NEW WORKS. Second and Cheaper Edition, price 7s. 6d., post 8vo., cloth, POPLAR HOUSE ACADEMY. By the Author of “Mary Powell.” “A tale as touching and alluring as it is simple,—a tale sure to interest, whether by its sweet scenes of pathos, its continuous interest, its exquisite traits of nature, or its unaffected, unobtrusive tone of true piety.”—Literary Gazette. In preparation, THE HOUSEHOLD OF SIR THOMAS MORE. Cheap Edition. To be followed by EDWARD OSBORNE. DEBORAH’S DIARY. Uniform. This day, price 2s. boards; 2s. 6d. cloth, SEVEN TALES BY SEVEN AUTHORS. Edited by F. E. Smedley, Esq., Author of “Frank Fairlegh,” &c. Price 3s. cloth; or 3s. 6d. gilt edges, THE MANUAL OF HERALDRY; Being a concise Description of the several Terms used, and containing a Dictionary of every Designation in the Science. New Edition. Illustrated by 400 Engravings on Wood. THE ULSTER AWAKENING: An Account of the Rise, Progress, and Fruits of the Irish Revival. With Notes of a Tour of Personal Observation and Inquiry in 1859. By John Weir, D.D., Minister of the English Presbyterian Church, Islington; and Author of “Romanism: Lectures on the Times.” Fifth Thousand, price 2s., THE BACKWOODS PREACHER: Edited by W. P. Strickland. Reprinted from the last American Edition. “For the rugged earnestness of the man it is impossible not to have a high admiration. His life is full of strange incident, and, setting aside its oddities, must command, and more than command, interest.”—AthenÆum. “Full of the richest Americanisms and quaintest anecdotes. It gives the details of a religious phase of society almost unknown in England.”—Dickens’s Household Words. MOST ELEGANT CHRISTMAS PRESENT. THE BOOK OF THE THAMES, By Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Hall. With numerous Illustrations. THE AUTHORS TO THE PUBLIC. We have the honour to submit to the public a “Book of the Thames, from its Rise to its Fall,” hopeful that our readers may share with us the enjoyment we have so long, and so often, derived from the “King of Island Rivers!” We have traced the bountiful river from the bubbling well out of which it issues, in the meadow by Trewsbury Mead—its lonely birthplace—through its whole course, gathering tributaries, and passing with them through tranquil villages, populous towns, and crowded cities; ever fertilizing, ever beautifying, ever enriching, until it reaches the most populous city of the modern or the ancient world, forming thence the Great Highway by which a hundred Nations traverse the globe. NOTICES OF THE PRESS. “It is a book to endear to us our native England; and, produced with all the elegance of the printer’s and binder’s art, will richly adorn the drawing-room table.”—Daily News. “It is by far the pleasantest book, certainly the most complete in design and execution, that has been published about the Thames for many years, and we can easily understand that in writing it the authors performed ‘a labour of love.’”—Morning Post. “This is one of the best in appearance of the ornamental works of the season which is just passed; the binding and the typography are excellent, and the style lively, superficial, and showy.”—John Bull. “A faithful as well as an agreeable guide to whatever of interest occurs along the entire course of the river. In short, it is a pleasant, well-written, and very handsome book on the pleasantest river an author could have to write about.”—Literary Gazette. IN THREE BINDINGS:
ARTHUR HALL, VIRTUE, & CO., 25, PATERNOSTER ROW. THE |