48 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



Each edition is given a number tor convenience of cross reference 

 in the bibliography itself. When an edition (other than a first edition) 

 ip mentioned by number, as, for example, "2nd éd.," it means that the 

 ■words " second edition " appear on the title page. The words "An. ed." 

 merely indicate that it is another edition. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



An Address on the Present Condition, Resources and Prospects of British 

 North America, delivered by special request at the City Hall, Glas- 

 gow, on the 25th March, 1857, by the Hon. Mr. Justice Haliburton. 

 Printed for gratuitous circulation, 



1. [1st éd.] London : Hurst é Blackett, 1857, 8vo. 



2. An. ed. Montreal, John Lovell, 1857, 8vo. pp. 17. 



Sabia, in error, gives " 47 pages." 



Dedicated to Hon. Andrew Orr, Lord Provost of Glasgow, and the 

 members of the Athenaeum (under whose auspices it was delivered). 



The Americans at Home; or, Byeways, BacTcwoods, and PraiHes. 

 Edited by the author of " Sam Slick." 



1. [1st ed.] Ivondon : Hurst & Blackett, 1854, 3 vols. 12mo. Vol. I, pp. xii, 



302; vol. IL pp. vii, 314; vol. IIL pp. vii, 351. (No plates). 



Sabin. Morgan, and others state that the first edition was 

 published in 1843; this is undoubtedly an error. 



2. An. ed. London: Hurst é Blackett, n.d., 3 vols, in 1, 12mo. pp. (8), 314. 



Frontispiece by Linley Sambourne. 



3. " " Philadelphia, T. B. Peterson, n.d., 12mo. Published under the 



title " Yankee Stories and Yankee Letters." 



4. " " London : Hurst d Blackett, 1873, 12mo. 



This work was intended as a companion to " Traits of American 

 Humour." 



"' In this highly entertaining work we are treated to another cargo 

 of capital stories from the inexhaustible stores of our Yankee friend — 

 all of them graphically illustrative of the ways and manners of Brother 

 Jonathan." — John Bull (London). 



Pirated editions of these stories appeared in the United States. The 

 pirating, however, was merely returning the stories to their country of 

 origin, as they were almost entirely taken from " Brother Jonathan's " 

 literature. 



The Attaché; or, Sam Slich in England. By the author of " The Clock- 

 maker; or, Sayings and Doings of Sam Slick," &c. 



First Series. 



1. [1st ed.l London : Richard Bentlev. 1S43, 2 vols. 12mo. Vol. I, pp. viii. 

 277, Vol. 11. pp. vi, 2.S9. 



