ISS Monthly r.rsviEw of liteiiaturi?. 



Winkles's Continental Cathedrals. No. I. Royal 4to. Charles 



Tilt, Fleet Street. 

 This is a new and very suppiior publication, comprising four finely engraved (on 

 fteel) illustrations of the Cathedral Cliiircli of Ajuiens, togetlier with descriptive 

 tetter-press. 'I he drawings were made by R. Garland, aichitect; the description 

 by Thomas Moule, author of an Essay on Roman Vdlas. This is a work of 

 undoubted merit and utility. 



Stanfield's Coast Scenery. Plate 7. Smith, Elder, and Co. 

 This charming woik continues to attract univeisal yttention. The present 

 number contains four beautiful plates, illustrative of Uroadstairs, Dover Pier, 

 Boulogne, and Boulogne Old Pier, with the usual quantity of descriptive matter. 



The Architectural Magazine. No. 23. January, 1836. Longman 



and Co. 

 This number is quite equal to those which have preceded it. We have been 

 much pleased with the " paper" On the Design q^' the New Housesof PurUument, 

 by Candidas. 



Arboretum Britannicum, &c. Longman and Co. 

 The January number of this meritorious work presents an unusual quantity of 

 matter, accompanied by an increased mass of illustration, both of which are well 

 deserving praise. 



A few Remarks on the Present Laws of Mai-riage, Adultery, and 

 Seduction in England, to Lord Brougham and Vaux, Member of the 

 Institute of France. By P. Anichini, a Briton by Act of the Re- 

 formed Parliament. Second Edition, with considerable Additions. 

 Effingham Wilson, Royal Exchange. 

 This is a very able essay, by a distinguished and sensible writer. The author 

 savs, in his eloquent dedication to Ebenezer Elliott, Esq.—" You have exposed, 

 in ih'e idiom of siblime poetry, the iniquity of the corn laws : I have denounced, 

 in the humble sunpUcity of prose, the infamy of the laws of marriage and 



adul ery." . 



As we have no space for extracts, it only remains lor us to observe, which we 

 are enabled to do witli perfect salisfiction to ourselves, that our author has accom- 

 plished Ins task with infinite credit. We most cordially direct the immediate 

 attention of our readers to this oiergiown pamphlet — nevertheless, a pamphlet is a 

 pamphlet still, notwithstanding it consists of six sheets of well-printed letter-press. 



The Divarication of the New Testament into Doctrinal History. By 

 Thomas Wirgman, Esq., Author of "The Principles of Transcen- 

 dental Philosophy," "Kant," "Logic," "Metaphysics," "Moral 

 Philosophy," and Philosophy in the " Encyclopa;dia Londinensis." 

 London : Wurtz and Co. pp. 60-1. 

 The author of this volume is a lion whom the great directors of the religious 

 world have been afraid to beard. The Evangelkul Maguzine confessed it could 

 not comprehend him ; The Buptixt Missionari/ Hegistcr, that it could not under- 

 stand him • The Quarterly said that to attempt to prove the doctrine of the 

 Trinity, the' professed object of the book, was arch heresy ; and the great orgnn of 

 Chuich of Enelandism, in its sul|ihur suit, The British Magazine, shouted with 

 nil Its might, ''The Church m danger," while the "little dogs, Toby, Blanch, and 



