CLOSE OF AUTUMN. 



Miscellaneous Reflections on Autumnal Appearances. The Landscape at the 

 Close of Autumn, xii. Sunday. — The Fall of the Leaf . 



GENERAL SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT. 



Government of the World bj' General Laws. Government of the World by a 

 Particular Providence. Contrast between Savage and Civilized Life, as regards 

 the Arts. As regards Domestic Comforts. As regards Commerce. As regards 

 Moral Cultivation, xiii. Sunday. — '■'■The Harvest is the End of the f For id.^^ 



The preceding ten volumes are now ready for delivery ;- 

 and they will be followed, with all due despatch, by the 

 subjoined, among others, provided they are approved by 

 the Board of Education. 



LIFE OF WASHINGTON, (with a portrait, and nu- 

 merous engravings,) by the Rev. Charles W. Up ham, 

 Author of ' ike Life of Sir Henry Vane,'' 



THE PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE UNDER DIF- 

 FICULTIES ; in two volumes, with Preface and Notes, 

 by Francis Wayland, D. D., President of Brown Uni- 

 versity. 



THE PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE UNDER DIF- 

 FICULTIES, illustrated by incidents in the Lives of 

 American Individuals ; in one volume, with Portraits. 



HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY, in two volumes, with illustra- 

 tive wood cuts, by Robley Dunglison, M. D., Professor 

 of the Institutes of Medicine in the Jefferson Medical College, 

 Philadelphia ; Author of ' Elements of Hygiene, ' ' The Medi- 

 cal Student,' 'Principles of Medical Practice,' Sfc. <^c. 



CHEMISTRY, with illustrative wood cuts, by Benja- 

 min Silliman, M. D., LL. D., Professor of Chemistry, 

 Mineralogy, Sfc. in Yale College. 



ASTRONOMY, by Dennison Olmsted, Professor of 

 JVatural Philosophy and Astronomy in Yale College. 



This work will be a popular treatise on the Science ; it will also enter 

 fully into its history, and consider the subject of Natural Theology, so 

 far as it is related to Astronomy. 



NATURAL PHILOSOPHY, by Professor Olmsted. 

 Both of these works will be very fully illustrated by diagrams and 

 wood engravings. 



