NATURAL HISTORY ADVERTISER. 



3 



SMITH, ELDER Co. Cornhill, London, 



** They equal, if they do not exceed, any thing he lias written 



befort'. " — Spectator. 

 ** As a picture of Persian manners, habits, customs, and dis- 



positions, the tale is both curious and valuable, although it 



does not by any means stand upon this single merit." 



Scotsman. 



** Admirable picture of Persian, Koordistan, and Toorkoraan 



life."— CoMr^ Magazme. 

 " It possesses all the vigour of description and absorbing 



interest, with which this writer knows how to invest his 



subject" — London Advertiser . 



On the First of October appealed 

 VIII. 



WALDEMAR; A TALE OF THE THIRTY YEARS WAR. 

 By,W. H. Harrison, Esq. Author of " Tales of a Physician," 

 &c. &c. 



A lively and varied narrative." — Literary Gazette. 



" A work which will be read with pleasure." — Atlas. 



** There is in this volume invention sufficient for a tale of six 

 times its length." — Court Journal. 



" The reader will rise from its perusal with the conviction of 

 having obtaiued a minuter insight into the manners of the 

 time, and the characters of the leading actors in it." — Albion. 



The celebrated historical romance of the Siege of Vienna, con- 

 densed and adapted from the German of Madame Pickler, is also 

 ready, and will be followed by The Baronet, by a Debutante ; 

 The Dark Lady of Doonah, by the Author of " Wild Sports 

 of the West ;" and other Original Works, of first rate talent, by the 

 most distinguished writers of the age. 



Now ready, the second edition, beautifully illustrated, 

 Price Is, 6d. cloth extra, or lOs, 6-1, elegantly bound in morocco, 



PICTURES OF PRIVATE LIFE, 



BY SARAH STICKNEY 



" Sarah Stickney is an honour to her sex and an ornament to 

 literature. We would place her volume in an exquisite small library 

 sacred to Sabbath feelings and the heart's best moods, when love, and 

 charity, and hope, combine to throw over the mind that soft and 

 tranquil glow only to be compared to the later glories of the day." — 

 Spectator. 



*' An impressive piety pervades her writings, and the philosophy of 

 morality lends its depth and grace. A lovefy frontispiece adorns the 

 volume, and the work is altogether invested with so virtuous a 

 character, that duty seems coupled with pleasure when we give it our 

 recommendation. " — National Standard. 



•* A very charming volume, full of graceful and feminine feeling, 

 and an entiiusiaitic sense of religious faith." — Literary Gazette. 



A Second Scries of Pictures of Private Life is now 

 in the press. 



