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Hills. An Irish Historical Romance, founded on Facts of the Seventh Century. By Mrs. Peck. In 3 vols. 12mo. 15s.

Manners, a Novel. 3 vols. 18s.

A Year and a Day. By Madame Panache. In 2 vols. 12mo. 12s.
Castles in the Air; or the Whims of my Aunt. In 3 vols. 12mo. 15s.

PHILOLOGY.

A New Irish-English Dictionary, with a compendious Irish Grammar. By Edward O'Reilly, Esq. 21. 2s.-fine 21. 12s. 6d.

POETRY.

An Elegy, supposed to be Written on a Field of Battle. 8vo. 25.
Revenge Defeated and Self-punished; a Dramatic Poem. 8vo. 23. 6d.
Poems, by Mrs. Brooke. 12mo. 7s.

The Anglo-Cambrian, a Poem, in four books. By M. Linwood. 12mo. 5s.
Poems and Tales in Verse. By Mrs. Eneas Lamont. 8vo. 6s.

The Mourner, a Poem, commemorative of the Public Sentiment excited by the Death of her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte of Wales, originally presented to Prince Leopold. By W. G. Horner. 2s. 6d.

The Adventures of Johnny Newcome in the Navy; in Four Cantos. By Alfred Burton. 8vo. with Sixteen Plates. 11. 1s.

Night; a Descriptive Poem, in Four Books. Foolscap 8vo. 7s. 6d. Miscellaneous Poems, extracted from the Records of the Circulation Club at Edinburgh. By Andrew Duncan, Sen. M.D. and P. Secretary to that Society. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

The Dream of Youth; a Poem. Foolscap 8vo.

4s. 6d.

The Minstrel of the Glen, and other Poems. By Henry Stebbing. 8vo. 7s. 6d.

POLITICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY.

A Letter to the Right Honourable Robert Peel, M. P. for the University of Oxford, on the Pernicious Effects of a Variable Standard of Value, especially as it regards the Lower Orders, and the Poor Laws. By one of his Constituents 8vo. 3s. 6d.

Essay on Money. By C. R. Prinsep, Esq. 8vo.

A Letter addressed to the Proprietors of the Bank of England on the Division of the Surplus Profits of that Corporation. By C. Arnot, Solicitor.

THEOLOGY.

Sermons, selected from the Manuscripts of the late Rev. E. Robson, Vicar of Orston. By the Rev. H. C. O'Donoghue, A.M. Dedicated by special permission to H. R. H. the Prince Regent. 8vo. 2 vols. 11. 1s.

Lectures on the Principal Evidences and the several Dispensations of Revealed Religion. By W. Roby. 8vo. Ss.

Sermons on Various Occasions. By the Rev. James Knight, M.A. 8vo. 7s. Sermons, in which the connexion is traced between a belief in the truths of Revelation and the character, comfort, &c. of Christians. By the Rev. Miles Jackson, of Leeds. 8vo. 12s.

Sermons, on several subjects and occasions. By W. Hett, M.A. 2 vols.

8vo. 18s.

Sermons, selected from the Manuscripts of the late Rev. C. Moore, M.A. 2 vols. 8vo. 11. 1s.

A Charge delivered to the Clergy of the Diocess of London, at the Visitation in July and August, 1818. By William, Bishop of London. 1s. 6d. The Church Catechism and Rite of Confirmation explained and illustrated in a Course of Lectures. By Thomas Tunstall Haverfield, B.D. 13s.

A Sermon preached in the Cathedral of Wells, before the Diocesan Association of the Members of the Society for promoting Christian Knowledge, at their

Anniversary Meeting, on the 1st of Sept. 1818. By the Bishop of Gloucester 1s. 6d.

Sermons preached in the Parish Church of High Wycomb. By the Rev. C. Bradley. 10s. 6d.

Old Church of England Principles, opposed to the 'New Light,' in a series of plain, doctrinal, and practical sermons, (fifty-eight in number) on the First Lesson in the Morning Service of the different Sundays and great Festivals throughout the year, showing the connexion between the Old and New Testaments, &c. &c. By the Rev. Richard Warner, Rector of Great Chatfield,

Wilts. 3 vols. 12mo. 11.

More Work for Dr. Hawker, in a Reply to his Misrepresentations of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. By the Rev. Thomas Smith, of St. John's College, Cambridge. 8vo. 1s.

Doctrinal, Experimental, and Practical Thoughts, on that Sanctification which is effected by the Instrumentality of the Gospel through the Divine Influence of the Holy Spirit. By the Rev. Thomas Young. Second Edition, revised and much enlarged. 12mo. 3s. boards.

Lectures on the Principles and Institutions of the Roman Catholic Religion: with an Appendix containing Historical and Critical Illustrations. By Joseph Fletcher, M.A. Second Edition, corrected and enlarged. 8vo. 9s

Sermons Selected from the most Eminent Divines of the 16th, 17th, and 18th Centuries Abridged and rendered in a Modern and appropriate Style. By the Rev. Edward Atkyns Bray, Vicar of Tavistock. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

TOPOGRAPHY.

The History of the County Palatine of Chester. By J. H. Hanshall. Parts I. to VI.

Histrionic Topography; or the Birthplaces, Residences, and Funeral Monuments of the most distinguished Actors. By J. N. Brewer. 8vo. With Engravings. 12s.

Lester's Illustration of London, with sixty-four plates, and a letter-press description. Vol. I. 8vo.

The Visiter's New Guide to the Spa of Leamington Priors, and its Vicinity; including sketches of Warwick, &c. By W. T. Moncrieff, with map and plan. 12mo. 5s. 6d.

The Panorama of Paris and its Environs; with thirty-one plates descriptive of as many striking public Edifices. Second Edition. 32mo. 4s.

The History of the City of Dublin, from the earliest Accounts to the present Time; containing its Annals, Antiquities, Ecclesiastical History, and Charters; its Present Extent, Public Buildings, Schools, Institutions, &c. To which are added, Biographical Notices of Eminent Men, and copious Appendices of its Population, Revenue, Commerce, and Literature. By the late John Warburton, Esq. Deputy Keeper of the Records in Birmingham Tower, the late Rev. James Whitelaw, and the Rev. R. Walsh, M.R.I.A. Illustrated by numerous Views, Maps, &c. 4to. 2 vols. 51. 5s. Large Paper 81. 8s. The Stranger's Guide to the City of New-York, comprising a Description of the Public Buildings, Population, Markets, Amusements, Manufactures, Docks and Fortifications, with an Account of the Literary, Philosophical and Commercial Establishments, and every other object that can interest the Stranger. To which is prefixed, an Historical Sketch and a Plan of the City. By E. M. Blunt, of New-York. 4s. boards.

Annals of Aberdeen, from the Reign of King William the Lion to the End of the year 1818; with an Account of the City, Cathedral, and University of Old Aberdeen. By William Kennedy, Esq. Advocate, Aberdeen. 2 vols. 4to.

41. 4s.

A new Picture of Rome; or, an interesting Itinerary, containing a General

577

Description of the Monuments and most distinguished Works in Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, both Ancient and Modern, of that celebrated City and its Environs. By Marien Vasi. Embellished with Forty Views of the Public Buildings, also a large Plan of Rome, complete in one volume. 12s. bound.

A Second Memoir on Babylon. By Claudius James Rich, Esq. Royal Svo. With Plates. 8s.

VOYAGES AND TRAVELS.

A Narrative of the Shipwreck of the Oswego, on the Coast of South Barbary, and of the Sufferings of the Master and the Crew while in bondage among 11. 5s. the Arabs. By Judah Paddock, her late Master.

4to.

The Tourist through Ireland; by which the Traveller is directed to the ob jects most worthy of notice, whether of Antiquity, Arts, Science, or the Picturesque. By an Irish Gentleman, aided by the communication of Friends. 12mo. 6s.-coloured Maps, 7s.

A Year's Residence in the United States of America. By W. Cobbett. Part I.

6s.

Caution to Continental Travellers. By the Rev. J. W. Cunningham. Ss. 6d.

A Narrative of a Journey of Five Thousand Miles through the Eastern and Western States of America; contained in Eight Reports, addressed to the thirty-nine English Families by whom the author was deputed, in June 1817, to ascertain whether any, and what part of the United States would be suitable for their Residence, with Remarks on Mr. Birkbeck's Notes and Letters. By Henry Bradshaw Fearon. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

A Chronological History of Voyages into the Polar Regions, undertaken chiefly for the purpose of discovering a North-east, North-west, or Polar Passage between the Atlantic and Pacific, from the earliest period of Scandinavian Navigation, to the departure of the recent Expeditions, under the orders of Captains Ross and Buchan. By John Barrow, F. R. S. To which are added, a Narrative of Captain Buchan's Expedition into the interior of Newfoundland, and a Relation of the Discovery of the Strait of Anian, made by Captain L. F. Maldonado, in the year 1588, with an original Map of the Arctic Regions. 8vo.

Gleanings and Remarks collected during many Months Residence at Buenos Ayres and within the Upper Country, with a prefatory account of the Expedition from England, until the Surrender of the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope, under the joint command of Sir D. Baird, G.C.B. K.C. and Sir Home Popham, K.C.B. By Major Alexander Gillespie, illustrated by a Map of South America, and a Chart of Rio de la Plata, with Pilotage Directions. 3yo. 10s.

INDEX

TO THE

NINETEENTH VOLUME OF THE QUARTERLY

REVIEW.

A

ABERDEEN (Earl of,) dissertation of, on
the gold coinage of Attica, 242. 243.
Alexandria, present state of, 180.
Allied Sovereigns, conduct of, towards cer-
tain countries of Europe vindicated, 153
-158--and especially towards France,
158-162

America, travels in. See Birkbeck.
Amycle, notice of antiquities discovered
at, 243, 244.

Apprentices (out-door), evil of, 81.
Ash-tree, uses of, 49.

Astronomy, cultivated by the Egyptian
priests, 407.

Attica, observations on the gold coinage of,
242, 243.

B.

ack woods of America, described, 73, 74
---administration of justice in them, 75.
Balmerino (Lord), anecdote of, 125.
Barrett (E. S.), Woman, a poem, 246-
specimen of it, with remarks, 247---250.
Begging, a systematic trade among the
poor, 110, 111.

Bellamy (John), translation of the Bible,
250-importance of translating the Holy
Scriptures, ib.-excellence of the autho
rized version, 251--examination of the
translator's qualifications, 252-255-
falsehood of his assertion respecting for-
mer translations of the Scriptures from
the Hebrew, 255, 256---remarks on the
authorities adduced by him as urging the
necessity of a new English version, 257,
258---the authorized version vindicated
from Mr. Bellamy's aspersions of it, 258,
259-importance and value of the Sep-
tuagint version, 260--262---examination
and collation of several passages of Mr.
Bellamy's version with the Septuagint
and other ancient versions, 262---273-
specimens of the inconsistencies of Mr.
Bellamy's translation, 274---276---speci-
mens of his pretended improvements in
punctuation, 277, 278---concluding re-
marks on the work and its patrons, 279,
280---strictures on Mr. Bellamy's 'Reply
to the Quarterly Review,' 446--exami-

nation and refutation of it, 447-458-
additional proofs of his inconsistencies,
and of his ignorance of Hebrew, 458—
460.

Belzoni (M.) biographical anecdotes of,
422-424-successful researches of at
Thebes, 191-sarcophagus of Apis-dis-
covered by him, 192-unjust attempt of
a Frenchman to depreciate his labours,
193, 194, 195-plan of the pyramid of
Cephrenes, 197-account of his opera-
tions in penetrating to its centre, 198-
202-his persevering researches in dis-
covering and penetrating into the tem-
ple of Ipsambul, 423, 424.

Bennet (Hon. G.) Letter on the Abuses
existing in Newgate, 79-benevolence
of his efforts, 113, 114.

Bible, excellence of the authorized English
version of, 251-estimation in which it is
held by the Icelanders, 302, 306-new
version of, see Bellamy.

Birkbeck (Morris), Notes on a journey in
America, 54-remarks on the change of
his religious opinions, 55-character of
his fellow-traveller, ib.-account of his
journey through the southern states of
North America, 56-58-picture of emi-
grants to the western states, 59-interior
of an American tavern, 60-mistake of
the author corrected, 62-difficulties to
which new settlers are exposed, 62, 63—
thriving state of Cincinnati, 64-sheep-
husbandry in Kentucky, 64-observa-
tions on the emigration to the western
parts of America, 65, 66---character of
the Americans, 67---interior of a hunter's
cabin described, 69---sketch of the co-
lony of Harmonites,' 72---specimen of
American justice, 73, 75, 76---character
of the Wabashites, 74, 75---concluding
remarks on the work, 78.

Bowles (Rev. W. L.) Vindicia Wyke-
hamicæ, 492-his successful vindication
of Winchester school, 561---remarks on
his flattery of Mr. Brougham, ib. 562---
565.

Bridges (American), notices of, 356, 357.
Brougham (Henry, Esq.) Letter of, to Sir

Samuel Romilly, and Speech on the
Education of the Poor, 492---Letters in

eply to him, 492, 493-..remarks on his
arliamentary conduct, 494, 495; origin,
ogress, and present state of the educa-
on committee, 495-500-remarks on
is attack upon the ministers of state as
eing unfavourable to the education of
e poor and to the investigating of abu-
s of charities, and as being actuated
y party feelings, 511-514---strictures
n his complaint that the Commissioners
Tere restricted in the objects of their
quiry, 515---518---and on his attack
f the Bishop of Lincoln, 519---522–
is misrepresentation of the Yeovil Cha-
ties, 523---and those at Croydon, 524
-528-the real state of the Pocklington.
chool, and his treatment of the master
nd tutors of St. John's College, 529;|
34; remarks on Mr. Brougham's ac-
Count of St. Bees school, 535; 537;
nd of the Huntingdon charities, 538;
is severe treatment of Winchester col-
ege, 539-Mr. Brougham mistaken in
is construction of college statues, 541
-observations on the conduct of the
ducation committee, and on the inexpe-
Siency of extending its powers to all
baritable institutions, and on the consti-
ition of the act proposed by Mr.
Brougham for appointing commissioners
> examine into the education of the
hoor, 542-563-reflections on the pro-
able consequences that might have re-
ulted had Mr. Brougham's suggestions
Geen wholly adopted, 565-569.

own (John), Memoirs of the Northern
Courts, 379-observations on his autho-

site scenes in Italy, 224-description of
the Palatine Mount and Egerian Grottos,
225 of the dying gladiator, 226-beau
tiful address to the Princess Charlotte,
227-concluding strictures on the poem,
228-281-and on the notes that ac
company it, 231, 232.

C.

Cambridge University, orthodoxy of, assert-
ed, and its attachment to the church,
443, 444-statement of facts relative to
its botanical professorship. See Smith.
Camping out' described, 67.

Carnac, ruins of, described, 187-ancient
statues discovered there by M. Belzoni,
191.

Catechising, importance of, 98-benefits
resulting from it, 99.

Caviglia (M.) successfully explores the well
in the great Pyramid of Ghiza, 396—
397-his successful researches in that
Pyramid, 398-401-account of other
ancient edifices and paintings examined
by him, 402, 403-observations on the
sculpture paintings, 404, 405-descrip-
tion of his successful efforts in clearing
away the soil and rubbish from the
Sphinx, 410-copies and translations of
inscriptions discovered by him, 411-
415-plan of the ground covered by that
monument, 416-disinterestedness of his
labours, 418, 419.

Cephrenes, pyramid of, plan of, 197-de-
scription of M. Belzoni's operations in
penetrating to its centre, 198-202-ac-
count of the bones found in it, 280, 281.
ities, 380-specimen of the author's di-Charity schools, observations on, 95, 96.
lomatic skill, 381-his whining lamen-Charles II., restoration of, and his entrance
ation over Buonaparte, 382, 383-re-
emarks on it, 383, 384-account of the
assassination of Gustavus III. King of
Sweden, 385, 386-state of that country
under the regency of the Duke of Suder-
mania, 387-strictures on the liberty
which this author takes with preceding
travellers, 388-390.

onaparte, sanguinary cruelty of, in
Egypt, 149, note the real cause of his
overthrow in the campaign of Moscow,
139-Sir R. Wilson's account of his con-
duct in 1814, 142-its incorrectness
shown, 143-145-as also the incorrect-
ness of his account of Buonaparte's de-
feat at the battle of Waterloo, 146–148.
yron (Lord) Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,
Canto IV. 215-general remarks on the
entire poem, 216-220-plan of the
fourth canto, 221-description of the
former greatness of Venice, 221-exqui-

VOL. XIX. NO. XXXVIII.

into London, described, 33-his excel-
lent advice to his brother, 34.
Charlotte (H. R. H. the Princess), exqui-
site poetical address to, 227.
Chaulnes (Duke de), mean conduct of,

391.

Children, employed in begging, 111.
Church of England, oppressed state of,
during the rebellion, 24, 25.
Churches (new), importance and necessity
of, 501.

Cincinnati, notice of, 64.
Clarke (Dr. E. D.), mistakes of, corrected,
398, 417, 418.

Clarke (Rev. L.), Letter to Mr. Brough-
am, 493.

Clergy (inferior), condition of, at the Re-
formation 89-its effects still felt, 90.
Colden (Cadwallader D.), the Life of Ro-
bert Fulton, 347-its bombastic exor-
dium, ib. See Fulton.

74

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