38 LIST OF BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



Katie Stewart: A True Story. 



By Mrs Oliphant. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated boards, 2S. 6d. 



"A singularly characteristic Scottish story, most agreeable to read and 

 pleasant to recollect. The charm lies in the faithful and lifelike pictures it 

 presents of Scottish character and customs, and manners and modes of life." — 

 Tait's Magazine. 



Chronicles of Carlingford. 



By Mis Oliphaut. 

 Salem Chapel. 2S. in boards, or 2S. 6d. cloth. 

 The Perpetual Curate. 2S. in boards, or 2S. fid. cloth. 

 Miss Marjoribanks. 2S. in boards, or 2S. fid. cloth. 

 The Sector and the Doctor s Family, is. sewed, or is. fid. cloth. 



Modern Practical Cookery, 



Pastry, Confectionery, Pickling, and Preserving, with a 

 GREAT VARIETY OF USEFUL RECEIPTS. By Mrs Nourse. Fcap. 8vo, 

 boards, 5s. fid. 



Narratives of Voyage and Adventure. 



By Sherard Osljorn, C.B., Captain Royal Navy. 3 vols, crown 8vo, 

 17s. fid., or separately ; — 



Stray Leaves from an Arctic Journal; 



or, Eighteen Months in the Polar Regions in Search of Sir John Franklin's 

 Expedition in 1850-51. To which is added the Career, Last Voyage, and 

 Fate of Captain Sir John Franklin. New Edition, crown 8vo, 55. 



The Discovery of a North- West Passage by H.M. S. Investigator, 

 During the years 1850-51-52-53-54. Edited from the Logs and Journals 

 of Captain Robert C. M'Clure. Fourth Edition, crown 8vo, 5s. 



Quedahj a Cruise in Japanese Waters; and, The Fight on the 

 Peiho. New Edition, crown 8vo, 7s. fid. 



The Poems of Ossian 



In the Original Gaelic. With a Literal Translation into English, and a 

 Dissertation on the Authenticity of the Poems. By the Rev. Archibald 

 Clerk. 2 vols, imperial 8vo, ^^i, iis. fid. 



' ' The most thoughtful and able book in connection with Celtic literature 

 that has appeared for a long time. " — Perthshire yournal. 



" We feel assured that the present work, by the well-condensed information 

 it contains, by the honest translation of the Gaelic it gives, by the mere weight 

 of its fair statements of fact, will do more to vindicate the authenticity of 

 Caledonia's Bard from the pompous ignorance of Johnson, the envious spite 

 of Pinkerton, the cold incredulity of Laing, and even the self-asserting vanity 

 of IVIacpherson, than any champion that has yet appeared." — Glasgow Mail 



The Conquest of Scinde. 



A Commentary. By fieneral Sir James Oatram, C.B. 8vo, 18s. 



