NATURAL HISTORY ADVERTISER. 



17 



FRASER §• Co's. BOOKS, 



** The present edition is one which we hesitate not to pronounce the 

 most complete that has yet been offered to the public. It not only 

 contains all the pieces which have appeared in former editions, but 

 boasts of several new pieces which are now inserted for the first time. 

 We are also here presented with the various readings of certciin of his 

 more celebrated poems— a feature in this edition by no means unim- 

 portant to the student of literature ; and what is perhaps still more 

 interesting-, we have prefixed to it one of the best biographical 

 Memoirs of Goldsmith j — a Memoir which rests on less questionable 

 authority than many of its predecessors, and which paints the 

 eccentricities of a life which has been passed in a singular alternation 

 of idleness and extraordinary exertion, of great privation and luxurious 

 enjoyment, of dependent beggary and the most boundless extravagance. 

 It perhaps may not be deemed unimportant to state, that the volumes 

 now before us, meet, in every sense of the word, the economizing 

 views of the present day. They are, in fact, at once suitable to the 

 tastes of the rich, and the purses of the poor." — Argus. 



" The Life of the author deserves to be noticed as one of the most 

 elegant specimens of biographical composition, we do not hesitate to 

 say, in the language." — Historical Newspaper. 



IV. 



ROBINSON CRUSOE, With an Appendix, 



containing Howell's Account of Alexander Selkirk, an inte- 

 resting piece of biography. To which is subjoined KIRKBY'S 

 Philosophical Romance of the HISTORY OF AUTOMATHES. 

 Two volumesj price Is, in morocco boards. 



NEARLY READY, 



@[1L[?>[][M5'§ [F@[^[I§T §(g[I[Mll^Yg 



WITH IMPORTANT AND EXTENSIVE ADDITIONS 



BY SIR THOMAS DICK LAUDER, Bart. 



AND NEARLY THIRTY EXQUISITE ETCHINGS OP FOREfcT TREES AND ANIMALS, 



BY MR J. B. KIDD. 



Gilpin's Forest Scenery has long been held in high estimation by 

 the retined lover of Nature ; but, like White's Selborne, and some 

 other delightful works of a similar character, it has hitherto been 

 inaccessible to readers in general. It is now published in a form at 

 once so handsome and so cheap, that it cannot fail to become univer- 

 sally known; and the very extensive additions which the research 

 of the author of the Morayshire Floods has enabled him to make 

 to the present edition, will be found greatly to enhance both the 

 value and the interest of the book. 



The Illustrations speak for themselves, and will be found, it is 

 hoped, to add to IMr Kidd's already well-earned fame as an artist. 

 Fraser & Co. b\. North Bridge, and Orr & Smith, London. 



