556 
London cate in July, the = of which, 
judging from the inrerefting character. 
and fituation of - Italy, will, it may be 
fuppofed, not ‘be inferior to the Tran 
lations cf the late Travels of the fame 
author in Siberia and France. 
Dr. Witson, minifter of Falkirk, will 
fhortly publith a new Hiftory of Egypt. 
Milfs ANN PLumMPTREE. has in the 
prefs a Narr: tive of Three Years Refi- 
dence in Franceé,- in which fhe will intra- 
duce ‘a variety of anecdotes refpcChing the 
French Revelutior. 
Literary and Philofaphical Intelligence. 
[July i; 
Mifs SypnEy OwENsON, of. Sligo, 
has juft completed a novel under the tile 
of the Novice of St. Benedict, of which 
her friends form fanguine expectations. 
A novel may foon be expected from the 
pen of Mrs. Tempe, a lady to whom 
the public are already under obligations 
for ievera! efteemed works. 
An Abtidgment. of Mr. Roscoe’s 
_Life and Pontificate of Leo the Tenth is 
announced at Liverpool. 
Mr. Bucx, author of the Theological 
_ Diétionary, has in the prefs a Treatife 
An FEnglith Gentleman, who efcaped 
from France in the month of May, intends 
to give to the world a Faithful Atcount 
of the Prefent State-of that Country and 
of the French Peoples whder the Defpot- 
ifm of Bonaparté. “This work is to con- 
tain authenti¢ particulars and anecdotes of 
the Gove: ee the military, the police, 
the laws, the public amulethents of Paris, 
the manners, dréfs, and domeftic fociety, 
thé late Coronation, the Pope and religion, 
the legion of honour, trade and manufac- 
tures, the war with England, the Englifh 
tm France, the Bourbons, the pr ice of the 
necefiaries of life; 8c. &c. &c.” : 
A Treatife on the Anatomy of the Hu- 
man Ear, by Mr. J. C. SAUNDERS, de- 
monftrator of practical anatomy at St. 
Thomas’s Hofpital, and furgeon of the 
London Difpenfary for Difeafes of the Eye 
and the Ear,'will thertly make its appear- 
ance. It. will be illuftrated by a feries 
of engravings, which reprefent the organ 
precilély of its natural fize. The engrav- 
ings will be executed in the beft ftyle; and 
will -be made from drawings taken by an 
excellent artitt from diffections of the re- 
cent ear. The engravings will fhew in 
facceffion the different parts exaCtly in 
their natural pofition, anil, taken toge- 
on Religious | Excerience, in which its 
nature, evidences, ard ‘advantages, are 
confidered. 
Mr. Davip Bootn, of Newburgh, i in 
the county of .Fife, has publifhed Propo- 
fats for.an Apalytical Didtionary of the 
Englifh Language, in two o€tavo yo- 
lumes.* All the compound words (in — 
wiich clafs the -author includes almoit. 
every word of more than one fyllable), 
are to be arranged: under the refpeétive 
roots from which they are derived. - The 
original idea annexed to éach root is to be 
“mveftigated, and an account given of its 
ther, will form a compiete demonitration » 
of this complicated organ. 
A Treatif will appear in a few days on 
the Procefs employed by Nature in ‘Sup- 
preffing the Hemorrhage from divided and 
punctured Arteries 5 and on the Ufe of 
the Ligature ; concluding with Obferva- 
tions on Secondary Hemor rhage; the 
whole deduced from an extenfive feries of 
experiments, and illuftrated: with fifteen 
plates ; by Dr. Jones, of Barbadoes. 
Mr. ALutnutTT, of Henley-on-Thames, 
has mvented.a mode of printing plans of 
eitates with moveable types, unitmg cor- 
re€inefs, neatnefs, and cheapnefs, ina de- 
gree which renders it worthy of the pa- 
tronage of-auctioncers, Exyegore » &e, &c. 
fetondary powers, as acquired: from-cuf=. 
tom and from metaphor. ‘The various in- 
feparable prepofitions and terminations of 
the language are confidered as diftinét 
words, and explained i in an Introduction, 
which is now in the prefs. 
The Rev. THEOPHILUS Brown, late 
of the univerfity of Cambridge, will pub- 
lifh, in a few weeks, Plain and ufeful 
Leffons from the Books of the Old and 
New Teftament, according to: the moft 
approved modern Verfions, with explana- 
tory Notes. 
Tr is intended fhortly to publith, by 
fubfcription, Memoirsof the Life of Co- 
lonel Hutchinfon, Governor of Notting- 
ham, Member of the Council of State for. 
the Commonwealth, one of the Judges of 
Charles I. with original Anecdotes of 
many of the moft diftinguifked of his 
Contemporaries; and a fummary Review 
of Public Affairs.“ Written by his: Wi- 
dow Lucy, Daughter of Sir ALLEN 
APSLEY, Lieutenant of the Tower, &c. 
To be printed from the original MS. in 
poftelion of a branch of Colonel Hutch 
infon’s family, and embellifhed with en- 
gravings of portraits, &c. 
Mr. Joun TudNer, of the Middle 
Temple, is preparing. a new work on: 
Conveyancing. It will confift of anodern 
precedents,-ard an Introduétion on the 
language and dtructure of conveyances. 
| A new 
‘ 
