162 



Literary and Miscellaneous Intelligence. [March I, 



and a supplement of foreign genealo- 

 gical works, by T. Moole, esq. 



A new oriental poem, entitled Abdal- 

 lah, will shortly appear, descriptive of 

 Arabian character, manners, and 

 scenery, about the time of Mohammed, 

 with numerous notes and authorities, is 

 about to appear. 



The Bridal of Armagnac, a tragedy, 

 [ by the Rev. T. Streatfeild, f.a.s. 

 will appear in a few days. 



In the press, and sliortly will be 

 published, the second edition of Mr. 

 ii. Clark's New Veterinary Pharma- 

 copoeia, pointing out the diet, poisons, 

 and medicines of the horse, with origi- 

 nal experiments. 



The Economy of the Eyes, or Pre- 

 cepts for the Improvement and Pre- 

 servation of the Sight, with plain rules 

 which will enable all to judge exactly 

 when and what spectacles are best 

 calculated for their eyes, and an essay 

 on opera-glasses, &.c. is advertised by 

 W. KrTCHiNRR, M.D.; also. Part II. 

 of the Illuminating and Magnifying 

 Powers of Newtonian, Gregorian, and 

 Cassegrainian, Reflectors, and Achro- 

 matic Telescopes, from three inches to 

 seven feet focus. 



The Scenery of the River Exc, con- 

 sisting of thirty views of the most 

 intertsting scenes, from its source iu 

 tlie Exmoor to its conflueucc with the 

 sea at Exnioutli, drawn and etched by 

 F. C. Lewis, will soon appear. 



Mr. S. Bennett has just issued the 

 prospectus of a work, to be entitled 

 the Temple of Ezekiel, or an Illustra- 

 tion of the 40lh, 41st, 42(1, &c. chapters 

 of Ezekiel, to be published in a quarto 

 volimie, and illustrated with a ground- 

 plan and a bird's-eye view of the 

 Temple. 



Mr. W. Cox, surgeon, has in the 

 press, and will publish in a few days, 

 a Translation of Mr. Coster's ftlanual 

 of Surgical Operations, containing 

 Mr. Lisfranc's new methods of ope- 

 rating. 



The fourth edition is about to appear, 

 in one large vohinie, octavo, (revised 

 and altered according to the last edi- 

 tion of the London and Edinburgh 

 Pharmacopoeias,) of the London Dis- 

 pensatory, by A. T. Thomson, f.l.s. 



Essays and Sketches of Character, 

 by the late R. Ayton, esq. with a me- 

 moir of his life, and extracts from his 

 correspondence, will speedily be pub- 

 lished. 



There will shortly be published. 

 Plain Instructions to Executors and 



Administrators, showing the duties 

 and responsibilities incident to the due 

 performance of their trusts. 



Elements of the History of Civil 

 Government, being a view of the rise 

 and progress of the various political 

 institutions that have subsisted through- 

 out the world, and an account of the 

 present state and distinguishing fea- 

 tures of the governments now in exis- 

 tence, by the late J. Tysov, esq. are 

 announced in parts. 



The sixteenth edition is expected of 

 the Shipmaster's Assistant and Owner's 

 Manual, containing general informa- 

 tion necessary for merchants, owners, 

 and masters of ships, officers, and all 

 other persons concerned or employed 

 in the merchant-service, relative to the 

 mercantile and maritime laws and 

 customs, by D. Steel, esq. revised 

 throughout, and brought down to 

 Midsummer 1823, by William Dick- 

 inson, esq. 



An edition of Scottish Songs, an- 

 cient and modern, illustrated with 

 notes, a critical introduction, and cha- 

 racters of the most eminent lyric poets 

 of Scotland, by Allan Cunningham, is 

 announced. 



A miniature edition of the His- 

 torical Romances of the " Author of 

 Wavcrley," is printing in six vols. 



Critical and Descriptive Accounts of 

 the most celebrated Picture Galleries 

 in pMigland, with an Essay on the Elgin 

 Marbles, will soon appear. 



In August last a fire broke out, 

 which destroyed the greater part of 

 the manufactories, and three-fourths 

 of the dwellings, at Sarepta, a Sfttle- 

 ment of the Moravian brctliren, at or 

 near the confluence of the smaller 

 river Sarpa, with the Wolga. It was 

 built more than fifty years ago; and 

 contains at present about 600 inhabi- 

 tants, men, women, and children. The 

 principal object of the settlement, was 

 to serve as a starting point for carry- 

 ing the Gospel among the Calmuck 

 and other Tartarian tribes. 



The first and second volumes are 

 about to be published of the English 

 Flora, by Sir J. E. Smith, President of 

 the Linnean Society, &c. 



Prose Pictures, a series of descrip- 

 tive letters and essays, by E. Herbert, 

 esq. with etchings by G. Cruikshank, 

 are announced. 



The Christian Father's Present to 

 his Children, by the Rev. J. A.James, 

 is in tiie press. 



John Clare, the Northamptonshire 

 puet, 



