THE FAMILY LIBRARY. 9 



Bight of Benin. With the view of ascertaining this, the 

 Landers were set down at the same point of the coast of 

 Guinea where the former expedition had commenced. 



THE LIFE OF MARCUS TULLIUS CICEEO. 



By J. F. ROLLINGS. 



The name of Cicero himself the universal admiration of 

 his genius the era in which he flourished and the part he 

 enacted, bring his memoirs within the circle of subjects 

 suited to domestic education. His Life, by Middleton, is 

 more acceptable to the learned than the learner, and this 

 conclusion has led to this epitome, in which the text contains 

 the uninterrupted personal memoir of the philosopher in a 

 popular form ; while such information as belongs more 

 distinctively to the department of ancient literature is 

 conveyed by means of notes and references. 



SIX MONTHS IN THE WEST INDIES. 

 By HENRY NELSON COLERIDGE, M.A. 



This little work, which has already received public approba- 

 tion, is calculated to amuse in no ordinary degree, for the de- 

 scriptions of scenery are vivid, the pictures of society graphic, 

 and the adventures and anecdotes interesting and varied. 



LIVES 



OF THE MOST EMINENT BRITISH PAINTERS, 

 SCULPTORS, AND ARCHITECTS. 



By ALLAN CUNNINGHAM. 

 6 vols., with Portraits of Thirty-two of the most distinguished 



British Artists, $c. 



The author has collected in six small volumes the History 

 of Art in England, and the Lives, Characters, and Works of 

 its Professors, the materials for which were previously 

 scattered through many volumes. On this account, these 

 biographies have been considered a valuable acquisition to 

 literature ; and although the critical observations will render 

 them valuable to the student, yet, being free from the dry 

 technicalities of virtu, and abounding with personal anecdote, 

 they are not less alluring to the ordinary reader. 



