4 Popular Literature Puhlished by Harper Sf Brothers. 

 Coitering© in (Kurcpe; 



Or, Sketches of Travel in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Austria, 

 Prussia, Great Britain, and Ireland. With an Appendix, containing Ob- 

 servations on European Charities and Medical Institutions. By J. W. 

 Corson, M.D. 12mo, Muslin, $1 00 ; Paper, 75 cents. 



The author evidently wrote just as he traveled, with a perfect overflowing of enthusiasm. 

 The impressions which he received, and which he communicates to the reader, have all the 

 minute fidelity of the Daguerreotype as to form, while the author's imagination imparts to 

 them those natural hues which are beyond the reach of that art. — Journal of Commerce. 



(Jl)c Battle of jBtiena bista, 



With the Operations of the " Army of Occupation" for One Month. By 

 Captain Carleton. 12mo, Muslin, 75 cents; Paper, 50 cents. 



The best description that has yet appeared of one of the most distinguished battles fought 

 during the Mexican campaign. We read it through from title-page to Colaphon with unabated 

 interest. Its style is simple and pure, and its pictures vivid in a marked degree. — Knicker- 

 bocker. 



iJlan anb l)is inotiwes. 



By George Moore, M.D. 12mo, Muslin. 50 cents. 



Dr. Moore is one of the very best writers of the day. He is both a practical and a philo- 

 sophical physician, and he derives much advantage in developing the spiritual as well as phys- 

 ical nature of man, from the practice of his own profession. This is the third of his works, all 

 of which have been placed by intelligent readers in the first class of modern literature and phi- 

 losophy. — Cincinnati Herald. 



@:i)e ^tmxit 0f tDilbfdl foil. 



By A. Bell. 12mo, Muslin, 75 cents ; Paper, 50 cents. 



It is by all odds the best temperance story we ever read. It is difficult not to believe in 

 the reality of the scene. You can not doubt that it is an actual copy of life. You forget you 

 are reading a romance, and put just as much trust in the narration as if it were told of your 

 next-door neighbors. To produce this effect completely is, we take it, the highest success of 

 a novelist. — Mirror. 



(il)e Stniss i^amilj} Hobinson; 



Or, Adventures of a Father and Mother and Four Sons on a Desert Island. 

 13eing a Continuation of the Work published some years since under this 

 Title. 2 vols. 18mo, Muslin. 75 cents. 



Every one will remember the first two volumes of this charming story for children, and, of 

 course, be desirous to see the conclusion. The present volumes are quite as interesting as the 

 former.— Godey'i Lady's Magazine. 



The first two Volumes of the same work may still be had. 2 vols. ISmo, 

 Muslin. 62^ cents. 



STlje (©0ob genius tijat tnrncb ©wern 2i;i)ing into ®olb; 



Or, the Queen Bee and the Magic Dress. A Christmas Fairy Tale. By 

 the Brothers Mayhew. Engravings. 18mo, Muslin, gilt edges, 45 cents; 

 Muslin, plain, 37^ cents ; Fancy paper covers, 37^ cents. 



This is a most charming little fairy tale, written with singular beauty and spirit, and incul- 

 cating the duty of industry. 



Omoo; or, a Narration of ^boentnres in tlje Soutl) Qtas. 



By Herman Melville. 12mo, Muslin, $1 25 ; Paper, $1 00. 

 Musing the other day over our matinal hyson, we suddenly found ourselves in the entertain- 

 mgsociety of Marquesan Melville, the phcenix of modern voyagers, sprung, it would seem, from 

 the mingled ashes of Captain Cook and Robinson Crusoe. The title signifies a rover ; the 

 book is excellent quite first-rate. — Blackwood. 



