JAN. 19. 1850.] 
NOTES AND QUERIES. 
Illustrated by the Etching Club. 
In One Volume, square crown &vo. 21s. cloth ; or, 36s. bound in 
morocco, by Hayday, 
OLDSMITH’S POETICAL WORKS. 
Edited by Botton Corney With Engravings on Wood, 
from Designs by Members of the Etching Club. 
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which, apart from the grace and beauty of the Illustrations con- 
tributed to it by the Etching Club, is by far the most correct and 
careful of the existing editions of Goldsmith's poetry.""—Forster’s 
Life of Goldsmith, p. 699. 
London: LonGMan, Brown, GREEN, AND LONGMANS 3 
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THOMSON’S SEASONS. Edited by Boiron 
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Just published, a New Edition, Three Vols., crown 8vo., 
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HE DRAMATIC WORKS of KIT MAR- 
LOWE, with Some Account of His Life and Writings by 
the Rev. ALEXANDER Dyce. 
WILLIAM PIckERING, 177. Piccadilly. 
Just published, Part I. of 
PO HE DECORATIVE ARTS of the MIDDLE 
AGES. By Henry Saaw, F.S.A. The object of the pre- 
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executed Engravings (taken from some of the best authorities 
now remaining) the peculiar features, and general characteristics 
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INACOTHECH HISTORICZ SPECI- 
MEN ; sive Illvstrivm qvorvndam ingenia, mores, for- 
tvnz, ad Inscriptionvm formam expresse. Avctore F. Kitverr, 
A.M. Pars Secvnda. 
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say much in few words,—those words remarkably select, «nd 
expressive, and arpropriate,—exhibiting the noble characteristics 
ofthe Latin language as compared with every other, ancient or 
modern. This is a rare excellence, and, therefore, I mention it 
first. But it is not the greatest merit of your performance, There 
is a truth in the delineation of character, and a devotion to recti- 
tude and virtue in your moral estimate, quite as remarkable as the 
felicity of diction by which the varieties of each portrait are de- 
noted. You have also escaped the snare to which brevity (accord- 
ange Horace’s well-known line) is exposed—obscurity.”—F’rom 
@ Letter of the late Bishop of Llandaff: 
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Just published, price 1s, 8vo. sewed. 
RACTICAL REMARKS ON BELFRIES 
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GENTLEMAN’S MAGAZINE 
HISTORICAL REVIEW, 
The next number of the “ Gentleman’s Magazine” (which 
will be published on the Ist February, 1850), will exhibit several 
alterations in the character and arrangement of its contents, 
which have been determined upon after due consideration of the 
present state of our literature. 
Time was when the whole field of English literature was before 
us, and we were its only reapers. At that time the harvest was 
scarcely rich enough to supply materials for our monthly com- 
ment. One hundred and twenty years have produced a marvel- 
lous revolution. Our literature has grown and expanded, and 
been divided and subdivided, and has still gone on growing and 
increasing, until—such is its wonderful extent and fertility — 
every separate branch maintains its independent organ, and we 
ourselves, overpowered by a growth which we were the first to 
foster, have gradually been compel ed, by our limited space, to 
allow one subject after another to drop from under our notice. 
Still, amidst many minor alterations, we have kept an un- 
weakened hold upon certain main subjects. History, BioGrapuy, 
and ARCHAOLOGY have never been neglected, and our OsiTuary 
has grown into a record which, even we ourselves may say, has 
become a permanent and important portion of the literature of 
our country. 
The changes we are now about to introduce have for their de- 
sig a more strict adherence to what we look upon as our peculiar 
pith. We shall henceforth devote ourselves more particularly — 
we may say almost exclusively—to the great subjects we have 
mentioned. Space that has been given to other matters will be 
curtailed, variations in type and arrangement will afford additional 
room, and all that can in any way be gained will be devoted to 
our main and peculiar purpose. 
We have made arrangements to secure for our pages, by a 
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write upon their respective subjects of study, and shall strive, 
more than ever, to be a worthy organ aud representative of that 
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which has for its object the instruction of mankind by the study 
and the perpetuation of whatever is now doing, or whatever has 
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be attractive from its variety, and from the skill with which its 
several subjects are treated, and will be permanently valuable 
from the importance of the matters to which it relates. 
In principles and general tone of management we have nothing 
to retract, nothing to alter. History is Truth, or it is a mere de- 
lusion. The discovery and the establishment of Historical Truth, 
in all its branches, are our objects, and we shall continue to pur- 
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but, as we purpose and intend, more diligently and more un- 
dividedly. 
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