HISTOEY AND BIOGRAPHY 



Continuation of the History of Europe, from the Fall of 



Napoleon to the Accession of Louis Napoleon, By Sir Archibald Alison, 

 Bart., D.C.L. In Nine Vols., £6, 7s. 6d. Uniform with the Library Edition 

 of the Author's " History of Europe, from the Commencement of the French 

 Eevolution," People's Edition, Eight Vols. Crown Octavo, 34s. 



Epitome of Alison's History of Europe. Fifteenth 



Edition, 7s. 6d., bound. 



Atlas to Alison's History of Europe ; containing 109 



Maps and Plans of Countries, Battles, Sieges, and Sea- Fights, Constructed by 

 A. Keith .Johnston, F, R.S. E, With Vocabulary of Military and Marine Terms. 

 Library Edition, £3, 3s. ; People's Edition, £1, lis. 6'd. 



Lives of lord Castlereagh and Sir Charles Stewart, 



Second and Third Marquesses of Londonderry, By Sir Archibald Alison, 

 Bart,, D,C.L, From the Original Papers of the Family, and other sources. In 

 Three Vols. Octavo, £2, 5s. 



Life of John Duke of Marlborough. With some Account 



of his Contemporaries, and of the War of the Succession, By Sir Archibald 

 Alison, Bart,, D,C.L. Third Edition, Two Volumes, Octavo, Portraits and 

 Maps, 30s, 



Essays; Historical, Political, and Miscellaneous. By 



Sir Archibald Alison, Bart, Three Vols. Demy Octavo, 45s, 



The Invasion of the Crimea : its Origin, and an Account 



OF ITS Progress down to the Death of Lord Kaglan, By Alexander 

 William Kinglake, M. P. Vols, I, and II, , bringing the Events down to the 

 Close of the Battle of the Alma. Fourth Edition. Price 32s. 



The Boscohel Tracts ; Relating to the Escape of Charles 



the Second after the Battle of Worcester, and his subsequent Adventures, 

 Edited by J, Hughes, Esq., A.M. A New Edition, with additional Notes and 

 Illustrations, including Communications from the Kev. R. H. Barham, Author 

 of the " Ingoldsby Legends," In Octavo, with Engravings, 16s, 



" ' The Boscobel Tracts ' is a very curious book, and about as good an example of single sub- 

 ject historical collections as may be found. Originally undertaken, or at least completed at the 

 suggestion of the late Bishop Copplestone, in 1827, it was carried out with a degree of judgment 

 and taste not always found in works of a similar character. The subject, as the title implies, is 

 the escape of Charles the Second after the battle of Worcester."— Spectator. 



History of Scotland from the Revolution to the Extinction 



of the last Jacobite Insurrection, 1689—1748, By John Hill Burton, Esq,, 

 Advocate. Two Vols. Octavo, 15s. 



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