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VII. 



THE WORKS OF EDMUND BURKE. 



In Nine Volumes, Octavo. 



" The present edition of Burke's Works is more complete than any one which has hith- 

 erto appeared either in England or America. It comprises the entire contents of the 

 English edition of his works in sixteen octavo volumes, including two volumes of speeches 

 on the trial of Hastings, published in 1827, anil which have never before been republished 

 in this country. It also contains a reprint of the work, entitled ' An Account of the Euro- 

 pean Settlements in America,' first published in 176J, (which, though published anonymous- 

 ly, is well known to have been written by Burke,) and also the correspondence with French 

 Laurence, which are not contained in the English edition of his collected works. Although 

 the present edition contains a volume more than the I ttest and best English one, it is offered 

 at less than one half the price. It has been the aim of the publishers to present the work 

 in a form and style worthy of its contents; and it 13 confidently offered to the favorable 

 regard of the public from its completeness, its moderate price, and its typographical excel- 

 lence. " — Preface to tie Edition. 



u The publishers of this edition have borne in mind the nature and value of the contents, 

 and given the mechanical execution a degree of excellence corresponding to the literary and 

 political merits of the volumes, of which there are nine, in octavo, containing all that is 

 given in the sixteen octavo volumes of the London edition, and including two volumes on 

 the East India question, and an account of the European discovery in America, which last 

 is not in the London edition. 



" This edition of Burke may be considered as containing all that that distinguished 

 writer intended for the press, and is commended to the taste and judgment of those who 

 are forming or competing a library." — United States I Philadelphia) Gazette. 



VIII. 



MEOANiaUE CELESTE. 



By the Marquis de la Place. 



Translated by NATHANIEL BOWD1TCH, LL. D. 



To which is prefixed a Life of Dr. Bowditch, with Portraits, &c. &c. 



Complete in Four Volumes, Royal Quarto. 



A few sets of this great 



for soon. As it never 



may wish to possess it, will do well to send their orders without delay. 



it work, now recently completed, may be had, if applied 

 will be reprinted, public libraries and individuals who 



IX. 



DICTIONARY OF LATIN SYNONYMES, 



For the Use of Schools and Private Students. 



With a Complete Index. 

 BY LEWIS RAMSHORN. From the German, by FRANCIS LIEBER. 



Duodecimo. 



"We are glad to see, in our own language, a translation of this valuable work of an 

 eminent German scholar and practical instructor. If the Latin language is still to be a 

 part of our course of education, — and we hope it will long continue to be so, — it must be 

 studied with the aid of such works as the present; for which, indeed, we shall be obliged, 

 for some time, to look to Germany, now at the head of the literature of all Europe. 



" We cannot but congratulate the students of the Latin language in this country, upon 

 the publication of a work, which is superior to any one of the kind that we are acquainted 

 with in the English language ; and it cannot fail to be considered a necessary part of the 

 apparatus of every student's library, as well as of every school where the Latin language 



is taught. 



"We must not conclude our remarks upon this volume, without adverting to the ex- 

 traordinary care with which it has been carried through the press; a consummation not so 

 easy as most readers would imagine, in works where the variety of types and languages id 

 apt to mislead the most lynx-eyed corrector, and in school boeks, above all others, of the 

 highest importance." — North American Review. 



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