C iS ay 
_ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS, 
; We have been obliged to, confine Sacuistheds in the present number, to a more’ brief 
portion of thé. very vahiable communication on the “ Impressment, &c. of Seamen”’ than 
Wwe could ‘have wished: for it is not a subject to-be doled out in minute fragments ; “but 
haying brought to a conclusion two of the long articles previously ir in hand, we lial have- 
more space, for the future, at our disposal. 
We are still obliged to acknowledge the non fuldiment of some of the promises of our 
last number. The disquisition on the Non-eternity of the World and the Eternity of 
Matter will, however, certainly appear in our next: as will, also, G* on Female Education, 
-and, we trust, The Importation of. Foxes, and T. H.on Bayley’ s History of the Tower. 
Y. Z. on the comparative Antiquity of various Parts of the Old Testament, was uly 
delayed i in consequence of some difficulties about the Syriac types. _~ 
It was not our intention that M. Duvard’s reply on the word “ Idiotism” should have 
appeared ‘without the attention of anote: but a temporary absence of the Editor from 
the spot, deprived him of the opportunity of subjoining his purposed comment. The 
omission will be supplied in our next. 
» It can hardly have escaped the acute observation of our correspondent Mr. Davids, that 
in his original communication (July, p. 521) Lattire is given-as the name of the. author 
alluded to; and which appeared, both to the printer and to us, the name written in Mr. 
D.’s MS. ; in which case; the phrase we made use-of:(in P: 109, Sept., No.) will, PEThADss 
‘not be regarded as inexcusable. 
In the reviewing departinent we haye still some arrears to acknowledge; and, as the 
only return we can consistently make to those authors and publishers who pay us the 
compliment ‘of sending ‘us their works, is a prompt and public announcement—these ‘ we 
hold it a:duty to specify. Reviews of the following are already in: type, and stand over 
only from want of space:—Mr. Burridge’s Address to. His Majesty, ‘&c, on the Critical 
Condition of the Army, Navy, &c.; The Slave Colonies of Great Britain, &c. an Abstract- 
of the Papers before Parliament; Fosbrooke’s Pathological Relations of the Kidneys, 
Brain, &c.; A Century of Surgeons on Gonortheea, &e: ; Hugh. Campbell's Fruits of 
‘Faith, or Musing Sinner, with other Poems. A notice. of Miss Edgeworth’s continua- 
tion of Harry and Lucy, in 4 vols.; is also in the hands of the. printer, .and only waits 
for space. Forty Years in the World, 3-vols.; The Camisard, or the Protestants. of 
Languedoc, 3 vols. ; and The Highest Castle and the Lowest Cave, 3 rola are in., the” 
‘hands usually entrusted with articles’of this description. 
The History.of the French Reyolution, fromthe French of A. Thiers and F. Botin, 
‘3 thick vols. 8vo. ; Keatinge’s Expedition to St. Peter’s River, 2-vols. 8vo. ; An Account 
of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata, translated from the Spanish. of Sen.-Don 
Ignacio Nunez, Syo. ; and The Session of Parliament for 1825, 8yo., require an extent 
‘of examination, for impartial notice, which we have not yet had time ‘to give them. 
A Picturesque and Descriptive ‘Tour in the Mountains of the High Pyrenees, with 
24. coloured- Views, by J. Hardy, Esq:, 8vo.; Herban, a Poem in Four Cantos, 8vo. ; 
‘Ac Critical Dissertation on the Nature and Causes: of Value, cr..8vo. ; and some other 
atticles, which willbe further. noticed as opportunities may- -permit, have been received... 
Among the interesting articles of Correspondence’ that have been ‘délayed, either from 
want of space, or their too late Arrival, may be enumerated—Facts relative to the 
‘Occupation ‘of small plots of Land by the Poor; Remarks on Literary and. Scientific 
‘Institutions; Mr. Gray ‘on’ Rail-ways; Mr. Tatem on ‘Dry Rot; X on the Migration 
‘of Birds; J. M.‘L. on Impositions’of Water and Gas Companies ;. M., P. on Coreggio’s 
Holy. Family ; T.-H. on a Remarkable Epitaph ; An Essay on Liberty, read at @ Lite- 
rary Institution ; History ‘of the Captivity of a Russian Officer among the Turks ;*Re- 
‘marks on the Egyptian Zodiac; Dr. H. Robertson’s Physiological Treatise on the 
‘Venous ‘and Absorbent Systems ; Mr. W. Sharp’s Extract relative to the Attraction 
of the Heavenly Bodies, from Mme. Du Chastelet’s “ Exposition’ Abrégée ;” and an 
‘interesting communication from Paris concerning a Deaf and Dumb Boy — to hear 
and. speak. 
‘To our Poetical Correspondents several acknowledgments : -and apologies “are Le. 
“« Dramas of the Dead: Great Folks at Home, a Tragedy in one Act,” is already i in 
type, but, on account of its length, must stand oyer for the Supplement ; as must alsp 
. some other: ae favours that would: games the limits of our ar ane eqhumns, aa 
