4 
Messrs, Saunders and Otley^s New Puhlicatioyis, 
XI. 
NEW SERIES OF THE OLD MEN'S TALES. 
In Three Volumes, Post Octavo, 
TALES OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS. 
A Second Series of ** The Old Men's Tales." 
*' The pleasure we received from the perusal of the * Two Old 
Men's Tales' lingers with us yet. We remember them with the 
same degree of interest with which we recal, in the dreariness of 
winter, the sunshine of summer. The first tale, the ' Country- 
Village,' ought to be circulated widely throughout every house, 
vicarage, and town, in England. The narrative (for there is no plot) 
is so simple, the result so natural, the moral so excellent and so 
exalted." — New Monthly. 
XII. 
HAZLITT'S LITERARY REMAINS. 
In Two Volumes, Octavo, 
LITERARY REMAINS OF THE LATE 
WILLIAM HAZLITT. 
With a Notice of his Life, by his Son ; 
And Thoughts on his Genius and Writings, by E. L. Bulwer, 
Esq., M.P., and Mr. Serjeant Talfourd, M.P. 
** Few works have lately issued from the press in every respect 
more acceptable to the thinking scholar than these ' Remains.' His 
was a great and powerful mind. The grasp of his intellect was 
essentially Johnsonian, while the delicacy of his perception of the 
beautiful enabled him to impart an elegant charm to everything he 
handled." — News. 
XIII. 
NEW MODE OF COMMUNICATION BY FLOWERS. 
In One small Volume, bound in silk, with coloured Plates, 
THE FLORAL TELEGRAPH. 
A New Mode of Communication by Flowers, adapted to all 
Seasons. 
