6 - ee SLIPTLE AND 
oe 
BROWN’S 
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change would have involved many © other 
Mise has dische 
A MANUAL OF POLITICAL ina 
THE STATE. By RANCIS ee 
tions, government, pg athy, &c. &c., an 
r nd m 
and virtuous of all countries. The \ work 
aim and end are practical.” &c.—Eatract Provo 
* 
are eure in ane eresting ma 
I am disposed to concur in ES pe s whi cia 
“as I 
an Hig to our iterate and do much to 
all have so great an interest.” —-Eztr od from a 
arious mistakes occasioned by the h 
manner in w he acciden 
since the days of 4ristotle.’’-—London 
edition. 12mo. By Francis Lreper. 
not merely useful to students, but to m n of lon 
‘ eet worthy the reputation of the auth 
& 
d poetry, but it ‘could hardly have wit called the poetry of at for such a 
u ; : We repeat, tha 
( stant I the duties which he wed took in a most excellent MaieiA. tue 
able at once to himself and useful to all his readers. We must not omit to mention, that 
se proonce walk in point ost ay execution, are among the most elegant that have 
an American pre They will bear a rigid pe aL with the m 
qibotgely co he London Deductions ”_ Boston Morning Pos 
ly“ We con sider this reprint of Leta with the excellent annotations and other labors of 
t orks 
the pares? ag as an importan rds the more general introducti 
of this class s remarked, Re oisely, that the gg" ry nd only pongo ma in 
these volum ut eve uch areader will return aerie Quee 
with renewed 
aan in the sickshive fen of tasteful ty tens? + Philadelphia National Gazette, 
USE OF COLLEGES AND STUDENTS AT LAW ; PART FIRS ST, CON- 
TAINING BOOK I. ETHICS GENERAL AND POLITICAL; BOOK II. 
ciples just shen admirable and most aye as to right, duties, property, so ela- 
h d 
with your work a book. Yours most tra 
_ oey $n are Aes ie State and rhe ges Be ty) ects of deep importance, an 
take. 
hope you will present the mck to the oublic at an early day. It would be q 
The v 
the rudest eonceivable condition of human existence, falsely — won the state of 
e a ‘ 1 
any 0 
I va ariety of iustration, we cannot even refer to, without exceeding aes ‘init We sa 
* that this yoke _ "the means ar ma the attention of our countryme a subject 
w 
« Cag the systematic completeness with which the subject is s handled, and 
aside a 
always seahert Political Ethics may be howeky amongst the best treatises on Governme ent 
Spec 
LEGAL AND POLITICAL HERMENEUTICS, OR PRINCIPLES OF IN- 
TERPRETATION AND CONSTRUCTION IN LAW AND POLITICS, 
WITH REMARKS ON PRECEDENTS AND AUTHORITIES. Enlarged 
7 noe ® emeene Cae boyd: pene as a work eminently pit 4 our profe 
exposition of the principles aa admirab tn pee ag = the aoienel of f interpretation an 
ive 
ye 
sory examination in MS. ; but from Cs is said d glance I am induced to believe, 
still more importan 
DESIGNED CHIEFLY FOR THE 
= vols. 8vo 
ormal sot ment whatever, that ve 
; fall of deep reflection, solid pebotgiet hr 
it over superficially but I have begun and 
7 
e and intend to make _— ‘ae 
with me a still greater value, in that its 
a letter of the Hon. JosEru Srory. 
and 
ome, not important exceptions, 
call a attention to subjects in whieb 
. Joun C HOUN 
letter of th e Hon 
abit of seeking for the origin of society in 
ersed.”’—London ie aeduiew 
d the essentials al imed at, if i 
ssion— 
as a most lucid 
cannot but think that the public. wi 
ee @ 
