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27 



SANDFORD.-WOMAN IN HER SOCIAL AND DOMESTIC CHARACTER. 



By Mrs. John Sandford. 6th Edition. Foolscap Sto.6«. cloth. 



SANDFORD.— FEMALE IMPROVEMENT. 



By Mrs. John Sandford. New Edition. Foolscap 8vo.7». cloth. 



SEAWARD.— SIR EDWARD SEA WARD'S NARRATIVE OF HIS SHIPWRECK, 



and consequent Discovery ot certain Islands in the Caribbean Sea: with a Detail of many 

 extraordinary and highly interesting Events in his Life, from 1/33 to 1749, as written in his 

 own Diary. Edited by Bliss Jane Porter. New Edition. 2 vols, post Svo. 21*. cloth. 



SEDGWICK.— A HISTORY OF FRANCE 



For the Use of Schools and Youn^ Persons. From the Earliest Period to the Revolution 

 oflS4S. Edited by the Rev. John Sedgwick, M. A. Demy of Magdalene College, Oxford; 

 and one of the Masters in the Ordnance School, Carshalton. Foolscap 8vo. 



\_Nearly ready. 



SELECT WORKS OF THE BRITISH POETS: 



From Chaucer to Withers. With Bioijraphical Sketchei, by R.Southey, LL.D. Medium 

 Svo. 30». cloth i or, with gilt edges, 31». 6rf. 



SELECT WORKS OF THE BRITISH POETS: 



From Ben Jonsou to Coleridge. With Biographical and Critical Prefaces by Dr. Aikin. 

 A New Edition, with additional Selections, from more recent Poets, by Lucy Aikin. Medium 

 Svo. ISs. cloth, 

 •,* The peculiar feature of these tuo ttorkt i>, that the Poems included are prirtted entire 

 uit/iout mutilation or abridgment. 



SENIOR.— CHARLES VERNON : 



A Transatlantic Tale. By Lieut. -Colonel Henry Senior. 2 vols, post Svo. 21». boards. 

 " There are very few readers whose taste is not consulted in these volumes. We pay them 

 a high compliment when we say that we rend them at one refreshing draught. They treat of 

 love, prosperous, then unhappy, andJinnUy prosperous again ; of sea fights and landjights — 

 of being almost sold to slavery, and thence redeemed by braving terrible perils; of bold 

 adventures in escaping through surrounding ejtemies; of IVest Indian conjlagrations and 

 unsparing hurricanes; of descriptions of Creole and negro life ; of the idleness and cruelty 

 of Colonial owners and consumers , of the forced labour and ill-treatment of the producers ; 

 and finally, the Author, transplanting his literary progeny from trans- to cii- atlantic 

 localities, causes them to terminate their adventures happily in Somersetshire and Hamp- 

 shire," — Observer. 



THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT. 



Intended as a Birthday-Present, or Gift-Book for all Seasons. Printed in Gold and Colours, 

 in the Missal Stvle ; with Ornamental Borders by Owen Jones, Architect, and an Illuminated 

 Frontispiece by \V. Boxall, Esq. A new edition. Foolscap 4to. in a rich brocaded silk cover, 

 2Is.; or bound in morocco, by Hayday, 2oj. 



SHAKSPEARE, BY BOWDLER. 



THE FAMILY SHAKSPEARE, in which nothing is added to the Original Text ; but those 

 Words and Expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud. By T. 

 Bowdler, Esq. F.R.6. New Edition. Svo. with 36 Illustrations after Smirke, etc., 21*. 

 cloth i or, without Illustrations, 8 vols. Svo. 4/. I4». 6d. boards. 



SHORT V/HIST: 



Its Rise, Progress, and Laws ; with the recent Decisions of the Clubs, and Observations to 

 make any one a Whist Player. Containing also the Laws of Piquet, Cassino. Ecarte, Cribbage, 

 Backgammon. By Major A * * « ♦ * New Edition. Towhich are added. Precepts forTyros. 

 By Mrs. B * * * * * Foolscap Svo. 3». cloth, gilt edges. 



THE GOOD SHUNAMMITE. 



From the Scriptures— 2 Kings, chap. IV. 8 to 37. With Six Original Designs by A. Klein, 

 and an Ornamental Border to each page, in the Missal style, by L. Gruner. Printed in 

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SINCLAIR— THE BUSINESS OF LIFE. 



By Catherine Sinclair, author of "The Journey of Life," "Jane Bonverie,'' "Modern 

 Accomplishments," " Modern Society," etc. 2 vols. fcap. Svo. 10*. cloth. 



" The book, without being of a directly devotional character, or belonging to the class of 

 light reading, combijies several of the best qualities of both, arid makes general literature 

 and entertaining anecdote serve as handmaids to religions instruction. We have seen many 

 pompous treatises containing not half the talent or a tithe nf the knowledge compressed into 

 these unpretending Itttle iioTamcj."— Britannia. 



