MESSRS. TINSLEY BROTHERS' NEW WORKS. 



MASANIELLO OF NAPLES. 



By Mrs. HORACE ST. JOHN. 



In 1 Vol. [This day. 



" The historic parallel which some writers detect in the brief course of Masa. 

 niello and the unfinished career of Garibaldi, is far from complete ; and, save on a 

 few comparatively trivial points, it is by no means manifest. Of humble origin, 

 the one a fisherman, the other a sailor, they both exclaimed against the misrule 

 of Naples, and were raised, by the popular will, from obscurity to eminence. 

 Throughout her bright and gracefully-written volume, Jlrs. St. John speaks of 

 Masauiello's riot as a revolution, and requires for him, as a true, enlightened, un- 

 fortunate patriot, our admiration and pity."— Atherueum. 



FACES FOR FORTUNES. 



By AUGUSTUS MAYHEW, 

 Author of " How to Marry and Whom to Marry," "The Greatest Plague in 

 Life,"&e. [ThisduT/. 



BALLADS. 



By MISS AMELIA B. EDWARDS, 



Author of " Barbara's History." [Tfds day. 



A MISSION TO DAHOMEY: 



Being a Three Months' Residence at the Court of Dahomey. In which are described 

 the Planners and Customs of the Country, including the Human Sacrifice, <fcc. 



By CAPT. R. F. BURTON, 



Late H. M. Commissioner to Dahomey, and the Aiithor of " A Pilgrimage to 



EI Medinah and Meccah." In 2 Vols., with Illustrations. 



[Second Edition revised, thU day. 

 "He witnessed the grand Cxistoms and the yearly Customs of that grotesquely 

 ceremonious people, including the evolutions of their army of ' Amazons ' and the 

 traces of their cruel human sacrifices, of which he himself, with proper tast«, 

 declined to be an actual spectator, and he brought away impressions of the 

 Dahoman prochvities which are really very curious and instructive, though they 

 were not very satisfactory to himself nor to be commended to the imitation of the 

 gentle philanthi-opists who patronise the Dahomans or their congeners under the 

 faU;icious impression that they can ever be elevated up to the same level of being 

 as themselves." — Times. 



