WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. 9 



THE nOOK-HUNTER, ETC. 



By JOHN HILL BURTON. New Edition. In croAvn 8vo, 7s. 6d. 



" A book pleasant to look at and pleasant to read— pleasant from its rich storeof anecdote, its geniality, 

 and its humour, even to persons who care little for the subjects of which it treats, but beyond measure de- 

 lightful to those who ari; m any degree members of the above-mentioned fraXi^ruHy. "Saturday Jiemnv. 



" We have not been more amused for a long tin^e : and every reader who takes interest in typography 

 and its consequences will say the same, if he will begin to read ; beginning, he will finish, and be sorry 

 when it ia oyer."— Atheticmm. 



"Mr Burton has now given us a pleasant book, full of quaint anecdote, and of a lively bookish talk. 

 There is a quiet humour in it which is very taking, and there is a curious knowledge of books which is 

 really very sound."— jfc'xa»u>i<;r. 



HOMER AND HIS TRANSLATORS, 



And the Greek Drama. By Professor WILSON. Crown 8vo, 6s. 



" But of all the criticisms on Homer which I have ever had the good fortune to read, in our own or 

 any language, the most vivid and entirely genial are those found in the ' Essays, Critical aud Imagina- 

 tive,' of the late Professor Wilson."— J/r Gladstones Studies on Homer. 



THE SK ETC HER. 



By the Rev. JOHN EAGLES. Originally published in ' Blackwood's Maga- 

 zine.' 8vo, 10s. 6d. 



" This volume, called by the appropriate name of ' The Sketclier,' is one that ought to be found in the 

 studio of every English landscape-painter. .... More instructive and suggestive readings for young 

 artists, especially landscape-painters, can scarcely be found."— TVte Globe. 



ESS A YS. 



By the Rev. JOHN EAGLES, A.M. Oxon. Originally published in ' Black- 

 wood's Magazine.' Post 8vo, 10s. 6d. 



Contents : — Church Music, and other Parochials. — Medical Attendance, and 

 other Parochials. — A few Hours at Hampton Court. — Grandfathers and 

 Grandchildren. — Sitting for a Portrait. — Are there not Great Boasters 

 among us? — Temperance and Teetotal Societies. — Thackeray's Lectures: 

 Swift. — The Crystal Palace. — Civilisation : The Census. — The Beggar's 

 Legacy. 



ESS A YS; HISTORICAL, POLITICAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS. 

 By Sir ARCHIBALD ALISON, Bart., D.C.L. Three vols., demy 8vo, 45s. 



LECTURES ON THE POETICAL LITERATURE OF THE 

 PAST HALF-CENTURY. By D. M. MOIR. Third Edition. Fcap. Svo, 5s. 



" Exquisite in its taste and generous in its criticisms."— /fjtyft. Miller. 



LECTURES ON THE HISTORY OF LITERATURE, 



Ancient and Modern. From the German of F. Schlegel. Fcap., 5s. 



"A wonderful performance— better than anything we as yet have in our own language."— Qua rfeHy 

 Review. 



THE GENIUS OF HANDEL, 



And the distinctive Character of his Sacred Compositions. Two Lectures. 

 Delivered to the Members of the Edinburgh Philosophical Institution. By 

 the Very Rev, DEAN RAMSAY, Author of ' Reminiscences of Scottish Life 

 and Character.' In crown Svo, 3s. 6d. 



BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, 



From Commencement in 1817 to December 1861. Numbers 1 to 554, forming 

 90 Volumes. £31, 10s. 



INDEX TO THE FIRST FIFTY VOLUMES OF BLACKWOOD S 



MAGAZINE. 8vo, 15s. 



