POETRY &- BELLES LETTRES. 27 



literature and art ; delighting, each of them, in the epigrammatic terseness 

 which is the charm of the ' Pensees ' of Pascal, and the ' Caractires ' of La 

 Bruyire — agreed to utter themselves in this form, and the book appeared, 

 anonymously, in two volumes, in 1827." — Memoir. 



Hamerton. — a painter's camp. By Philip Gilbert 

 Hamerton. Second Edition, revised. Extra fcap. 8vo. ds. 



Book I. In England ; 'SiOOlnYi.. In Scotland ; BooVi. 111. In France. 

 This is the story of an Artist's encampments and adventures. The 

 headings of a few chapters may serve to convey a notion of the character 

 of the book : A Walk on the Lancashire Moors ; the Author his own 

 Housekeeper and Cook ; Tents and Boats for the Highlands ; The Author 

 encamps on an uninhabited Island ; A Lake Voyage ; A Gipsy Journey 

 to Glen Coe ; Concerning Moonlight and Old Castles ; A little French 

 City ; A Farm, in the Autunois, ^'c. (s'c. 



" His pages sparkle with happy turns of expression, not a few well-told 

 anecdotes, and many observations which are the fruit of attentive study and 

 wise reflection on the complicated phenomena of human life, as well as of 

 unconscious nature." — Westminster Review. 



ETCHING AND ETCHERS. A Treatise Critical and Practical. 

 By P. G. Hamerton. With Original Plates by Rembrandt, 

 Callot, Dujardin, Paul Potter, &c. Royal Svo. Half 

 morocco. 3IJ. (>d. 



"It is a work of which author, printer, and publisher may alike feel 

 proud. It is a work, too, of which none but a genuine artist could by pos- 

 sibility have been the author."— Sa.t:vsdky Review. 



Helps. — REALMAH. By Arthur Helps. Cheap Edition. 

 Crown Svo. ds. 



Of this work, by the Author of "Friends in Council," the Saturday 

 Review says: " Underneath the form (that of dialogue) is so much shrewd- 

 ness faiuy, and abm/e all, so much wise kindliness, that we should think 

 all the better of a man or woman who likes the book" 



