Ireton, 
Colonel Hammond, Admiral Deane, Admiral 
Blake, and numerous other eminent Persons, 
2 vols, 8vo. handsomely printed, extra cloth, (pub. 
at £ 1 . 8s) red uced to 1 2s . 1 842 
" We can safely recommend this work to all loveri 
of historical literature." — Literary Gazette. 
GARY'S TRANSLATION OF DANTE, fcap. Svo. 
extra cloth, (pub. at lOs 6d) reduced to 8s 6d 
1844 
Gary's version of Dante is unanimously allowed to 
be one of the most masterly productions of modero 
times. 
" Shelley always says that reading Dante is nnfa- 
vourable to writing, from its superiority to all possible 
com posit ions. " — Byron. 
TRANSLATION OF PINDAR, fcap. Svo. 
extra cloth, (pub. at 6.«) reduced to 4s 6d 
EARLY FRENCH POETS, a Series of No- 
tices and Translations, with an Introductory 
Sketch of the History of French Poetry. 
Edited by his Son, the Rev. Henry Gary, M.A. 
Worcester College, Oxford, fcap. 8vo. 
LIVES OF ENGLISH POSITS, from John- 
son to Kirke White, designed as a Continuation 
of Johnson's Lives. Edited by his Son, fcap. 
Svo. 
CHAMBERS'S LIFE OF KING JAMES L, 
2 vols. 18mo. ckth bds. (pub. at 7s) reduced to 
4s . 1830 
CHANDLER'S (DR. R.) TRAVELS IN ASIA 
MINOR AND GREECE, made at the ex- 
pense of the Society of Dilettanti, 2 vols, in 1 , 
4to. maps and plans, extra cloth, (pub. at £2. 2i) 
reduced to 12s . 1817 
GHANNING'S COMPLETE WORKS, the Li- 
brary EDITION, complete to the time of his 
decease, printed from the Author's corrected 
copies, transmitted to the English Publishers 
by the Author himself, 6 vols, post Svo. hand- 
somely printed, with a fine portrait, cloth lettered, 
(pub. at £2. 2s) reduced to £1. Is 1845 
"The works of Channing ate among the noblest 
productions of the human mind, and the richest gifts of 
a bountiiul God. Never since man was placed upon 
earth, has any one wiitten with more of the spirit of 
truth and of love. His words are remarkable for fit- 
ness and btautj, his thoughts are the effulgence of the 
eterUHl light, and his feelings are the tidiness of the 
heavenl> lite. It is impossible that his works should be 
read without piofil. li is impossible that they should 
be iiiiivei>allj diffused, without ettecting a beneficent 
revolution amongst every class, and in every institution 
ol society. " 
" Channing is unquestionably \.he finest tvr iter of the 
aye. From his writings may be extracted some of the 
richest poetry and richest conceptions, clothed in lan- 
guage, unlbrtunately for our literature, too little 
studied in the day in which we live." — 
Fraser'g Magazine. 
" We warmiyand heartily recommend Dr. Channing 
to the hands of every young man who is finishing bis 
^liicalion, and to every general reader who earnestly 
•iek> Ins own improveincnl." — Athenteum. 
" The Sermons of Dr. (/banning are astonishing pro- 
ductons, and deserve a high place in the library of 
every Divine throughout the worl^."-r-JVew Monthly 
