PUBLISHED BY LONGMAN, BEOWN, and CO. 



23 



The Traveller's Library being now com- 

 plete, the Publishers call attention to this 

 collection as well adapted for Travellers and 

 Emigrants, for School-room Libraries, the Libraries 

 of Mechanics' InstHutions, Young Men's Libraries, 

 the Libraries of Ships, and similar purposes. Tlie 

 separate volumes are suited for School Prises, 

 Presents to Young People, and for general instruc- 

 tion and entertainment. The Series comprises 

 fourteen of the most popular of Lord Macaulay's 

 Essai/s, and his Speeches on Parliamentary Reform. 

 The department of Travels contains some account 

 of eight of the principal countries of Europe, as 

 well as travels in four districts of Africa, in four of 

 America, and in three of Asia. Madame Pieiffer's 

 First Journey round the Tf'orld is included ; and a 

 general account of the Australian Colonics. In 

 Biography and History will be found Lord Macau- 

 lay's Biographical Sketches of Warren Hastings, 

 Clive, Pitt, Walpole, Bacon, and others ; besides 

 Memoirs of Wellington, Turenne, F. Arago, &c. ; an 

 Essay on the Life and Genius of Thomas Fuller, 

 with Selections from his Writings, by Mr. Henry 

 Rogers ; and a history of the Leipxic Campaign, by 

 Mr. Gle:g, — which is the only separate account of 

 this remarkable campaign. Works of Fiction did 

 not come within the plan of the Traveller's Li- 

 brary ; but the Confessions of a Working Man, by 

 Souvestre, which is indeed a fiction founded on fact, 

 has been included, and has been read with unusual 

 interest by many of the working chisses, for whose 

 use it is especially recommended. Dumas's story 

 of the Maitre-d' Amies, though in form a work of 

 fiction, gives a striking picture of an episode in the 

 history of Russia. Amongst the works on Science 

 and Natural Philosophy, a general view of Creation 

 is embodied in Dr. Kemp's Natural History of 

 Creation; and in his Indications of Instinct remark- 

 able facts in natural history are collected. Dr. 

 Wilson has contributed a popular account of the 

 Electric Telegraph. In the volumes on the Coal- 

 Fields, and on the Tin and other Mining Districts 

 of Cornwall, is given an account of the mineral 

 wealth of England, the habits and manners of the 

 miners, and the scenery of the surrounding country. 

 It only remains to add, that among the Miscella- 

 neous Works are a Selection of the best Writings of 

 the Rev. Sydney Smith; Lord Carlisle's Lectures 

 and Addresses ; an account of il/o;HiOMm«, by the 

 Rev. W. J. Conybeare; an exposition of Railway 

 management and mismanagement, by Mr. Herbert 

 Spencer ; an account of the Origin and Practice of 

 Printing, by Mr. Stark; and an account oi London, 

 by Mr. M'Culloch. 



"If we were called upon to 

 lay the first stone of a Me- 

 chanics' Institute or Book- 

 Society ' s Collection, it should 

 be composed of the hundred 

 and two parts ot the Tra- 

 veller'.t Library. It is tlie 

 best Sliilling Series extant. 

 Here are Mr. Macaulay's 

 best writings, the anthologia 

 of Sydney Smith, some ad- 

 niirable literar.v essays by 

 different authors, several ex- 

 cellent volumes of science, 

 narratives of travel in eiglit 

 European, four American, 

 !om' African, and three Asi- 



atic countries, and examples 

 from the works of Souvestre 

 and Dumas. Dound together, 

 they form twenty-five con- 

 venient volumes, which any 

 society of a hundred and five 

 members may possess, upon 

 paymentof one shillingeach. 

 An association of this kind, 

 formed in every small town, 

 would thus create sufficient 

 basis for a free library upon 

 a modest scale, dood books 

 are not beyond the reach of 

 working men, if working 

 men will combine to obtain 

 them." Leader. 



^^ The Traveller's Library may also be had 

 as originally issued in 102 parts, Is. each, 

 forming 50 vols. 2s. 6d. each ; or any separate 

 parts or volumes. 



TroUope.— Barchester Towers. By An- 



THONT Teollope. 3 Yols. post 8vo. prlce 

 31s. 6d. 



" Barchester Towers (a 

 kindofseqiielincontiiiuiition 

 of Mr. Trollope's foimer 

 novel The Warden) does 

 not depend only on story for 

 its interest ; the careful 

 >vi-iting, the good humour 

 with a tendency often to be 

 Shandean in its expression, 



TroUope.— The Warden. 

 Post 8vo. 10s. 6d. 



and the sense and right 

 feeling with which the way 

 is threaded among questions 

 of high church and low 

 church, are very noticeable, 

 and secure for it unquestion- 

 able rank among the few 

 really well-written tales that 

 every season produces." 



EXAMINEB, 



By Anthony TroUope. 



Sharon Turner's Sacred History of the 



World, attempted to be Philosophically 

 considered, in a Series of Letters to a Son. 

 New Edition, edited by the Eev, S. Ttieneb. 

 3 vols, post 8vo. price Sis. 6d. 



Sharon Turner's History of England 



during the Middle Ages : Comprising the 

 Keigns from the Norman Conquest to the 

 Accession of Henry VIII. Fifth Edition, 

 revised by the Kev. S. Tueneb. 4 vols. 

 8vo. price 508. 



Sharon Turner's History of the Anglo- 

 Saxons, from the Earliest Period to the 

 Norman Conquest. Seventh Edition, revised 

 by the Rev. S. Tuenee. 3 vols. 8vo. 36s. 



Dr. Turton's Manual of the Land and 



fresh- Water Shells of Great Britain. New 

 Edition, thoroughly revised and brought xip 

 to the Present Time. Edited by Dr. J. E. 

 Gray, E.R.S., &c.. Keeper of the Zoological 

 Department in the British Museum. Crown 

 8vo. with Coloured Plates. [/« the press. 



Dr. lire's Dictionary of Arts, Manufac- 

 tures, and Mines : Containing a clear Expo- 

 sition of their Principles and Practice. 

 Fourth Edition, much enlarged ; most of 

 the Articles being entirely re-written, and 

 many new Articles added. With nearly 

 1,600 Woodcuts. 2 vols. 8vo, price 60s. 



Van Der Hoeven's Handbook of Zoology. 



Translated from the Second Dutch Edition 

 by the Eev. William Claes, M.D.,F.R.S., 

 &c., late Fellow of Trinity College, and Pro- 

 fessor of Anatomy in the University of 

 Cambridge, with additional Keferences fur- 

 nished by the Author. In Two Volumes. 

 Vol. I. Invertebrate Animals; with 15 Plates, 

 comprising numerous Figures. 8vo. 30s. 



Vehse.— Memoirs of the Court, Aristo- 

 cracy, and Diplomacy of Austria. By Dr. E. 

 Vehse. Translated from the German by 

 Feanz Demmlee. 2 vols, post Svo. 21s. 



