A. HARrS STANDARD WORKS. 



THE MODERN BRITISH ESSAYISTS 

 At less tlian Half Price. 



The great success that has attended the publication of 

 THE MODERN ESSAYISTS, 

 Comprising the Critical and Miscellaneous Writings of the Most Distinguished Authori 

 of Modern Times, has induced the publishers to issue a New, Revised and very Cheap 

 Edition, with Finely Engraved Portraits of the Authors; and while they have ac?tfe(/ to 

 the series the writings of several distinguished authors, they have reduced the price more 

 I'han 



0]?^E RAI.F. 



The writings of each author will generally be comprised in a single octavo volume, 

 well printed from new type, on fine white paper manufactured expressly for this edition. 

 The series will contain all the most able papers that have ever appeared.in 



THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, 



and may indeed be called the cream of those publications. 



It is only necessary to mention the names of the authors whose writings will appear. T. 

 Babington Macaulay, Archibald Alison, Rev. Sydney Smith, Professor Wilson 

 James Stephen, Robert Southey, Sir Walter Scott, Lord Jeffrey, Sir James Mack- 

 iNTo&H, T. Noon Talfourd. J. G. Lockhart, Reg' xald Heber. 



The popularity of the authors and the extreme moderaticn of the price, recommend 



-THE MODERN ESSAYISTS, 



To heads of Families for their Children, as perfect models of style. 

 To Managers of Book Societies, Book Clubs, &c. 



To School Inspectors, Schooi^mastees and Tutors, as suitable gifts and prizes, or 

 adapted for School Libraries. 



Travellers on a Journey will find in these portable and cheap volumes something lo 

 read on the road, adapted to fill a corner in a portmanteau or carpet-bag. 



To Passengers on board a Ship, here are ample materials in a narrow compass for 

 whiling away the monotonous hours of a sea voyage. 



To Officers in the Army and Navy, and to all Economists in space or pockety who, 

 having limited chambers, and small book-shelves, desire to lay up for themselves a concen- 

 trated Library, at a moderate expenditure. 



To all who have Friends in Distant CcsTjntries. as an acceptable present to send 

 out to them. 



The Modern Essayists will yield to the Settler in the Backwoods of America the most 

 t ilaable and interesting writings of all the most distinguished authors of our time at lesa 

 t}ian one quarter the price they could be obtained in any other form. 



The Student and Lover of Literature at'^Home, who has hitherto been compelled 

 f?) wade through volumes of Reviews for a single article, may now become possessed of 

 every article ivorth reading for little more than the cost of the annual subscription. 



L ) Ranke's T-Tistory of the Popes, Cowley and 



'^/^A't*AfTT s Milton, Mi^ford's History of Greece, The, 



£9A£^%f,K&i%JJ^£^&m > Athenian Orators, Comic Dramatists of the 



««-rmT/^.T .,T^ rr^.N«^T-r .-.TT^rtT-ci J Rcstoration, Lord Holland, Warren Hast- 

 CRITICAL A^D MISCELLANEOUS mgs, Frederic the Great, Lays of Ancient 

 VA/DiT'iMr^Q n C" j Rome, Madame D'Arblay, Addison, Ba- 



VV K I I I rSj o b p s rere's Memoirs, Montgomery's Poems, Civil 



THOMAS BABINaTON MACAULAY. ^Disabilities of the Jews, Mill on Govern- 

 In One Vohwie, with a finely engraved ^ ment, Bentham's Defence of Mill, Utilita- 

 portrait, from an original picture \ r>an Theory of Government, and Earl Chat- 

 by Henry Inman. Cloth Gilt, \ second part, &e. 



^2 00. \ ' t ^^ay now be asked by some sapient 



I critics, Why make all this coil about a mere 

 i^oiiii,eni:s. . periodic^: essayist? Of what possible con- 



Milton, Machiavelli, Dryden, History, j cern is it tc anybody, whether Mr. Thomas 

 Hallam's Constitutional History, Southey's j Babington Macaulay be, or be not, overrun 

 Colloquies on Society, Moore's Life of By- > with faults, since he is nothing more than 

 ron, Southey's Banyan's Pilgrim's Progress, S one of the three-day immortals who contri- 

 Croker's Boswell's Life of Johnson, Lord S bute flashy and 'taking' articles to a Quar- 

 Nugent's Memoirs of Ham.pden, Nare's Me- S terly Review ? What great work has he 

 moi'rs of Lord Burghley, Dumont's Recol- ^written? Such questions as these might be 

 lections of INIirabeau, Lord Mahon's War of \ put by the same men who place the Specta- 

 Ihe Succession, Walpole's Letters to Sir H. < tor, Tattler and Ramb.'ev among the British 

 Mann, ThacKaray's Historv of Earl Chat- I classics, 3^et judge of the size of a cotempo- 

 ham. Lord Bacon, Mackintosh s History of ^ rarv's mind by that of his book, and who 

 the Revolution of England, Sir John Mai- J can naraiy recognize amolitude of compre- 

 colm'sLifeof Lord Clive, Life and Writings piension, unless^it be spreaa over the six 

 of S^r W. Temple, Church and State, > hundred pages of octavos tX!id quartos.— 



