LEA AND BLAN CHARD'S PUBLICATIONS. 



CAMPBELL^S LOUD CHAIS^CELLOES. 



JUST PUBLISHED. 



LIVES OF THE LORD CHANCELLORS AND KEEPERS OF THE 

 GREAT SEAL OF ENGLAND, 



FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE REIGN OF KING GEORGE IV., 



BY JOHN LORD CAMPBELL, A.M.,F.R.S.E. 



First Series, forming three neat volumes in demy octavo, extra cloth. 

 Bringing the work to the time of Lord Jeffries. 



THE SECOND SERIES WILL SHORTLY FOLLOW IN FOUR VOLUMES TO MATCH. 



"It is sufficient for us to thank Lord Campbell for the lionest industry with which he has thus fai 

 prosecuted his large task, the general candor and hberality with which he has analyzed the lives 

 and characters of a long succession of influential magistrates and ministers, and the manly style 

 of his narrative. We need hardly say that we shall expect with great mterest the contmuatioa 

 of this performance. But the present series of itself is more than sufficient to give Lord Campbell 

 a high station among the English authors of his age." — Quarterly Review. 



" The volumes teem with exciting incidents, abound in portraits, sketches and anecdotes, and are 

 at once interesting and instructive. The work is not only historical and biographical, but it is 

 anerjlotal and philosophical. Many of the chapters embody thrilling incidents, while as a whole, 

 the publication may be regarded as of a high intellectual order."— /n<7u;rcr. 



"A work in three handsome octavo volumes, which we shall regard as both an ornament and an 

 honor to our library. A History of the Lord Chancellors of England from the institution of the 

 office, is necessarily a History of the Constitution, the Court, and the Jurisprudence of the King- 

 dom, and these volumes teem with a world of collateral matter of the livehest character for the 

 general reader, as well as with much of the deepest mterest for the professional or phUosophicPl 

 mind." — Saturday Courier. 



" The briUiant success of this work in England is by no means greater than its nients. It is 

 certainly the most brilliant contribution to English history made within our recollection ; it has 

 the charm and freedom of Biography combined with the elaborate and careful comprohensivenesg 

 (rf History."— iV. Y. TrOmne. 



MURRAY'S ENCYCLOPEDIA OF GEOGRAPHY. 



THE ENCYCLOP/EDIA OF GEOGRAPHY, 



CO.MPRISINU 



A COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF THE EARTH, PHYSICAL, 

 STATISTICAL, CIVIL AND POLITICAL. 



EXHIBITINO 



ITS RELATION TO THE HEAVENLY BODIES, ITS PHYSICAL STRUCTURE, THE 



NATURAL HISTORY OF EACH COUNTRY, AND THE INDUSTRY, 



COMMERCE, POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, AND CIVIL 



AND SOCUL STATE OF ALL NATIONS. 



BY HUGH MURRAY, F.R.S.E., &c. 



Assisted in Botany, by Professor HOOKER— Zoology, ic, by W. W. SWAIN SON— Astronomy, Sue. 



by Professor WALLACE— Geology, &c., by Professor JAMESON. 



REVISED, WITH ADDITIONS, 



BY THOMAS G. BRADFORD. 



THE WHOLE BROUGHT UP, BY A SUPPLEMENT, TO 1843. 

 In three large octavo volumes. 



VARIOUS STYLES OF BINDING. 



This great work, furnished at u remarkably cheap rate, contains about 

 Nineteen Hundred large imperial Pages, and is illustrated by Eighty- 

 Two SMALL Maps, and a colored Map of the United States, after Tan 

 ner's, together with about Eleven Hundred Wood Cuts executed in the 

 best style. 



