ENCYCLOPAEDIA AMERICANA. 3 



given of the provisions of American, English, French, Prussian, 

 Austrian, and Civil Law. 



The Publishers believe it will be admitted, that this work is 

 one of the cheapest ever published in this country. They have 

 been desirous to render it worthy of a place in the best libraries, 

 while at the same time they have fixed the price so low as to 

 put it within the reach of all who read. 



Those who can, by any honest modes of economy, reserve the sum of two 

 dollars and fifty cents qwarterly, from their family expenses, may pay for this 

 work as fast as it is published ; and we confidently believe that they will find 

 at the end that they never purchased so much general, practical, useful infor- 

 mation at so cheap a rate. Journal of Education. 



If the encouragement to the publishers should correspond with the testimony 

 in favor of their enterprise, and the beautiful and faithful style of its execu- 

 tion, the hazard of the undertaking, bold as it was, will be well compensated ; 

 and our libraries will be enriched by the most generally useful encyclopedic 

 dictionary that has been offered to the readers of the English language. Full 

 enough for the general scholar, and plain enough for every capacity, it is far 

 more convenient, in every view and form, than its more expensive and ponder 

 ous predecessors American Farmer. 



The high reputation of the contributors to this work, will not fail to insure 

 it a favorable reception, and its own merits will do the rest. Silliman's Journ. 



The work will be a valuable possession to eveiy family or individual that 

 can afford to purchase it ; and we take pleasure, therefore, in extending the 

 knowledge of its merits. National Intelligencer. 



The Encyclopaedia Americana is a prodigious improvement upon all that 

 has gone before it; a thing for our country, as well as the country that gave 

 it birth, to be proud of; an inexhaustible treasury of useful, pleasant and fa- 

 miliar learning on every possible subject, so arranged as to be speedily and 

 safely referred to on emergency, as well as on deliberate inquiry ; and better 

 still, adapted to the understanding, and put within the reach of the multitude. 

 * * * The Encyclopcedia Americana is a work without which no library 

 worthy of the name can hereafter be made up. Yankee. 



The copious information which, if a just idea of the whole may be formed 

 from the first volume, this work affords on American subjects, fully justifies 

 its title of an American Dictionary; while at the same time the extent, varie- 

 ty, and felicitous disposition of its topics, make it the most convenient and 

 satisfactory Encyclopaedia that we have ever seen. National Journal. 



If the succeeding volumes shall equal in merit the one before us, we may 

 confidently anticipate for the work a reputation and usefulness which ought 

 to secure for it the most flattering encouragement and patronage. Federal 

 Gazette. 



The variety of topics is of course vast, and they are treated in a manner 

 which is at once so full of information and so interesting, that, the work, in 

 stead of being merely referred to, might be regularly perused with as much 

 pleasure as profit. Baltimore American. 



We view it as a publication worthy of the age and of the country, and can- 

 not but believe the discrimination of our countrymen will sustain the publish- 

 ers, and well reward them for this contribution to American Literature. 

 Baltimore Patriot. 



We cannot doubt that the succeeding volumes will equal the first, and we 

 hence warmly recommend the work to the patronage of the public, as being by 

 far the best work of the kind ever offered for sale in this country. U. S. Oaz. 



It reflects the greatest credit on those who have been concerned in its pro- 

 duction, and promises, in a variety of respects, to be the best as well as the 

 most compendious dictionary of the arts, sciences, history, politics, biography, 

 &c. which has yet been compiled. The style of the portion we have read 

 is terse and perspicuous; and it is really curious how so much scientific and 

 other information could have been so satisfactorily communicated in such brief 

 limits. JV*. Y. Evening- Post. 



A compendious library, and invaluable book of reference. JV. Y. American 



