20 
CATALOGUE OF NEW WORKS 
LOV/.— ELEMENTS OF PRACTICAL AGRICULTURE; 
Comprehending the Cultivation of Plants, the Husbandry of the Domestic Animals, and the 
Economy of the Farm. By David Low, Esq, F.R.S.E,, Professor of Agriculture in the Uni- 
versity of Edinburgh. 4th Edition, with Alterations and Additions, and above 200 Wood-cuts 
8vo. 21s, cloth. 
Low's ^Elejnents of Practical Agriculture' is the best work on farming in om language.'" 
Gardener's Chronicle, 
MACAULAY. -C.18TICAL AND HISTORICAL ESSAYS CONTRIBUTED TO 
The EDINBURGH REVIEW, By the Right Hon. Thomas Babington Macaulay, M.P, 
3d Edition. 3 vols . 8vo. 3Cs. cloth, 
MACAULAY. -LAYS OF ANCIENT ROME. 
By the Right Honorable Thomas Babing-ton Macaulay, M.P. 5tli Edition. Crown Svo, 
10s. 6rf. cloth. 
MACKENZIE.— THE PHYSIOLOGY OF VISION. 
By W. Mackenzie, M.D., Lecturer on the Eye in the University of Glasgow. Svo. with 
Woodcuts, 10s, 6c?. boards. 
MACKINTOSH (SIR JAMES).-.THE LIFE OF SIR THOMAS MORE. 
By the Right Hon, Sir James Mackintosh. Reprinted from the Cabinet Cyclopaedia i and 
intended for a Present-Book or School Prize. Foolscap Svo, with Portrait, 5s. cloth j or 
bound in veilum gilt {old style) , 8s. 
MACKINTOSH'S (SIR JAMES) IVII3CELLANE0US WORKS; 
Including his Contributions to The EDINBURGH REVIEW. Collected and Edited by 
his Son. 3 vols. Svo. — In the press. 
MACKINTOSH, ETC.— THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND. 
By Sir James IMackintosh; W. Wallace, Esq, ; and Robert Bell, Esq. 10 vols, toolscap Svo. 
with Vignette Titles, 3/. cloth. 
M'CULLOCH.~A DICTIONARY, GEOGRAPHICAL, STATISTICAL, AND 
HISTORICAL, of the various Countries, Places, and Principal Natural Objects in the World. 
ByJ.R. M'CuUoch, Esq. 2 thick vols. Svo. illustrated with Six large important Maps, 4/. cloth. 
The ea^tent of information this iJictionary affords on the subjects referred to in its title 
is truly surprising. It cannot fail to proven vade mecum to the student, whose inquiries ivill 
be guided by its light, and satisfied by its clear and frequently elaborated communications. 
Every public room i?i which commerce, politics, or literature forms the subject of discussion, 
ought to be furnished with these volumes."— iilohe. 
M'CULLOCH.— A DICTIONARY, PRACTICAL, THEORETICAL, AND 
HISTORICAL, OF COMMERCE, AND COMMERCIAL NAVIGATION. By J. R. 
M'CuUoch, Esq. An entirely New Edition, corrected throughout, enlarged, and improved. 
I very thick vol. Svo., illustrated with Maps and Plans, 50s. cloth; or 55s. strongly half- 
bound in Russia, with flexible back. 
" Without ea'aggeration one of the most wonderful compilations of the age. The power of 
continuo7is labour, the wide range of inquiry, and the power of artisticul finish, which have 
been brought into play by this work, are probably unrivalled in the history of literature . . . 
Compared with all previous attempts to compile a commercial dictiujiary, Mr. M^Culloch's 
appears as the realisation of an idea which former projectors had conceived too vaguely to 
be able to carry into execution. It is superior to them all, quite as much for the spirit of 
judicious selection brought by the author to his task, as for any other quality. The great 
merit of the work is, that, while omittingnothing of essential importance, it contains nothing 
that is useless or 7nerely cumbrous . . . The success of the earlier editions of Mr. M^Culloch's 
Dictionary is, after all, the best proof of its merit; the facts attending it prove that the 
mercantile, political, and literary public were in want of such a work, and that they were 
satisfied tvith the 7nanner in which Mr. M'CuUoch had perfurmed his task. No reader can rise 
from the per?isal of any one of the larger articles without feeling that no previous writer has 
conce7itrated so much valuable information within so small a cotnpass, or conveyed his inform- 
ation in so agreeable a style. And the remark is equally applicable to all the nmnerous 
articles of u-hich this crammed volutne is composed .... It is, indeed, invahiable as a book 
ofr^'ference to the jnerchant, the insurance-agent, the statesman, and the journalist ; and its 
articles, from the care and talent with which they are executed, are as well calculated to 
supply the wants of the patient inquirer as of the hurried man of brisiness. Mr. MH'ullvch 
occupies a high place amongst the authors of the day as a hard-headed original thinker in 
political eco7iomy ; a still higher, as one of the most zealous and successful labourers in • 
rendering that science popular ; but, of all his publications, his Commercial Uietionary is the I 
one least likely to encounter the rivalry of a work of superior or even equal value." | 
Abridged from The Spectator of March 16, 1844, j, 
M'CULLOCH,— A TREATISE ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF i 
TAXATION AND THE FUNDING SYSTEM. By J, R. M'CuUoch, Esq. Svo 
In the press. 
M'CULLOCH.-THE LITERATURE OF POLITICAL ECONOMY; 
Being a Classified Catalogue of the principal Works in the different departments of Political 
Economy, interspersed with Historical, Cx-itical, and Biogrnphical Notices, By J, R, 
M'CuUoch, Esq. Svo.— In the press. 
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