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Ancient Critical Essays upon English Poets and Poesy. Edited by Joseph Haslewood. Vol. II. 4to. 31. 3s.

The Proportionate and Universal Table; being a Compendium of Arithmetical Calculations for finding the Principal and only leading Points in the Art of cutting to fit the Human Shape. By Benjamin Read, Inventor and Teacher of the Arithmetical System for cutting to fit the Human Shape.

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A Treatise on the Dry Rot in Timber. By the late Thomas Wade. 8vo. 5s. Anecdotes Parisiennes. 18mo. 4s. bound.

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East India Register, corrected to August 4, 1815. Edinburgh Fugitive Pieces; with Letters containing a comparative view of the Modes of Living, Arts, Commerce, Literature, Manners, &c. of Edinburgh, at different Periods. By the late William Creech, Esq. F.R.S. Edinburgh. To which is prefixed an Account of his Life. 8vo.

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Remarks on the Comparative Value of Freehold and Copyhold Land. By William Rouse, Esq. Author of the Doctrine of Chances. 1s. 6d.

NOVELS, &C.

Glenowen, or the Fairy Palace, a Tale. By Eleanor Heath; illustrated with Engravings. 18mo. Half-bound 3s.

Zeluca, or Educated and Uneducated Woman; a Novel. 3 Vols. 12mo. 17. 1s.

PHILOLOGY.

A new and copious English and Gaelic Vocabulary; with the different parts of Speech, in Alphabetical Order. By P. Macfarlane, Translator of Doddridge's Rise and Progress, &c. 8vo. 7s. 6d.

Illustrations of English Philology. By Charles Richardson, Esq. Consisting of a Critical Examination of Dr. Johnson's Dictionary; and Remarks on Mr. Dugald Stewart's Essay on the Tendency of some late Philological Speculations. 4to. 1/. 5s.

POETRY.

Consolation, with other Poems. By the Rev. William Gillespie. 8vo. 12 Monthermer, a Poem. By Edward Quillinan, Esq. of the Third Dragoon Guards. 8vo. 9s.

Opoleyta, or a Tale of Ind; a Poem, in Four Cantos. By Bertie Ambrose. 8vo. 9s.

Kenilworth; a Mask. By I. S. Anna Liddiard. 8vo. 7s.
Ode to the Dutchess of Angouleme. 8vo. 1s. 6d.

Poems by William Cowper, of the Inner Temple, Esq. in three Volumes; containing his Posthumous Poetry, and a Sketch of his Life. By his Krusman John Johnson, LL. D. Rector of Yaxham with Welborne, in Norfolk. Vol. 3. various sizes, 18mo. 5s. 12mo. 8s. 8vo. 12s. Royal 8vo. 16s. Brathwaite's Odes; or Philomel's Tears. Edited by Sir Egerton Brydges,

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Davison's Poetical Rhapsody. Part III.

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Original Poems, never before published. By William Browne, of the Inner Temple, Gent.; Author of Britannia's Pastorals. 4to. 1l. 11s. 6d.

The Duel, a Satirical Poem, in Four Cantos, with other Poems. By L. 0. Shaw. Crown 8vo.

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A Collection of ancient and modern Scottish Ballads, Tales, and Songs, with explanatory Notes and Observations. By John Gilchrist. 2 Volumes 12mo. 12s.

Scribleomania; or the Printer's Devil's Polichronicon. A sublime Poem. Edited by Anser Pen Dragon, Esq. 8vo. 148.

The Deserted Village Restored. The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green, in three Cantos. Pastorals, &c. By Arthur Parsey. 12s.

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Fugitive Pieces, chiefly written whilst the Author was on Service in Egypt, and a Prisoner of War in France. To which is added, Wellington's Triumph; or the Battle of Waterloo. By J. B. Goldsmith. Crown 8vo.

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The Morning Star; or the Divine Poems of Mr. Rees Prichard, formerly Vicar of Landovery, in Carmarthenshire; translated into English Verse by the Rev. William Evans. Vicar of Lanhaden. 8vo. 8s.

Poems and Reflections by a Young Lady. 12mo. 7s.

Battle of Waterloo, a Poem. By George Walker. 12mo. 3s.

Ode on the Victory of Waterloo. By Elizabeth Cobbold. 8vo. 1s. 6d.

POLITICS, AND POLITICAL ECONOMY.

Substance of the Speech of George Holford, Esq. in the House of Commons, on Thursday, 22d June 1815, on the Bill to amend the Laws relative to the Transportation of Offenders; containing Provisions respecting the Confinement of Offenders in the Hulks. 1s.

Considerations on the present Political State of India, embracing Observations on the Character of the Natives, on the Civil and Criminal Courts, the Administration of Justice, the State of the Land Tenure, the Condition of the Peasantry, and the internal Police of our Eastern Dominions; intended chiefly as a Manual of Instruction in their Duties for the younger Servants of the Company. By Alexander Fraser Tytler, late Assistant Judge in the 24 Pergunnahs Bengal Establishment. 2 vols. 8vo. 18s.

Observations on the Effect of the Manufacturing System; with Hints for the Improvement of those Parts of it which are most injurious to Health and Morals. Dedicated most respectfully to the British Legislature. By Robert Owen, of New Lanark. 1s.

The Port-folio of Buonaparte, taken at Charleroy, the 18th June, 1815. Translated from the Original Edition, just published at the Hague, by Royal Authority in Parts. Part I. 3s.

THEOLOGY, AND THEOLOGICAL HISTORY.

True Christianity, or the whole Economy of God towards Man, and the whole Duty of Man towards God. By the venerable John Arndt. Edited by William Jacques, Translator of Professor Franks' Guide to the Study of the Scriptures. 2 Vols. 8vo.

Four practical Sermons on the universal Presence of God, the Duty of Parents, the Danger of evil Habits, and the proper Use of the Sabbath. By a Member of the British and Foreign Bible Society. 8vo. 1s. 6d.

Four practical Sermons on the universal Presence of God, the Folly and Wickedness of Lying, the dreadful Presumption of Revenge, and Religious Industry. 8vo. 1s. 6d.

Discourses, chiefly on Practical Subjects. By the late Rev. Newcome Cappe. Edited by Catherine Kappe. 8vo. 12s.

Essays on the Mythology, Theology, and Morals of the Ancients; accompanied with a brief Outline of the respective Tenets of the Grecian Sectarian Philosophers. By G. S. Weideman.

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Baxteriana; containing a Selection from the Works of Baxter. Collected by Arthur Young, Esq. F. R. S. 12mo. 5s. 6d.

Sermons, selected and abridged from the Works of the Right Reverend Father in God, William Beveridge, D. D., late Lord Bishop of St. Asaph. 2 Vols. 8vo. 20s.

A Discourse upon the Witness of the Spirit. By T. M. Shann, A. M. 8vo. 1s. 6d.

A Parochial Vicar's Remarks on Mr. Belsham's Letters, which were addressed to the Bishop of London, and which animadverted on His Lordship's Charge, delivered in the Year 1814. 2s. 6d.

An Analysis of the Sixth Chapter of the Revelations of St. John; illustrated by Extracts from Gibbon's History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. 8vo. 7s.

Pentateuch. Discourses on the several Revelations of the Lord Jesus Christ, from the Fall to the call of Abraham, Jacob, &c. Together with some Typical Symbols; and the Sinai Transaction; which was ratified by the solemn Representation of the Death and Bloodshedding of the Messiah; designed to point how Christ was set forth in the Sacrifices, Tabernacle, Temple, and Service thereof; with other Sermons on various Subjects, &c. By Samuel Eyles Pierce, Minister of the Gospel, Author of the Growth in Grace, &c. &c. With a recommendatory Preface. By the Rev. Robert Hawker, D.D. Plymouth.

A Sermon preached in St. Edmund's Church, Dudley, on Sunday August 20, 1815, in behalf of the Fund for the Relief and Benefit of the Families of the, brave Men killed, and wounded Sufferers, under the Command of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington, in the Signal Victory of Waterloo. By the Rev. Proctor Robinson, A. M. Minister of St. Edmund's, and Head Master of the Free Grammar School, in Dudley. 8vo.

Another Mite for Waterloo. A Sermon preached in the Parish Church of Bedlington, in the County of Durham, on Sunday August 22, 1815. 8vo.

Treatise by St. Cyprian, Archbishop of Carthage, entitled of the Unity of the Church; translated from the Oxford Edition of his Works. By Nathaniel Marshall, L.L. B. and Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty; abridged and reprinted with an Appendix, by James Horsburgh, F.R.S. 8vo. 18.

VOYAGES, &c.

A Tour through some Parts of Istria, Carniola, Styria, Austria, the Tyrol, Italy, and Sicily, in the Spring of 1814. By a young English Merchant. Crown 8vo.

78.

The History of a Sailor; comprising the Five First Years of his Voyages; an Historical Sketch, with Reflections; Indian and other Anecdotes; and a brief Guide to Health. Written by himself. Drawn up and designed chiefly for Seamen; but adapted for general Readers, particularly for young Persons.

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The Traveller's Complete Guide through Belgium, Holland, and Germany; containing full Directions for Gentlemen, lovers of the Fine Arts, and Travellers in general. By Charles Campbell, Esq. Royal 18mo.

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A Picture of St. Petersburgh, represented in a Collection of Twenty interesting Views of the City, the Sledges, and the People. Taken on the Spot at the twelve different Months of the Year; and accompanied with an Historical and Descriptive Account. Folio. 61. 6s.

INDEX

TO THE

SIXTH VOLUME OF THE BRITISH REVIEW.

A.

Academical Education, the present state

of, briefly noticed, 275.
Adelung Mr.), his work, called, " Mi-
thridates; or a General History of
Languages," considered, 476-its ob-
ject described, 477-his enquiry into,
and opinion on, the origin of speech,
with remarks, 478-482-the like
as to the original seat of the human
race, and the seat of paradise, 482,
483-table showing his arrangement
of languages, 485 his opinion on
the Chinese language considered,
490 his opinion respecting the an-
cient Getæ, 502-the like as to the
Illyrians, 503-his attack on the
Welsh resented, 507-his account of
the German dialects, 510-of the
English, ibid.-of the Sclavonian, ibid.

of the languages of the various
nations of the north of Asia, 515-of
the Caucasian nations, 517-of the
natives of the South Sea Islands and
the Negro races, 520.
Eschylus, passage from, quoted, 165—

Prometheus Vinctus considered, 306
-remark on his high character as a
dramatic writer, 310—the various in-
terpretations of different editors of
his works considered, 311-323.
Africa, a brief remark on an expedi-
tion now preparing for the interior
of Africa, 447.

Africans, remarkable instances of des-
perate resolution in, when in capti-
vity, 136, 139-their natural capa-
city equal to that of Europeans, 137
-their unhappiness in the European
Colonies proved, with instances, 138.
Albania described, 158-the appear-
ance of the troops there remarked on,
ihid.
Alfieri, his reputation as a tragic writer
in Italy described, 325-his claim to
the name of a tragic poet considered
at some length, 328, 329-the general

character of his tragedies examined,
329-336-his play of "Saul” con-
sidered, with quotations, 337-346
-quotations from some other of his
tragedies, 348-350.

Ali Pasha, the Albanian chief, descrip-
tion of his life and character, &c.
159 his military force, 160-his re-
venues and government, ibid.-his
political intelligence and manner of
receiving strangers, 161-summary of
his character, 162.

Alluvial Remains, interesting remarks
on, in various parts of the world, 47
-important observations on those de-
posits, 48.

Armenian Language, some account of,
518.

Arts, their great improvement in the
United States observed on, 413.
Athens, elegant description of, 167..
Augustin (St.), his method of interpret-
ing the Psalms described, 3.
Austria, her great importance in the
present state of Europe considered,
225, 226.

Author, the first business of one, accord-
ing to Dr. Johnson, 275.

B.

Bacon (Lord, his philosophical pages
recommended to the perusal of the
academical student, 200.

Bakewell (Mr.), interesting passage from
his Evidence before the Committee of
the House of Commons on the state
of the mad-houses in England, 529.
Balance of Power, remarks on the mo-
dern signification of, 218-the prin
cipal obstacle in the way of, in
Europe, removed, 220-the slow pro-
gress which has for many years been
made in effecting it in Europe ex-
plained, 224.

Bali, an Eastern language so called,
history of, 499.

Berkeley (Bishop), his doctrine on the

subject of the philosophy of the hu-
man mind, 170.

Best (Dr.), his appointment to the of-
fice of physician to the York Lunatic
Asylum considered, 541-his reten-
tion in his office after the dismissal of
the other officers, and his vindication
of himself, considered, 548-550-
his resignation, 550.

Bethlem Hospital, extracts from the ex-
amination before the Committee of
the House of Commons on mad-houses,
as applicable to it, 550-interesting
answers of Mr. Wakefield on the
subject, showing the various abuses
and cruelties existing there, ibid.-
553-the want of regular inspection
complained of, 555.

Bible, extensive and beneficial effects

of its circulation on the minds of the
vulgar described, 255-its extensive
circulation, 265.

Bible Society, its character, and the ten-
dency of its labours defended against
the objections of Mr. Norris, 257-
263-sketch of the progress and re-
sult of its operations, 265–267.
Bishops, an increase of vigilance in
their dioceses recommended, and the
present want of it regretted, 270-
certain of them exempted from the
charge of indifference, ibid.-the ne-
cessity of a frequent intercouse be-
tween them and their clergy insisted
on, 272.

Blomfield (Mr.), his editions of the
"Prometheus Vinctus," "Septem
contra Thebas," and "Perse," of
Eschylus considered, 306-his cha-
racter as a scholar remarked on,
309-the difficulties with which he
had to contend in Eschylus noticed,
ibid the three plays considered, with
his interpretations, and the various
readings of different editors, 310-
323-Note quoted illustrative of his
judicious criticism, 322-the merits
of his labours finally considered, with
an observation on his Latin style, 324.
Book Trade, the flourishing state of, in
the United States of America noticed,
412, 413

Boston (in New England), its principal

manufactures described, 392.
Bridges, the state of, in the United
States, considered, and two remark-
able ones described, 405, 406.
Brighton, the want of church accomme-
dation there, shewn, 280.
Britain, its various strata described,
34-38.

Buonaparte, his decree for abolishing
the slave trade after his landing in
France from Elba, 126-144-his
opinion on the subject as expressed
during his residence on that island,
127-his recent usurpatiou of power
considered, 209—the prediction of a
certain Noble Marquis of that event,
ibid-his utter contempt of treaties
remarked on, 214-the mode of dis-
posing of him and his traiterous fol-
lowers considered, 235-his atrocity
described, 236, 237-madness of his
Russian expedition, 442.
Burke (Mr.), philosophical and just
remark by him quoted, 199-his sen-
timents on the fate of religion in jaco-
bin France, 220.

Byron (Lord), remark on the ten-
dency of his poetry, 156—his Hebrew
melodies considered, 200-their poe-
tical merit, 201-serious hints to his
Lordship, 203-extracts from his me-
lodies, 204-206-the remainder of
them descanted on, 207.

C.

Calmucks, description of the, 451-433
-their religion, called Lamism, de-
scribed, and their temples, 453, 454
-remarkably large drum used in
their temples described, 454-im-
mense number of their sacred books
noticed, 455-particulars descriptive
of the excellence of their moral cha
racters, 456.

Canada, the present bad state of the
roads and bridges there complained

of, 407.

Canals in the United States, the present

state of, described, with remarks on
an important projected one, 404.
Cantabrian, or Iberian Language, its
grammatical construction, &c. consi-
dered, 513-shown to be an original
tongue, ibid.

Carolina, South, the state of agriculture
there, tenure of the lands, incomes of
farmers, mode of living, produce, &c,
described, 384-386-great propor
tion of slaves in that province no-
ticed, 387-its agriculture and com
merce at different periods, 402-the
planters there described, 410.
Castlereagh (Lord), his activity and abi-
lity in the negotiations at Vienna for
the abolition of the slave trade con-
sidered, 142-his letter to Earl Ba
thurst describing his interview with
the Emperor of Russia on the sub-
ject, 153-his luminous speech on

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