112 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[No. 93. 



SOCIETY OF ARTS, ADELPHL LONDON.— 

 PUILOSOPniCAL TREATISES on the various Departments of 

 the Great ExHiiuTioN, whicli shall set forth the peculiar Advantages 

 to be derived from each by the Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce of 

 the Country. 



The Council offer, in the name of the Society, the lar^e Medal and 

 25/. for the best, and the Society's small Medal and 10/. for the second 

 best. Treatise on the Objects exJiibited in the Section of Rav/ Materials 

 and Produce. 



A lar-xe Medal and 25^. for the best, and a small Medal and 10?. for 

 the second best, Treatise on the Objects exliibited in the Section of 

 Machinery. 



A large Medal and 25/. for the best, and a small Medal and 10?. for the 

 second best, Treatise on the Objects exhibited in the Section of Manu- 

 factures. 



A larj^e Medal and 25/. for the best, and a small Medal and 107. for the 

 eecund best, Treatise on the Objects exhibited in the Section of Fine 

 Arts. 



Each Treatise must occupy, as nearly as possible, eighty pages of the 

 Bizc of the Bridgwater Treatises. 



The Society will also award its large Medal and 25 guineas for the best 

 General Treatise upon the Exhibition, treated Commercially, Politi- 

 cally, and Statistically ; and small Mt-dals for the best Treatises on any 

 Special Object or Class of Objects exhibited. 



The successful Treatises are to be the Property of the Society : and 

 should the Council see fit, they will cause the same to be printed and 

 published, awarding to tlie Author tl\e net amount of any profit wliich 

 may arise from the publication after the payment of the expenses. _ 



The Cumpetiug Treatises are to be written on foolscap paper, signed 

 with a motto in the usual manner, and delivered at the Society's House 

 on or before tlie Tiuutieth of Novkmdf.r, 1851, addressed to George 

 Grove, Esq., Secretary, from whom additional particulars may be 

 learned. 



Byorder of the Council, GEoncE Grove, Sec. 



Adelphi, June 1. 18j1. 



THE PFvIM.T:VAL antiquities of ENGLAND ILLUS- 

 TR.\Ti:i> BY THOSE OF DENMARK. 



rrillE PRIM/EVAL ANTIQUITIES OF DEN- 



X MARK. By J. J. A. WoBsiAE, Member of tlie Royal Society of 

 Antiquaries of Copeiiha'ren. Traiislateil and applied to the illustraliou 

 of similar Remains in Ennlanil. by William J. Tuoms, 1". S. A., Secre- 

 tary of the Camden Society. With numerous Woodcuts. 8vo. 10s. Ct/. 



" The best antiquarian handbook we have ever met with — so clear is 

 its arrangement, and so well and so plainly is each subject illustrated 

 by well-executed encravint's. ... It is the joint production of two 

 men who have olready distinguished themselves as authors and anti- 

 quarians." — Jloniiito Herald. 



" A book of remarkable interest and ability. . . . Mr. Worsaae's 

 book is in all wavs a valuable addition to our literature. . . . Mr. 

 Thorns has executed tlie translation in flowin» and idiomatic Enilish, 

 and has appended many curious and interesting notes and observations 

 of his ovru."^0'uardiati. 



" The work, which we desire to commend to the attention of oiu: 

 readers, is signally interesting to the British anticiunry. Ilifhly mterest- 

 ing and important work."— ^^jL/ifco/or/icn; Jvuriial. 



See also the Gentleman's Magazine for February 1850. 



Oxford : John Henhy Paiiueb, and 337. Strand, London. 



Now ready. Price 253., Second Edition, revised and corrected. Dedicated 

 by Special Permission to 



THE (L.VTEj ARCIIBISUOP OF CANTERBURY. 



PSALMS AND HYMNS FOR THE SERVICE 

 OF THE CHURCH. The words selected by the Very Rev. 

 n H MiLMAN,D.D.,Dcan of St. Paul's. The Music arranged for Four 

 Voices, but applicable also to Two or One, including Chants for the 

 Services Responses to the Commandments, and a Concise Svstem of 

 Chantino, by J. B. SALE, Musical Instructor and Organist to Her 

 Majesty. 4to., neat, in morocco cloth, price 25s. To be had of Mr. 

 J B Sale, 21. Holywell Street, Millbauk, Westminster, on the receipt of 

 a Post Office Order for that amount ; and, by order, ot the prmeipal 

 Booksellers and Music Warehouses. 



" A great advance on the works we have hitherto had, connected with 

 our Church and Cathedral Service."— Times. 



" A collection of Psalm Tunes certainly unequalled in this country." 

 — Litcrat'if Gazette. 



" One of the best collections of tunes which we have yet seen. Well 

 merits the distinguished patronage under which it appears. — M> steal 

 World. 



" A collection of Psalms and Hymns, together with a system of Chant- 

 ing of a very superior character to any which has hitherto appeared. — 

 John Bull. 



Also, lately published, 



J. B. SALE'S SANCTUS, COMMANDMENTS 



and CHANTS as performed at the Chapel Royal St. James, price 2s. 

 0. Lonsdale, 26. Old Bond Street. 



Just published, 



pOTHIC ORNAMENTS. By J. K. Colling, 



\_T Architect. In 2 vols, royal 4to., price 7?. 10A-.,in appropriate cloth 

 biading, containing 209 Plates, nearly 50 of which illustrate the exist- 

 iu': finely painted and ffilt decorations of the Cathedrals and Churches 

 of the Middle Apres. The work may be also had in numbers, price 3s., 

 or in Parts, together or separately. 



'' The completion of tliis elaborate work affords us an opportunity of 

 doing justice to its great merits. It was necessary to the appreciation 

 of the ciiaracterislics and the beauties of Gothic architecture, that some 

 more extensive series of illustrations should be given to the world. 

 Until the appearance of this work, that of Pu^'in was the only one of 

 any importance and accnrvicy.'''' —A rc/iitcctttral Quarf<:rl{/ liL-virw. 



"'The Gotliic Ornaments' constitutes a gorgeous work, illustrated 

 by fold and colour, giving correct ideas of the raagnificenee of the 

 original examples, of which the unilluminated works afford but a scanty 

 conception." — Civil Einiinctr and Architect's Journal. 



London : George Bell, 186. Fleet Street. 



CUTTINGS FROil OLD NEWSPAPEKS AND MAGAZINES. 



FOR disposal, price Two Guineas, a very entertain- 

 ing Collection of rare OLD NEWSPAPER AND MAGAZINE 

 CUTTINGS, curious Exhibition Bills, Prints, &c., relating to Kentish 

 Town, Camden Town, Somers" Town, and other parts of ST. PANCRAS, 

 and appropriate to illustrate Wiswould and Ingpeu's projected history 

 of that nighly interesting parish. 



Also numerous ohl newspaper Cuttings, Prints, ancient Handbills, &c., 

 illustrative of the history of Fleet Street, Ilolborn Hill, and various 

 other parts of the Wakd mf Fariiingdo.n Without. Price Two Guineas. 



Collections relating' to all the English Counties, to Remarkable Events, 

 and to Celebrated Characters, are likewise for disposal. 



Apply to MR. FENNELL, 1. Warwick Court, Gray's Inn. 



N. B. All the Cuttings are carefully dated. 



Just published, 



THE CATALOGUE OF A CHOICE AND 

 A'ALUABLE COLLECTION OF RARE AND CURIOUS 

 BOOKS, forming part of the extensive stock of F. Butsch, at Augsburg, 

 and comprising many unrivalled specimens of early Typography, first 

 editions of the Greek and Roman Classii-s ; rare Bibles ; books printed 

 upon velliun ; works with wootlcuts ; early Voyages and Travels ; old 

 Romances and popular Tules in alt lajiguages; Ballads in form of broad- 

 sheets; original Pamphlets of thcReforriiers; workson Music; Autograph 

 Manuscripts ofeininent Musicians; an almost unknownBuU of Pius II. » 

 printed by Fust and Sclioffer in the year 1461, &c. &c. 



Can be had gratis (or postage free for six stamps) of D. Nutt, 

 270. Strand, London. 



q^HE TRAVELLER'S JOY. Published in Five 



I Sections, each Section being perfect in itself, in handsome cloth 

 binding. Is. each. 



" The descriptions appear to contain all that is necessary to point out, 

 in a satisfactory manner, the peculiar interest, historical or otherwise, of 

 eacli locality, without being overburdened with tlie superfluous di tails 

 usually dragged in to swell the volume of local guide-books ; and the 

 style in which they arc written is. in spirit and adaptation to the large 

 and mixed class to which they are addressed, inferior to none of Mr. 

 Knight's pojjular publications. "~r/((; Times, Jxrne 25, idol. 



London: Charles Knioht, 90. Fleet Street. 



Just published, with Twelve Engravings, and Seven Woodcuts, roy al 8vo. 

 10.^.. cloth, 



THE SEVEN PERIODS OF ENGLISH AUCHI- 

 TECTURE DEFINED AND ILLUSTRATED. An Elemen- 

 tary Work, affording at a single glance a comprehensive view of the 

 History of English Architectiire, from the Heptarchy to the Reforma- 

 tion. By Edmund SiiAarE, M.A., Architect. 



'* Mr. Sharpe's reasons for advocating changes in the nomenclature of 

 Rickman are worthy of attention, coming from an author who has 

 entered very deeply into the analysis of flothic architecture, and who 

 has, in his ' Architectural Parallels,' followed a method of demon- 

 stration which has the highest possible value."—.! rchitcctural Quarterly 

 lievicw. 



" The author of one of the noblest architectural works of modem 

 times. His ' A rchitcctural Parallels ' are worthy of the best days of 

 art, and show care and knowledge of no common kind. All his lesser 

 works have been marked in their degree by tlie same careful and honest 

 spirit, llisaitempt to discriminate our architecture into jreriods and 

 assign to it a new nomenclature, is therefore entitled to considerable 

 respect."— G»«''f^'o«- 



London: George Bell, 186. Fleet Street. 



Printed bv Thomas Clark Shaw, of No. 8. New Street Square, at No. S. New Street Square, m the Parish of St. Bride in the City of London ; and 

 published by GroRGE Bell, of No. 186. Fleet Street, ik the Parish of St. Dunstaa in the West, m the City ot London, Publisher, at No. 186. 

 ilect Street aforesaid. — Saturday, August 9. 1851, 



