CHEAP SERIES. 5 Life of Nelson. 6 Wellington. In boards, 18. per Volume, unless specified. Ditto 8 Uncle Tom's Cabin. 10 Vicar of Wakefield. 11 Mosses from a Manse. 12 Sir Robert Peel. 13 The Arctic Regions. 16 Christopher Tadpole (2s.) With Plates. 20 Wild Sports (18. 6d.) Allen. 140 *Light and Darkness. Crowe. Hildreth. 144 *Drafts for Acceptance. Raymond. Hawthorne. 147 Our Miscellany. Emerson. 150 Marguerite de Valois (28.) A. Dumas. 22 Rome, and Early Christians. 25 What we Did in Australia. 32 Christmas Day. 33 Hobbs and Dobbs. Rives. Knighton. Earp. 159 *Flood and Field. (58.) Dumas. Carleton. 164 Four Phases of Love. G. H. Kingsley. 34 *Two Years before the Mast. Dana. 168 *Mabel Vaughan. 35 Representative Men. 39 Hyperion. Emerson. 169 *Mutiny In India. 40 Reminiscences of a Physician. 171 Acting Proverbs. F. J. Webb. Mrs. S. C. Hall. Harland. E. B. Lee. 46 Infidelity, its Cause and Cure. Nelson. 172 Greatest Piague of Life (2s.) Mayhew. Stowe. 177 Prophet of the Caucasus (28.) 69 The Lofty and the Lowly.McIntosh. 91 The Mountaineer. Mayer. Mead. Thompson. Mayo. 179 The Sepoy Revolt (2s.) 190 British Columbia and Vancouver's 191 A Lady's Captivity among Chinese 120 Sebastopol, the Story of its Fall. 123 *Clement Lorimer. 124 Rose Clark. 132 *Solitary Hunter (The) Fanny Loriot. Reach. 193 Derby Ministry (The) (18 6d.), Albert Smith. In foolscap 8vo. fancy boarded cover, 1s. 6d. Clo strongly bound, 1e, 8d.Or, Cloth extra, gilt lettering, 23. CURRE We hold this to be a pattern volume of cheap literature. It is so written that it cannot fail to amuse and enlighten the most ignorant, yet it is so a book which may be with pleasure, and surely with profit too, by the most polished scholar. In it, two excellent gifts are applied to the wivage of the people-a poetical instinct, and a full knowledge of English history, Dewing upon the resources of a knowledge already ample and well digested, Mr. White recently gure to a popular institution the Isle of Wight a few lectures or discourses upon English history; and this little book is for the most part a simple reproduction of those lectizos. It has nothing about it of common-place compilation. The ordinary mosaic pattern for schools, made up on bits of isolated fact, will not be found in it. The story of his country finding enough in the brun of the stor teller to become thoroughly assimile It is a portion, therefore, of his mind, and in this form he tell. it. Henwells only on the salient points the landmarks of the story--givi chench colour and proportion as best accords with his impression of the whole. It is arranged under the form of chapter; and a more graphie little sketch of their own history, presented in an eighteenpenny volume, the masses of the English people are not likely to find. "Although the book too, is written in an easy style, and takes pains to amuse its reader, we st add that it is only very rarely that your most ambitions tome supplies in a chapter more thoughan is often suggested, here by a few bold, well-considered touches single page. The Eth vidume is, in fact, thoroughly popular, without being in any degreesh cloas, It is the work of a man of markable aity, having. as enca, ale its own, and a grace thus cannot fail to exercise its refaing bulky uneducated people. In parting this little book, we must again say how repeatedly surprised w have been to find the amount of information it compresses into small compass with it once becoming dull."The Examiner. LONDON: ROUTLEDGE, WARNES, AND ROUTLEDGE, FARRINGDON STREET |