CONSTABLE S MISCELLANY. 

 XXVI. 



EVIDENCES of CHRISTIANITY. 



By the Venerable Archdeacon WRANGHAM. 



In this volume the truth of Christianity is proved by seven successive and 

 independent series of arguments ; each separately is a perfect demonstration, 

 but the effect of the whole united is irresistible. 



" We hail this well-timed publication with great pleasure. This is the true ' book' (of 

 human origin) ' of the Christian Church. '"London Weekly Review. 



XXVII. XXVIII. 



MEMORIALS of the LATE WAR, 



viz. I. Journal of a Soldier of the 71st Regiment. II. The 

 Spanish Campaign of 1808. By ADAM NEALE, M.D. F.L.S. 

 III. Despatch after the Battle of Corunna. By Lieut-Gen. Sir 

 JOHN HOPE. IV. Reminiscences of a Campaign in the Pyrenees 

 and South of France. By JOHN MALCOLM, Esq. V. Memoirs 

 of the War of the French in Spain. By M. de ROCCA. VI. 

 Narratives of the Battles of Quatre-Bras, Ligny, and Waterloo. 

 VII. Death of Napoleon Bonaparte. 



The history of the late war was a subject too interesting and important to 

 be omitted in the Miscellany : these volumes contain the narratives of those 

 eye-witnesses who had the best capacity and opportunity for observation, and 

 who were least likely to have their judgments warped by partiality or preju- 

 dice. 



" Well selected, and, where original, extremely interesting." Literary Gazette. 



" These records of British courage and constancy will sometimes soothe under disaster, 

 by bringing to remembrance the greater sufferings of others ; and they will produce many 

 a patriotic throb, when the British soldier, as he reads these pages, thinks of his country, 

 and looks upon her banner, and hears of her glory, in all ends of the earth." Caledonian 

 Mercury. 



XXIX. XXX. 



A TOUR in GERMANY, 



and some of the Southern Provinces of the Austrian Empire, 



in 1820, 21, 22. 

 By JOHN RUSSELL, Esq. 



The influence of German literature on the English mind is daily becoming 

 stronger, and it is therefore useful to have the means of determining what 

 result that influence will have, by seeing an account of the effects it has pro- 

 duced in its native land. 



" We must say, that we do not recollect to have met with a more reasonable traveller, 

 or, indeed, with many authors of any description, who have more successfully united 

 amusement with solid information, or entered on so great a variety of subjects, with so 

 little hazard of being represented as either tedious or superficial." Edinburgh Review. 



" Universally acknowledged to be the best of the multifarious works descriptive of that 

 country that has recently appeared." Edinburgh Observer. 



