1811.] 
firm their belief in the efficacy, safety, 
and policy, of pursuing vaccine inocu. 
Jation. 
The second volime of Mr. Moorr’s 
Tales of the Passions, containing the 
Married Man, being an illustration of 
the passion of Jealousy, is expected to 
- appear in the course of this month. 
Tne Rev. Joun Rupp, F.L.S. and 
President of the new Literary and Phi- 
Josop)ical Society of Preston, basin con- 
siderable forwardness, a Botanist’s Guide 
through Lancashire, in which all the 
plants, indigenous to the country, will be 
enumerated, and the habitats of the 
same ones accurately given, 
Mr, Ryopp will also publish, in a few 
days, a volume of Devotional Exercises, 
selected and composed for the use of 
Congregations and Families. 
Dr. Hurron’s new edition of his 
Dictionary of Mathematics and Philo- 
sophy, is ready for the press, with many 
_ improvements, made fromy late disco- 
veries in those sciences. sand 
Messrs. Serene and Son, have re- 
printed the Memoirs of the Life of Sir 
Stephen Fox, ancestor of the present 
Jord tloliand, and it will sm@ke its ap- 
pearance in a few davs, 
= 
his travels through Canada, and the 
United States of America, has in the 
press an American work, eutitled * Sal- 
“magund!, or the Whim Whams and 
Opinions of Launcelut Langstaff, esq. 
and Others ;” to which he has added an 
_ antroductory Essay on the Genius.and 
y 
Character of the Americans, together 
_ with explanatory notes. 
~- Mason Moor is about to publish, An 
| Account of the Measures pursued with 
different Tribes of Hindoos for the abo- 
 lition of the practice of the systematic 
murder of female children by their Pa- 
ents; with incidental notices of other 
customs peculiar to the inhabitants of In- 
dia. ByGovernor Duncan, and Lieut.-col. 
Walker. 
~The volume of the County Annual 
Revister for 1811, is in forwardness; in 
" addition to the usual matter relating to 
| the counties, it will contain a concise and 
4 
i 
¢ 
f 
| <A Description of the Ancient Terra- 
cottas in the British Museum, is an- 
need: the descriptive part by Mr. 
pe; and the engravings from draw- 
ings by Ma, War. ALExanpeRr. 
» Me. Kewpay has in the press, and 
ill speedily pablish, Remarks on the 
j i ul a 
Literary and Philosophical Intelligence. 
Mr. Lampert, who lately published. 
partial History of Europe for the year, 
209. 
Now in the press, a Literary Life and 
select Wurks of Benjamin. Stillingfleet. 
By Arcupracon Coxe. Illustrated with 
plates; 1n three volu(nes, octavo, 
Messrs. Dani eLv’s Picturesque Voyaye 
to India, by the way of China, with fifty 
coloured engravings, and descriptive lets 
ter-press to each, is neatly ready for pube 
lication. 
Early in the spring is intended. to be! 
published, in octavo, The Protestant Dis« 
senters’ Annual Register, for the yeat 
1810; designed to embody all facts of an 
historical, ecclesiastical, or political, nas 
ture, that are interesting to Protestant 
Dissenters.- 
A Life of William Waynfleet, Bishop 
of Winchester, Lord High Chancellor te’- 
Henry VI. and Founder of Magdalen 
College, Oxford, by-che late Dr. Ricnarp 
CHANDLER, Js in the press, t 
Fhe edition of Fabyan’s Chronicles of: 
England aud France, edited by Henry 
Ellis, Esq. is nearly ready for publicas 
lion. ' 
Select Letters of Tippoo-Sultan to va» 
rious Public Functionaries arranged and 
translated by Col. Kirkparrick, are ia 
the press, including his principal military: 
commanders, governors of forts and pros 
vinces, , diplomatic . and’ commercial 
avenis, &c. &c.3 together with some ade 
dressed to the tributary chieftains of San~ 
hore, Kurnool, aud Cannanore, aad sune 
dry other persons. 
Mr. Bensamin Travers, demonstras: 
tor of anatomy at Guy’s Hospital, sure 
geon to the Honourable East India Coms 
pany, and to the London Infirmary for 
diseases of the eye; has in the press, An 
Inquiry concerning injuries: tothe Canal 
cf the Intestines; illustrating vhe’ treat. 
ment of: penetrating wounds, and strane 
gulated hernia. 
Mr. Wixen has nearly ready for the: 
press, the Flora of the counties of Nar- 
thumberland and Durham, of which the 
Botanist’s Guide through those counties 
may be considered as a prodromus. It 
will comprise about 2000 indigenous 
plants, and be illustrated by some co« 
loured engravings, made by Mr. Sow- 
ERBY. ¢ 
The Rev. Jounson Grant will shortly 
publish the first volume of a sammary of 
the History of the English Church, and 
of the sects which have separated from 
it, from the earliest periods to the reign 
of James the First. 
A new edition of Dr. Sromrtey’s ace 
count of Lichard of Cirencester, and of 
