FAMILY CABINET ATLAS. 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



The family CABINET ATLAS, con- 

 structed UPON AN ORIGINAL PLAN: Being 

 a Companion to the Encyclopaedia Ameri- 

 cana, Cabinet Cyclopaedia, Family Library, 

 Cabinet Library, &-c. 



This Atlas comprises, in a volume of the Family Library 

 size, nearly 100 Maps and Tables, which present equal 

 to Fifty Thousand JVames of Places : a body of informa- 

 tion three times as extensive as that supplied by the 

 generality of Quarto Silases. 



Opinions of the Public Journals. 



" This beautiful and most useful little volume," says 

 the Literary Gazette, " is a perfect picture of elegance, 

 containing a vast sum of geographical information. A 

 more instructive little present, or a gift better calculated 

 to be long preserved and often referred to, could not be 

 offered to favored youth of either sex. Its cheapness, we 

 must add, is another recommendation ; for, although this 

 elegant publication contains 100 beautiful engravings 

 it is issued at a price that can be no obstacle to its being 

 procured by every parent and friend to youth." 



" This Atlas far surpasses any thing of the kind which 

 we have seen, and is made to suit tiie popular libraries 

 which Dr. Lardner and Mr. Murray are now sending into 

 every family in the empire." — Monthly Review. 



" Its very ingenious method of arrangement secures to 

 the geographical student the information for which hith- 

 erto he has been obliged to resort to works of the largest 

 dimensions." — Athenaium. 



" This miniature and beautiful Atlas is likely to super- 

 sede, for general purposes, maps of a more expensive and 

 elaborate character. It appears to us to answer the 

 double purpose of exercising the attention while it im- 

 prints all that is important in Geography on the memo- 

 rj^" — Atlas. 



"The workmanship is among the best of the kind we 

 have ever witnessed." — Examiner. 



" It contains all the information to be derived from the 

 most expensive and unwieldy Atlas." — York Courant. 



" By a moment's reference, the exact situation of any 

 place may be found." — Birmingham Journal. 



" An excellent little work, engraved with a clearness 

 and correctness which is quite surprising : when com- 

 plete, travellers will have a system of Geography and a 

 complete Atlas, which they may carry in their pocket." — 

 Spectator. 



" This is the most perfect gem of an Atlas which has 

 ever been published." — BrislolJoumal. 



" It corresponds in size with those popiilar publications 

 to which it will form so useful an addition — namely, 

 ' The Family Library,' ' The Classical Library,' and 

 ' Cabinet Cyclopaedia." — Court Journal. 



•' Nothing could be devised better calculated to impress 

 upon the mind a knowledge of the general principles of 

 geography, than the plan of this publication." — The 

 Warder. 



" It will be a crying shame in this age of intellect, if 

 this able and beautiful work be not extensively patron- 

 ized ; but we cannot doubt the success which we feel 

 assured its intrinsic merits must secure to it." — Intelli- 

 gencer. 



" It is scarcely in the nature of things, that a work of 

 so much public service should fail in meeting with that 

 extensive patroiiage which can alone reamnerate the 

 projectors." — Leeds Intelligencer. 



"The plates are beautifully executed; and the geo- 

 graphical student may obtain in this little work, such is 

 the excellence of its arrangement, as much information 

 as he could gain by wading through several books of far 

 greater bulk." — Weekly Dispatch. 



~ " We have seldom seen a work so perfect in its arrange- 

 ment, and so elegant in its execution." — York Courant. 



" For the accuracy of its delineation, and the extent 

 of the information which it conveys, it stands without 

 a rii al in English topography." — Freeman's Jovrnal. 



"The plan of this useful and elegant work may, in- 

 deed, be called ori.Tinal. The style and execution of the 

 Maps are of the first character." — Woolmer's Exeier and 

 Plymouth Gazette. 



•' This work is one of the moat useful publications 

 which has yet issued from the press ; it will be an unique 

 and brilliant accession to the library, and a very useful 

 work to the student in geogt&^hy:' — Reading Mercury 

 and Oxford Gazette. 



" Its qualifications will render it one of the most popu- 

 lar, highly interesting, and useful publications of the 

 day." — Liverpool Courier. 



MEMOIRS OF THE COURT OF KING 

 CHARLES THE FIRST. By Lucy Aiken. 

 2 vols. 8vo. 



" The admirers of Charles the First, owe no grati- 

 tude to Miss Aiken. She has told too plain a tale. 

 She has given, it is true, no summary of the character 

 of that monarch, but she has devoted an extensive 

 work to a faithful relation of his public works and ac- 

 tions, and has left it to tell his story." — AthencEum. 



" Following up her interesting career of a historical 

 writer, Lucy Aiken has here produced one of those 

 episodes belonging to our national annals, which add 

 to the importance of facts elaborated from many a 

 source, all the charms which are usually found in the 

 inventions of fiction. 



" Sidfice it to say, that from family and other papers 

 long hidden from the public view, new lights are ever 

 and anon shed upon the actors and proceedings of that 

 time : and that without delving too deeply into them, 

 our intelligent author has wrought the whole into one 

 of those agreeable narratives for which her pen is so 

 justly popular."' — Lit. Gazette. 



ELEGANT LIBRARY EDITIONS 



OF THE FOLLOWmG WORKS. 



WORKS OF JOANNA BAILLIE. 



COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME, 8v0. 



This edition corresponds with the Library Editions 

 of Byron, Scott, Moore, &c. 



" Miss Baillie's Plays on the Pa.ssions have been 

 long known as among the best in the language. No 

 one who reads them can entertain a doubt of the char- 

 acter of the writer's affections. Such works could 

 never have been dictated by a cold heart." — Christian 

 Examiner. 



" We are among the most earnest admirers of her 

 genius, her literary attainments and skill, her diction, 

 lier suc(>ess, her moral designs, and her personal worth. 

 Some of her tragedies have deservedly passed into 

 the slock of the principal British and American thea- 

 tres. They are express developments and delinea- 

 tions of the passions, marked by a deep insight mto 

 human nature, great dramatic power of treatment, a 

 fertile spirit of poetry, and the loftiest and purest 

 moral sentiment." — National Gazette. 



WORKS OF HENRY FIELDING. 



IN TWO VOLUMES 8v0., Vv'ITH A PORTRAIT. 



WORKS OP TOBIAS SMOLLETT. 



IiV TV/O VOLUMES 8vO., WITH A PORTRAIT, 



THE 



HISTORY 



OF THE 



RISE AND PROGRESS 



OF THE 



UNITED STATES 



OF 



NORTH AMERICA. 



EY JAMES GRAHAM. 

 TWO VOLS. SVO. 



