4 NEW AND POPULAR WORKS. 
JEUscdlaneous. 
TILT’S ILLUSTRATED EDITION. 
SHAKSPEARE’S DRAMATIC WORKS, 
Printed from the Text of the Corrected Copies of Stevens and Malone, with the Life 
of the Poet, by Dr. Symmons, and a complete Glossary, embellished with 
Sixty Engravings after Harvey, Stothard, &c. &c. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 
This edition is accurately printed, in a bold legible type, and forms the most elegant 
and useful, and at the same time cheapest edition of Shakspeare ever published in a 
single volume. It is also kept handsomely bound in morocco, price l6s. 
A GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN GRECIAN, 
ROMAN, ITALIAN, & GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE, 
New Edition, much enlarged, and illustrated with more than 200 Wood Cuts. 
THE ANGLER’S SOUVENIR, 
An unique and splendid Volume, profusely illustrated with Sixty Line Engravings 
by Beckwith and Topham ; each page surrounded with an emblematical engraving on 
wood. The type, cast on purpose, is peculiar — and no expense has been spared to pro- 
duce a work, which, while it contains a mass of useful information to the angler, 
should take its place in the cabinet of the lover of curious books. New Edition, 
splendidly bound in morocco elegant, l6s. 
“ The Angler's Souvenir— A complete manual for the Fisherman, curious and beautiful in its typography, 
and more fully, appropriately, and originally embellished, than any of the Annuals .”— New Sporting Mug. 
WOODLAND GLEANINGS; 
% ©ompanton in tfje mural ®talit ; 
By the Editor of “ The Sentiment of Flowers.” 
With Sixty-four Illustrations. 
Foolscap 8vo., handsomely bound in cloth, gilt, price 10s. 6d. or morocco elegant, 
with coloured plates, ll. is. 
“ Since the publication of Dr. Aikin’s Woodland Companion, upwards of forty years ago, nothing, on a 
s'milar plan, sufficiently popular in its character, has appeared in this country to record the thoughts and 
rich fancies of our poets respecting the most ornamental of its features — the trees, which rise from the 
bosom of the earth in majesty and grace. The present volume, however, seems well calculated to supply 
what had become a desideratum : a pocket companion for those who, unacquainted with the principles and 
practice of botany, yet feel an interest in trees, and might wish to identify such trees as they meet in their 
rambles with the accounts they may have read of them, or to link the individual tree which presented itself 
before them with a passage in some favourite poet. For either purpose the ‘ Woodland Gleanings ’ 
will be found an eligible manual; more especially as, in addition to well-known quotations fiom the 
earlier poets, the editor has introduced many from more recent sources, chiefly from Wordsworth and the 
American poets. * * * The illustrations are of two kinds ; a delineation of the aspect of the entire tree, 
as a picturesque object ; and a specimen of the leaves, flower, and fruit, by which each tree may be deter- 
mined, even by one unskilled in botanical lore. From this peculiarity, the volume may be advantageously 
added to the library of those who may already possess Gilpin, or similar works ; while it strongly recom- 
mends it to those who have yet to select a work for their summer companion and friend.— Loudon’s Maga- 
zine of Natural History . 
THE GEORGIAN ERA: 
In four volumes, crown 8vo., price 32s. embeRished with fine Portraits on Steel, of the 
Four Sovereigns, by Woodman, and comprising nearly TWO THOUSAND MEMOIRS 
of the most eminent Persons who have flourished in Great Britain from the Accession 
of George the First to the Demise of George the Fourth, chronologically arranged 
under the following Classes : — 
The Royal Family. 
The Pretenders and their Adherents. 
Churchmen. 
Dissenters. 
Statesmen and other Political Cha- 
racters. 
Judges and Barristers. 
Naval and Military Commanders. 
Voyagers and Travellers. 
Physicians and Surgeons. 
Political and Rural Economists. 
Philosophers and Men of Science. 
Authors. 
Painters. 
Sculptors. 
Architects. 
Engravers. 
Composers. 
Musicians. 
Actors. 
Combined with an immense mass of interesting Personal Anecdotes ; a Luminous 
View is thus presented of the progress of National Events and Political Affairs — 
Theology and Jurisprudence— Naval and Military Operations— Philosophy and Science 
—Inland and Maritime Discovery — Literature, Music, Fine Arts, and the Drama. 
