1828.] 
made, that any officer so offended, who may 
decline calling upon the judgement of this 
court, and who may take any means what- 
ever of redressing himself, be, upon due 
conviction thereof, before a general court- 
martial, irremissibly cashiered ; and the 
same in regard to any officer refusing to 
submit to the judgement of the proposed 
court, immediately and explicitly. Of course, 
if the investigation proved that the com- 
plainant was deserving, to any extent, of the 
obloquy put upon him, he too must be pu- 
nishable, either by the apology being made 
reciprocally, or in a severer way, as the case 
Varieties. 
95 
may require. If laws of the foregoing 
nature were formed, and rigidly executed, 
the decision of the suggested court would 
soon come to be considered as a sufficient 
purification of character, and no officer could 
think meanly of another, whom a body of 
officers pronounced undishonoured, such 
pronouncement being founded upon a sworn 
investigation into the facts of his case. On 
the contrary, an officer repeatedly offending 
would soon come to be universally despised 
and avoided, even if cashiering were not 
rendered the penalty of a repetition. 
WORKS IN THE PRESS AND NEW PUBLICATIONS. 
—— 
WORKS IN PREPARATION. 
A Volume of Poems, by S. Laman 
Blanchard, is in the Press, and will appear 
early in Jilly. 
Mr. Kendall has in progress a work of 
much meditation and research, and of equal 
speculative and practical interest, under the 
title of “The Holy Spirit, its Philosophy, 
Imagery, and Worship ;” in which he at- 
tempts to establish, upon incontrovertible 
ground, but under an entirely new aspect, 
the truth of the Trinitarian doctrine at large. 
The several subjects are treated philosphi- 
cally, poetically, and historically ; with the 
view of closing many controversies and heal- 
ing many animosities. 
The Winter’s Wreath for 1829: a Col- 
lection of original Pieces. To be embel- 
lished with 12 highly-finished Line Engrav- 
ings on Steel; from the Productions of H. 
Howard, R. A. ; J. Northcote, R.A. ; W. 
Havell; G. Arnold ; W. F. Witherington ; 
Nicholson (of Edinburgh); F. P. Stepha- 
noff; J. Watson; Severn (of Rome); 
Vandyke ; Wright (of Derby); Garnier ; 
Burns, &c. &c. 
A Universal Prayer, a Poem, by Robert 
Montgomery, &c. 
Memoirs of General Miller, of the Peru- 
yian Service, containing some Account of 
the War of Independence in Buenos Ayres, 
Chile, and Peru; and interspersed with 
Sketches of Character, Manners, and Cus- 
toms of those Countries. 
| Mr. Planché, the Author of “ Lays and 
Legends of the Rhine,” has in the Press his 
“ Descent of the Danube, from Ratisbon to 
- Vienna, during the Autumn of 1827; with 
Recollections, Historical and Legendary, of 
the Towns, Castles, Monasteries, &c., on 
the Banks of that River,” in one volume, 
Byo. 
Forty Views on the Danube, in illustra- 
tion of this Volume, will also speedily ap- 
pear, lithographed by L. Hayhe, frova 
Sketches made on the spot by Mr. Planché. 
The most Easy Greek Exercises for the 
use of the Lower Forms ; with a Greek and 
English Lexicon of every Word. By the 
Kev. Wm, Moseley, A.M. LL.D. 
St. Petersburgh at the Close of 1827. By 
A. P. Granville, M.D. 
Memoirs of John Frederic Oberling, 
Pastor of Walbach, in the Ban de la Roche. 
The Abomination of Desolation ; or, 
Proofs that the Destruction of Jerusalem 
was not foretold in the 24th Chapter of 
Matthew, 13th of Mark, and 21st of Luke. 
By T. Parkin. 
The Juvenile Forget-Me-Not ; a Christ- 
mas and New Year’s Gift, or Birth-Day 
Present for 1829. 
Mr. Britton’s History and Tlustrations 
of Peterborough Cathedral, containing ac- 
counts of this very fine Edifice, and of its 
Bishops and Deans, with 16 Engravings, is 
published ; also the first and second Num- 
bers of his Illustrations of Gloucester Cathe- 
dral. ; 
The whole of the Letter-press, by the 
same Author, to accompany the Architec- 
tural Antiquities of Normandy, is likewise 
announced to be given away to the Sub- 
seribers to the Engrayings of that Work. 
The reasons for this unusual circumstance 
are detailed in the Preface, which contains 
an Address to the Legislature, urging the 
repeal of that odious tax of presenting eleven 
copies to private corporate bodies of all 
published hooks, however expensive in get- 
ting up, and however limited the sale of 
such books. We cannot sufficiently com- 
mend this Author for his perseverance in 
reprobating this grievous and oppressive 
legislative enactment. 
On the Ist of July will appear the First 
Number of a new Topographical W ork, en- 
titled “‘ Picturesque Antiquities of the Eng- 
lish Cities,’ with 12 Engravings, by and 
under the directions of Mr. Lekeux, illus- 
trative of the Architectural Antiquities of 
York, Lincoln, and Gloucester. This pub- 
lication is to be comprised in Six Numbers. 
Dr. Burrows has nearly ready “ Commen- 
taries on Insanity,” in one volume, 8vo. 
A First Series of Dramas: comprising 
Jagellan, a Tragic Romance; and the 
Siege of the Scots, or Appleby in 1773—an 
Historical Play. By H. W. Montagu. 
The Life and ‘Times of Archbishop Laud, 
by John P. Lawson, M.A. 
