

COMPLETION 



ov 



THE TRAVELLER'S LIBRARY, 



In Twenty-five Volumes, price Five Guineas, in cloth. 



♦ 



The Tea-vellf-k's Libiuby being now complete, the Publishers call 

 ittenfcion to this collection as well adapted for Travellers bxiA Emigrants, for School- 



^■' • ^he Lidraries of .TT-' ■ ■ • ' T--'"-'' Young JUeft's Libraries, the 



j'S, and similar j r. volumes are suited for 

 '/ Frizes, F resents to Young Feople, and for general instruction and entertain- 

 I, 



The Series comprises fourteen of the most popular of Mr. Macaulay's Essays, 

 and his Speeches on 1' itary Reform. 



The department tn ikhcIs contains some account of eight of the pimujiial 

 countries of Europe, as well as travels in four districts of Africa, in four of 

 America, and in f hree of Asia. 



Madame Pfciff ••' '■'•■•' ^ ■ /'v/ iuuk^ ■«/ truiui is included; ani a general 

 account of the .1 .j. 



In Biography and History will be found Mr. Macaulay's Biographical Sketches 



"'" "' ■ ir.i: Clice, Pitt, IFalpole, Bacon, and. others ; besines Memoirs of 



F. Arago, &c.; an Essay on tJic Life and Genius of Thomas 

 /"YrT, with Selections from his Wrltiiir ' '" "^ ry Rogers j «ud u historj 

 ot' the Mmic Campaign, ^^- '^''r ni.'i.' - v separate account of this 



remarkable eampaign. 



Works of Fiction did not cciuc wiliim ilic plan of the Traveller's Libraky; 

 but the Confessions of a Working Man, by Souvestre, which is indeed a fiction 

 founded on fact, has been included, and has been read with unusual interest by 

 many of the- ' ' for whose use it is especially recommended. Dumas's 



story of the -, though in form a work of fiction, gives a striking 



picture of an episode in the history of Russi 



Amongst the works on Science and Naiurai i'iiilosophy, a general view of 

 f'n ation is embodied in Dr. Kemp's Natural History of Creation; and in his 

 •^ations of Instinct remarkable facts in natural history are collected. Dr. 

 Wilson has con* ' ! a popular account of the Electric Telegraph. In the 

 volumes on the ( -Is, and on the Tin and other Mining Districts of Cornwall, 



is given an account of the mineral wealth of England, the nabits and manners of 

 the miners, and the scenery of the surrounding country. 



It only remains to add, that among the Miscellaneous Works are a Selection of 

 the best Writings of the Rev. Sydney Smith ; Lord Carlisle's Lectures and Addresses ; 

 an account of Mormonism, by the Riev. W. J. Conybeare ; an exposition of Railway 

 management and mismanagement, by Mr. Herbert Spencer; an account of the 

 Origiii and Practice of Fnnting, by Mr. Stark; and an account of London, by Mr. 

 M'Culloch. . 



Frorn the Leader. 



" Ifwpwere called iiTon to lav the first stone of a i Asiatir oountriea, and C3famples from the works of 



'' ■■-■' ■--■•■■ •■ • -:■ -. • f •• Mon, I Soil -,....-..-.... ,>,-..,.„, ..„_.„n„.,. ,w... .-. 



irts 



Hug 



StHle.-cxI.ull. 11 MUS, 



tin- antholceia ible 



liter.!'" ' I >, MM'.ii I Ai i-ilent 



volui of travel in eifiht 



Eurc) I ' African, ami three 



t\\, 

 of 



i.a 



Kill 



SUliiwi.. ,. "J..- ...iji.^.:: . . .1... 



Good 1" the reach of workiiiR 



men, if \ ..ibine to obtain them." 



^* The Traveller's Library may also be had as originally issued in 102 parts, 

 Is. each, forming 50 vols. 2s. 6d. each ; or any separate parts or volumes. 



London : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, LONGMANS, and ROBERTS, 



7 



