Janvar¥ 21, 1860.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. a 
a eE 
| has been unable by his chemical — to separate | Nelson, at Trafalgar. We see the Lincolnshire boy pass 
the life from the mor rtal e case in — it had. been | through all the phases from childhood to manhi 
Notices od a5o0ks. - loged, a fully tied down | from the sk puga middy to the steady trustw. sa 
ina uct rena ” mip ant—tempere ed in a school of patient perseyer- 
Science in. Theology, by A. § . Farrar, M.A. Michel e, and not spoilt by constant success; he saw the 
ga of Queen’s College, “Oxford. 8vo. "Murray, By eed eign! the Doman E the pi Sir John n failure. at Flushing; he marked how, the un 
a anklin and Ea Companions. By Captain M‘Clin- | estim: aeaii ak a foe bro ousht down upon his pb cae 
sermons preached before the}. Ba R.N. Murray. Pp. the mischance of the American war; and in the disas- 
Unie of a in which the author designs to | Phe. Career, ok Voyage, and. Fate of Captain Sir fie preci to capture New Orleans le was for the 
some of the discoveries and methods of the| John. Franklin. By Captain Sherard Osborn, C.B. | first time wounded.” 
ia and moral sciences to bear upon theoretic} 12mo. Bradbury & 5 ao A kase As for the narrative of Franklin’s death, we shall saad 
questions of theology. It is well known that the) When two gallant officers. writing independently, | say that it is ae ae the most touching stories w: 
ology. Š x 
philosophers of theContinent, and especially in Germany, unite in descri ibing events Jike those Which befel one | mem mber to hav 
have long treated theo eology as a science; but their | of t} 
hi y regarded with distrust in | the; bl isi ible that their works A Ai ary el , Manufactures, and Mines, 
England, ind tob ble | should 5 tated. by lane Sania (P: art til ongmän) hes reached the word Calomel. 
of Spee the way in religion than the a piilo o-| I Wek? ‘lk at ra records It includes itn articles on Bread, Bricks, and 
sqphical, and the general ow ah oly m one, ational hear ma say, | of oe al daring? in high = bone leads m i Calico printin 
ut the Dlas: pomods 6 speculations of rationalistic | encounter s g an own in t nd 
ær the to vai w of the sound and | service is EA LN od om ening, and well may it be} TRADE Lists Recurvep.—Descriptive Catalogue of 
excellent treatises of divines, who with tod German | go, „But for the most part attention i is fixed up on the n TAOS ah of Annual, Biennial, y Perennial 
painstaking diligence have laboured to refute system ] r Seeds, selected from the ks er rig ion 
tically the mischievous errors of their opponents. Tt is carries men into the wild tumult of a battle at sea Cor ontinental and E English ae s, arranged according 
beginning to be felt in England that rati ood views | and that quiet resolution age ch eae others 2 calmly to the Natural System. By Wm. THO MPSON, vern 
ought not to be met by mere invective y sound | ¢ + p and vanquish | Street, Thick teas Kerynus’s (Salisbury) Catalogue 
argument, and for that purpose the and af riters | them is far less tho’ oug ht spon. Ye ee is doubtful | Of Show and Fancy Dahlias, Roses, Carnations, Picotees, 
-on theology in — have already prepa: ared vast whether the latter is not the m se nel ha of the | Fuchsias, and Verbenas.—A Catalogue of $ 
storehouses of arms for all who are called upon two; and certainly there is pee aa in the lives of a y 
contend for the fai ith. Blake or a Nelson that can be placed above the un- 
Univers “pet sermons are not usually attractive to the | flinching resolution which carried Franklin to his : and s 
general reader, but in the present volume the style is | tomb, or impelled MClintock and his companions to | Culinary Roots and Implements, so 
peculiarly pen for a subject of such epth, the argu- | rescue him iP still alive. Think only dta a yac cht of | TU N A 
ments a forcibly put, and the class of persons for | 170 tons, a mere boat, : facing fields of floating ice which ect 
whose use the sermons are intended is well borne in | eyen forced her back 1200 miles, then returning to the 00 
mind, hers this s usually makes a book interesting. The charge, par hi the p = e a hyperbor rean winter, Nurseryman, Weste. 
first sermon uggling » packs ” the very sight of which 
men that could be taken. There the classical student on pare r makes landsman’s. heart tremble, and | Flower —Descriptive Catalogue of Che 
will read with pleasure how the ae intellects amon Bt her aim, returning in safety with Vegetab; for sale by ir 
the Greeks were oa once God if h a they y mil) hry the! lon of a man, Surely Saia like these win War, Bats aa Qis Ri arket Place, Manches 
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reasoning * powers pain found that there ele be a ih aay Sa needless, even had we space at.command, amberwell, bridged heot) Serg aA of o Eea, 
“great first cause,” asort of order or law ruling in a tell the reader the history of M‘Clintock’s great igs ricultural, and F Catalogue 
nature, and ever ead =) good, but they never dis- reac or of that earlier one the = of which | of Garden and Tower $ Seeds a d Gar cen iain ments, 
a kae had arrived a was itself | jt succeeded in dis age Peep daily papers have poe i abe ame get on, of Cupar, aor Fife. Waa 
merely an He as us operandi of a Supreme leet exhausted that su ; and hee who desire > 
Being. Thei mpers on al abstraction, mot a more will necessarily aa te to the volume itself, Road) Catalogue of Kitchen, Flower Garden, and 
personal, self- exiting, p wine è; eg io lent Being. | the maps and sketches in which om indispensable to | Agricultura 
The author c tells s us in a no ote hat! he has in his | the right nadareiansing, of the stor 
sermon ra rs t p heathen, me It is otherwise with Captain Sherard asap s little | 
the sabiasteatic scholar will Asi forgive him for | sketch, a pat of whic! One ee. 
appeare cellan 
finding more of God in his favourite philosophers than We here find the career of Franklin in his Teie d The Ros De rere wl tae are changed! One . 
perhaps: they’ Teally aanas The ad Iwighton a ip to his danti, , painted byt the h and of one whom the used to say, some years ago, to a br rother Rose lover, 
e cle a and bri eloquen d 
lopment of the Divine character, as -it is pase =e as a ae inguished amas. BE ` thorough this year, or Desprez? ” “and. then 
displayed to Moses, David, and salah, and at length acquaintance with oe oning ai whom yee would be “Oh yes! you must get et wot ~ n 
pane time of aa lory = the Christian | public also knows, not only Tor his brilliant conduct: in | Rose of Laffay’s, Dr. Marx, aaa Baronne Prevost. of 
diapentat 3 he must not forget that wal the Crimean war, but as a spirited and graceful poner Sate g and so it went on from ya to i. few 
able rerelition of the attributes of God which as | One ae thaws the stk = poma Sh à | d pakin; ing their ; 
_vouchsafed to the Pron prayer of the great Jawgiver Osbo is made. Franklin. i th 7 
“The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long- aint called 4 the Dagli; e s ‘Capt. minke The askna t is so a at the —— day that it 
ee and abundant in goodness an and truth,” &e.! when a large part of me n’s New Holland collections | seems scarcely credible. In the autumn of 1858, the 
XXXL ll be ge diced ta were lost. _After being escued, he proceeded to China, È French ] Rose growers sent out for ies 
find his Special and wondrous branch of stu varieties, all with new names: t all with new 
“ee not as an opponent, which it never po i e | belonging to ti seis In this list of “ Seeemeeaeis ten” we have 
but as it is in reality, the inadihid of religion—not| “On the ee eas g anuary, 1804, a magnificent | 40 kinds of Hybrid Perpetuals, 4 of Damask Perpetuals, 
togning ut corroborating the testimony of serip- | fleet of 15 East: Indiamen are putting to sea, from the | 12 of Bourbons, 10 of Tea-scented, 2 of Noisettes, 
ure, each science after its own manner. s astro- | Canton River. Franklin has pears a in the} 1 China, and 2 summer Moss Roses. In this list are 
that aided by the telescope, reveals to man an idea of | Karl Camden, commanded by si sass passe the denlslan many sonia Soe a igen a ym differing 
capitan of “The mic such as hrm ax See had no nt | Dance, the a of this ie, erie is laden with | to the ex varieties we 
. on hand. 3 ransel Chinese ee udgmen' must, 
known to us that laleke r lars af dig see ie = : ya wilco 
then notorious Marengo, long exposure on _ her Journey will will allow her, and. ‘she 
nd his three satellite frigates. | will perhaps give flow ers approaching in beauty to their 
it to he long- | real character. Butif her master is a new man, anxious 
seen before shaping a course for the Straits of Malacca; planted i in ‘favourable border, and suffered to bloom 
3 2 are seen, th 
ni to be the t 
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astens towards | about propagatio: 
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„a periodicity w timely reverses the effects ready to fight. He heaves t to, in the hope that t during 
Sin. apparently verging to some catastrophe, | the nicht tl fi 
are sought rize, t ina 
trod tha é urb- | it, but i 
of the Lad Bs ch compose it are subject battle, some of them more warlike than others, but all | 
whieh | 
and 
an exquisite system of compensation ensures the light on ae a finds them all as had senan the | 
In of the whole, night, at their quarters, tte, F 
aena. wag, Mr. endeavours to show that | pared to a battle for "the 
fro aaay be regard as a revelation, differing only | from 
from the ine one in bei unicated day. Linois, more 
human genius . h the agency of until the English 
True has nothi fear ears ji 
of modern orided i | Tack! 
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