Cf4 ijitemY\j and PhilGSoj)kictLt Intelligence. [Aug. I, 
or months, for the purpose of ascertain¬ 
ing the changes that had happened, from 
the destruction of a part presumed to be 
so essential to life, the‘aorta was found 
obliterated where the ligature had been 
lixed, arrd the blood had been trans¬ 
mitted by the anastyiuosing branches, 
A posthumous work of the late Mr. 
Graves, of Clavercon, is announced, 
being a new translation from the Greek 
of the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius 
Antoninus; with a Life, Notes, and a 
View of the Stoic Philosophy. 
Mr. Ring has in the press, a Treatise 
on the Gout, containing the Opinions 
- of the most celebrated ancient and mo¬ 
dern Physicians on that Disease, vvith 
observations on the Eau Medicinale 
A*Hussmi. 
Mr. I. I. Park is engaged on a History 
of the Parish of Hampstead, in Middle¬ 
sex. 
Mr. J.P. Malcolm, F.S.A. will shortly 
publish a collection of Miscellaneous 
Anecdotes, illustrative of the Manners 
and Customs of Europe, in an octavo 
volume. 
The very ingenious Lectures on En¬ 
graving, written by the late Mr. Meadows, 
and delivered at the Surrey Institution, 
will shortly be published for the benefit 
of his widow. 
Mr. Bloomfield, author of the Far¬ 
mer’s Boy, &c. will speedily publish The 
Banks of Wye, a poem. 
Mr. D. M. Cummin, student of the 
Middle Temple, and translator of Aris- 
totle^s Dissertation on Rhetoric, is em¬ 
ployed on a poem entitled the Battle of 
Clontarf. It embraces a most interest¬ 
ing portion of Irish history, and, from the 
distinction which the author obtained 
when at Trinity College, Dublin, high 
expectations are formed of the present 
performance. 
Professor Playfair has in the press, 
a second ediiion, with additions and en¬ 
gravings, in a quarto volume, of Illus¬ 
trations of the Huttonian Theory of the 
Earth. 
Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges, an¬ 
nounces, in 9 vols. 8vo. with the arms 
engraved on wood, bv Branston, an edi¬ 
tion of Collins’ Peerage of England, with 
considerable improvements and correc¬ 
tions; and brought down to the present 
lime. 
An Improved Harmony of the Four 
Gosptls, not omitting any chapter or 
ver>>e liierein contained, will speedily he 
pubiibhcd, having the most necessary old 
references brought under the verses, and 
many new ones added ; and in which the 
Feast of Tabernacles, shown in St. Luke’s 
gospel, is proved to be the same as that 
treated of by St. John, by which several 
scriptural passages are more clearly elu¬ 
cidated than in any other former publi¬ 
cation on the subject, by Mr. John 
Chambers, of Worksop. 
Mr. John Sell Cotman, who lately 
published twenty-four beautiful etcliings 
of some of the most distinguished re- 
mains of Saxon and Norman architecture 
in England, has in a state of great for¬ 
wardness a series of etchings designed as 
an accompaniment to Bloomfield’s His¬ 
tory of Suffolk, which he intends to pub¬ 
lish. 
Mr. H. M. Browne, of Banbury, sur¬ 
geon of the 3d regiment of Oxford Local 
Militia, will publish in a few days the 
Apothecary’s Vade Mecum, or Critico- 
explanatory Companion to theNew Lon¬ 
don Pharmacoptea. Mr. Browne is at 
present engaged on a work of consider¬ 
able extent, (which is nearly ready for 
the press, entitled Speculations and New 
Opinions on the Effects and Utility of 
Counter Irritation, in a variety of serious 
diseases incident to the human frame, 
recommending at the same time a per¬ 
fectly new mode of alleviatingand curing 
many of the most inveterate complaints. 
A continuation of the Consolations of 
Erin, a poem, by Charles Phillips, A.B. 
of the Middle Temple, author of the 
Loves of Celestine and St, Aubert, is 
preparing for the press. 
" Mrs. Plunket (late Miss Cunning) 
has in the press, A Translation from the 
French of Madame de Montolieu’s Sen¬ 
timental Anecdotes. 
Mr. Me. Henry, of Friday-street, has 
prepared for the press, and n:)eans to 
publish by subscription, a new and im¬ 
proved Grammar of the Spanish Lan¬ 
guage, designed for every class of learners, 
and especially for such as are their own 
instructors. 
Speedily will be published, the second 
volume of a New Analysis of Chronology; 
in which an attempt is made to explain 
the history and antiquities of the nations 
recorded in the Scriptures, together with 
the prophecies relating to them, on priii- 
ciules lending to remove iniDerfectinn 
and discordance of preceding systems of 
chronology, by William Hales, D.D., 
formerly professor of the Oriental Lan. 
guiiges in tlie University of Dublin, The- 
Uiii'd volume is also in the press. 
