1811.] 
Mr. Barron Fierp, of the Inner 
Temple, has in the press, A full Analy- 
sis of Blackstone’s Commentaries, by a 
series of Questions, to which the student 
is to frame his own answers by reading 
tiers, 
that work, 
. The Library of the late William Platel, 
esq. of Peterborough, including his in- 
teresting collection of Arabic, Persian, 
Bengalet, and other MSS. forming part 
ofthe library of the laté Shah Aulum, 
will be sold by auction this winter. ° 
The Rev. .f. F. Drsprw has in the 
press, in one large octavo volume, the 
English Gentleman’s Library Companion, 
or a Guide to the Knowledge of rare; cu- 
rious, and useful Books, in the English 
language, and appertaining to British li- 
terature and antiquities. 
Memorrs of Mary Anne Radcliffe, in 
familiar Letters to her female friends, are 
in the press, in one voluine octavo; but 
the publishers think it right to apprise 
the public that this lady is not the au- 
thor of the Mysteries of Udolpho, and 
other celebrated romances. 
Sir Samuer EcErton BrYDGEs 1s en- 
waged on a Selection from Collins’s Peer- 
age, with very considerable alterations 
and improvements, and brought down to 
the present time. 
The second volume of Mr. Sourury’s 
History of Brazil is at press. It relates 
the foundation and establishment of the 
adjacent Spanish provinces, the affairs of 
which are in later times inseparably cons 
nected with those of Brazil. The sub- 
ject includes the whole tract of country 
between the rivers Plata, Paraguay, and 
Orellana or the Amazons, stretching 
westward to Peru, as far as the Portu- 
guese have extended their settlements 
or their discoveries. kes 
Mr. Josepn Murpny, of Leeds, has 
in the press, a History of the Human 
Teeth; with a Treatise on theit diseases, 
from infancy to age, adapted for general 
information, 
Mrs; Grant, of Laggan, will speedily 
publish Essays on the Poetry and Super- 
stitions of the Highlands, with Fragments 
in verse and prose. i 
The editor of the Selection of Curious 
“Articles from the Gentlernan’s Maga- 
zine, is engaged in preparing a a 
valnme, to be sold separately; which 
will contain Biographical Memoirs, Li- 
-‘terary Anecdotes, Characters of eminent 
Men, and Topographical Notices. 
Mr. Epwarvd Wakertecp will shortly 
Montuty Mae, No. 207. 
4 
~ 
Literary and Philosophical Intelligence. 
> 
\ 
£ 
load 
55 
publish a work on the Present State of 
Treland. 
The Rev. W. Errricx has in the 
press, in two octavo volumes, the Second 
Exodus, or Reflections on the Prophes- 
cies of the Last Times. 
The Bishop of London is printing a 
work on the subject of Calvinism, which 
will comprehend his last three Charges, 
with considerable additions, and numer- 
ous quotations fromthe works of Calvin, 
and the ancient Fathers, 
Mr, Joun Bettatty proposes to pub-. 
lish by subscription, in two octavo ve- 
lumes, the Fall of Deism, in which the 
objections of the Deists against the Old 
and New Testament, during the last 
1600 years, are answered with a,strict 
adherence to the literal sense of the Hee 
brew language. . 
Mr. Ricnarp Fenton will soon pub- 
lish an Historical Tour through Pem- 
brokeshire, in a quarto volume. 
Mr. Ropert Kerr is engaged on a 
General History aud Collection of Voy- 
ages and Travels, arranged in systematic 
order, and illustrated by maps and chartgs 
It is expected to form eighteen octave 
volumes, and to be published in thirty. 
$ix parts, the first of which will appear 
on the ist of January. 
Mrs. Mary Anne Ciarxke is pre- 
paring for the press, further particulars 
of her conduct in recent transactions. 
An Account of an Expedition under 
taken in the years 1805, 6 and 7, by or- 
der of the Government of the United 
States, by Masor Pixe, is in the press, 
under the title of Exploratory Travels 
through the Western Territories of North 
America; comprising a Voyage from St. 
Louis on the Mississippi to the sources 
‘of that river, anda Journey through the 
interior of Louisiana, and the north- 
eastern provinces of New Spain: the 
whole including a distance of 8000 miles, 
and exhibiting a view of the geography, 
natural, productions, Indian tribes, pres 
sent state of the population, &c. of those 
interesting countries. “The work will 
form a quarto volume, and be illustrated 
with maps drawn up from the Major’s 
observations. 
‘The late Mr. Barre Roperts’ match- 
less Cabinet of the Coins of England, 
Scotland, and Ireland; likewise his Ai 
glo-Gailic coins, coronation medals, and 
many ef the works of Thomas Simon, 
will besold by auction in February, if net 
previously disposed of by private contract, 
B Pour 
