96 



THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Feb. lo. 



BOOKS RECENTLY 



PUBLISHED, 

 PUBLICATION. 



OR IN PROGRESS OF 



E 



NCYCLOPiEDIA BRITANNICA; Seventh Edition. Edited by Professor Napier. 



- Now completed in 21 Volumes 4to ; illustrated by 506 Engravings on Steel, and many Thousands on Wood. 

 In Paper, Printing, and Embellishment, as well as in the Literary Value of its contents, the Work is accommodated 

 to the improved taste and advanced information of the times ; and, whether for the purpose of systematic study or 

 occasional reference, the Proprietors are satisfied that the Seventh Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica will 

 be found to be the most valuable addition which can be made to a modern library. 



A recent writer in the Quarterly Review, in adverting to the pre-eminent value of ^ n ^^'°^^ 

 that, » An Australian or New Zealand settler, who left his home with no other accomplishment but that of being 

 able to read, write, and count, might, with such a companion, beguile his long and weary voyage, and become a well- 

 informed man before he reached his destination." 



Lord Brougham also, in his recent speech on the Copyright Bill, observed, " If any work was not only valuable 

 and useful, but absolutely necessary for the country, it was this." 



An Index of 68,000 references, compiled with great industry and judgment, is appended to the work; forming a 

 ready key to its multifarious contents. 



TRAVELS through the ALPS of SAVOY, and OTHER PARTS of the PENNINE 



J- CHUN: with Observations on the Phenomena of Glaciers. By James D. Forbes, F.R.S., Sec. R.S.E. ; 

 Corresponding Member of the Royal Institute of France, and Professor of Natural Philosophy in Jfa >V*™*J 

 of Edinburgh In a handsome volume, imperial 8vo. Illustrated by a large Map of the Mer de Glace of 

 Chamouni, Lithographed Views and Plans, and Engravings on Wood, price 28,.; or, with the large Map, 

 coloured, in a case, 31$. Gd. 

 " A volume full of interesting and novel scientific information, pleasant and readable."— Athenxum. 



A VOYAGE ROUND the COASTS of SCOTLAND and the ISLES. By James 

 Wilson, F.R.S.E., M.W.S., &c. With a Map of Scotland, exhibiting the Tract of the Voyage ; a Chart of 

 St Kilda ; 20 Etchings on Steel, by Charles H. Wilson, A.R.S.A., from Sketches during the Voyage by Sir Thomas 

 Dick Lauder, Bart., and numerous Wood Engravings from the same Sketches, drawn by Montague Stanley, Prior, 

 and Sargent, and Engraved by Branston, Landells, and other Artists. 2 vols, post 8vo. Price 21s. 



'• Two of the most charming volumes we have had under our notice for a long time. --They describe scenery round which the 

 imagination loves to linger, and of which no description can be fatiguing. -Court Journal. 



« Written in a flowing and animated style. • * * Those who wish to know Scotland in its coasts and islands will derive from 

 this work both instruction and pleasure ; those who desire to know the value of their country and its institutions, as shown even 

 in the most inaccessible parts of its remotest provinces, will ponder over its contents; and the general reader, who seeks only for 

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 volumes.**— Edinburgh Review. 



BLACK'S GENERAL ATLAS OF THE WORLD. New Edition. To be completed in 

 Eight Parts, (Price 6s. each,) of which Seven are now Published. 



This Atlas which is already favourably known by the large circulation of the former Edition, is unsurpassed either 

 in accuracy or beauty of execution by any work of its class, while in cheapness it is altogether unequalled. It contains 

 Gl Folio Maps, engraved on Steel in the first style of Art, by Sidney Hall, Hughes, and^others, with Geographical 

 Des * " " ' " ------ 



60 ; 



The present Edition has been revised and corrected throughout, and many important New Maps have been added 



to it. Part VII. which aloue is required to complete the work — will contain the General Index, and will appear 



early in March. Part VIII., containing the New Maps, is Just Published, and is recommended to the purchasers 



of the former Edition. 



" We may now say, with certainty, that as no Atlas exceeds Black's in the neatness of its form and the utility of its dimensions, 

 so in Geographical accuracy, and beauty of execution, it equals any work extant of similar pretensions, and yet greater charge. 

 We have not been disappointed in a single reference to any of the Maps yet issued, and we have severely tested those of the present 

 Number."— Atlas. 



Folio Maps, engraved on steel in tne nrsc siyie oi Art, uy own*.* ha^, umuts, ouu uluwb, nuu v. cw 6 ,a F" ,v "* 1 

 escriptions, Statistical Tables, and an Index of all the names occurring in the several Maps, amounting to nearly 

 1,000, with'their Latitude and Longitude, and the Number of the Map in which they will be found. 



A DICTIONARY OF MEDICINE FOR POPULAR USE ; containing an Account of 

 Diseases and their Treatment, including those most frequent in warm climates ; with Directions for Adminis- 

 tering Medicines ; the Regulation of Diet and Regimen ; and the Management of the Diseases of Women and 

 Children. By Alexander Macaulay, M.D., Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, 

 and Physician- Accoucheur to the New Town Dispensary. Eighth Edition. 1 vol. 8vo. double columns. 14s. 



"Just such a Work as every head of a family ought to have on his book- shelf."— Brighton Herald. 



•« If sterling merit be the passport to success, this work will obtain the roo6t extensive celebrity ."—Bath Herald. 



" Calculated to accomplish all that could be wished in a popular system of medicine."— Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal. 



•• We have seen nothing of the kind better adapted for consultation.'*— Literary Gazette. 



u Decidedly the most useful book of the kind that has yet been offered to the public."— Caledonian Mercury. 



ANGLO-CATHOLICISM NOT APOSTOLICAL ; being an Inquiry into the Scriptural 

 Authority of the Leading doctrines advocated in "The Tracts for the Times, fp and other Publications of the 

 Anglo-Catholic School. By W. Lindsay Alexander, M. A., Author of " The Connexion and Harmony of 

 the Old and New Testaments," &c. 1 vol. 8vo. Price 85. 



u Mr Lindsay Alexander's learned and able work." — Edinburgh Review. 



•* It is written in a calm considerate spirit, and states the arguments of opponents with fairness and candour."— A therutum. 



" We most cordially recommend this book. It is not so short as to be superficial, nor so long as to be tedious. It does not 

 bewilder the reader by wandering over the almost interminable range of topics which might be brought into this controversy, but 

 judiciously confines attention to those leading questions which only are of real moment, and which are fundamental to the rest. 

 The style of the work is simple and appropriate, serious as befits the grave subjects it discusses, clear and graceful as that of one 

 accustomed to orderly thinking, and well practised in the communication of his thoughts to others."— Eclectic Review. 



"He ha* manifested almost conciliatory and Christian spirit in his management of the argument."— Church of England 

 Quarterly Review. 



THE FRUIT, FLOWER, and KITCHEN GARDEN. Forming the Article "HORTI- 

 CULTURE," in the Seventh Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. By Patrick Neill, LL.D., 

 F.R.S.E., Secretary to the Caledonian Horticultural Society. In post 8vo., illustrated with upwards of Sixty Wood- 

 cuts. Price 6s. 



"One of the best modern books on Gardening extant ; clear, comprehensive, and in every part well reasoned."— Loudon's Gar- 

 dener's Maff.tirini' 



"No country gentleman who takes an interest i*\ the appearance and successful management of his policies should neglect to 

 furnish a copy of this work to his gardener's library."— Ferthsnire Courier. 



" A hand-book of practical instruction in the art superior to any that has hitherto appeared, and which no one with a garden 

 ought to be without."— Caledonian Mercury. 



"The best book of the kind."— Nottingham Journal. 



" It includes all the improvements which late experience has introduced." — Northampton Mercury. 



- A perfect guide in every department of gardening."— Dundee Courier. 



"The first really practical treatise on Horticulture we have seen."— Somerset County Gazette. 



ADAM and CHARLES BLACK, Edinburgh ; 

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London ; and John Cumming, Dublin 



WORKS 



On AGRICULTURE, LAND-SURVEYING 

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AN ENCYCLOPAEDIA of AGRICULTURE- cu* 



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THE FARMER'S ENCYCLOPAEDIA, and Dictio*. 



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ELEMENTS of PRACTICAL AGRICULTURE, fiv 



DAVID LOW, Esq., F.R.S.E., Prof, of Agriculture in the tni 

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The BREEDS of the BRITISH DOMESTICATED 



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AN INQUIRY into the NATURE of the SIMPLE 



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THE APPLICATION of GEOLOGY to AGRI- 



CULTURE, and to the Improvement and Valuation of Land • 

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THE ART of VALUING RENTS and TILLAGES, 



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CROCKER'S ELEMENTS of LAND-SURVEYING. 



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A COMPLETE TREATISE on PRACTICAL LAND 



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A TREATISE on PRACTICAL MENSURATION: 



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ILLUSTRATIONS of the PRINCIPLES and PRAC- 

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RESEARCHES on LIGHT ; an Examination of all the 



Phenomena connected with the Chemical and Molecular 

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 Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society. [*» the P rea * 



A MANUAL of ELECTRICITY, MAGNETISM, and 



METEOROLOGY. ByDIONYSIUS LARDNER, D.C.L..F.R.S. 

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LESSONS on CHEMISTRY ; for the Use of Pupils 



in Schools, Junior Students in Universities, and Readers who 

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A TREATISE on FOOD and DIET : with Obserra- 



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 the Digestive Organs. By JON. PEREIRA, M.D., F.R.S., «^ s - 

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DR. TURTON' S MANUAL of the LAND and FRESH- 

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 Plates, 15*. 



POPULAR CONCHOLOGY; or, the Shell Cabinet 



arranged: being an Introduction to the Modern S>ste 

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 Animals, an Account of the Formation of the Shells, 

 complete Descriptive List of the Families and ^| nera * 

 AGNES CATLOW. Fcap. 8vo, 312 Woodcuts, 105. od. 



ELEMENTS of NATURAL HISTORY, for the >.V* 



of Schools and Young Persons; comprising tne . P ™"7 r P u ctir» 

 Classification, interspersed with amusing and war ^ 

 original accounts of the most remarkable Animals, nv ._ 

 R. LEE (formerly Mrs. T. E. BownicH), Author or 

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TAXIDERMY ; or, the Art of Collecting, Vx ^J^% 



and Mounting Objects of Natural History : for the ^ 

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LONDON: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, & LONGMA*^ 



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 to.the Editor.— Saturday, February 10, 1844. 



