THE END.
MR. SEWARD’S LONG-LOOKED-FOR BIOGRAPHY.
The undersigned take pleasure in announcing that they have now ready
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY
OF
WILLIAM HENRY SEWARD
(1801-1884),
With a later Memoir by his Son, FREDERICK W. SEWARD, late Assistant Secretary of State.
? The public have long looked for the publication of this exceedingly interesting work. It gives a true insight into the career of the great Governor, Senator, and Secretary, the Philanthropist, Statesman, and Patriot, whose history is so closely identified with that of his country.
? Among the illustrations of those who figure in the work, besides those of Mr. and Mrs. Seward, there will be portraits on steel of John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay, Thurlow Weed, Abraham Lincoln, Horace Greeley, Gerrit Smith, Charles Sumner, Hamilton Fish, Salmon P. Chase, Charles Francis Adams, Anson Burlingame, William M. Evarts, Andrew Johnson, Edwin M. Stanton, and other Patriots and Statesmen; also a view of Rogers’s celebrated statue of Mr. Seward, recently unveiled in New York.
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Prof. W. Kingdon Clifford, M. A., The First Principles of the Exact Sciences explained to the Non-Mathematical.
Prof. T. H. Huxley, LL. D., F. R. S., Bodily Motion and Consciousness.
Dr. W. B. Carpenter, LL. D., F. R. S., The Physical Geography Of the Sea.
Prof. Wm. Odling, F. R. S., The Old Chemistry viewed from the New Stand-point.
W. Lauder Lindsay, M. D., F. R. S. E., Mind in the Lower Animals.
Sir John Lubbock, Bart., F. R. S., On Ants and Bees.
Prof. W. T. Thiselton Dyer, B. A., B. Sc., Form and Habit in Flowering Plants.
Mr. J. N. Lockyer, F. R. S., Spectrum Analysis.
Prof. Michael Foster, M. D., Protoplasm and the Cell Theory.
H. Charlton Bastian, M. D., F. R. S., The Brain as an Organ of Mind.
Prof. A. C. Ramsay, LL. D., F. R. S., Earth Sculpture: Hills Valleys, Mountains, Plains, Rivers, Lakes; how they were produced, and how they have been destroyed.
Prof. Rudolph Virchow (Berlin University), Morbid Physiological Action.
Prof. Claude Bernard, History of the Theories of Life.
Prof. H. Saint-Claire Deville, An Introduction to General Chemistry.
Prof. Wurtz, Atoms and the Atomic Theory.
Prof. De Quatrefages, The Human Race.
Prof. Lacaze-Duthiers, ZoÖlogy since Cuvier.
Prof. Berthelot, Chemical Synthesis.
Prof. C. A. Young, Ph. D. (of Dartmouth College), The Sun.
Prof. Ogden N. Rood, (Columbia College, New York), Modern Chromatics and its Relations to Art and Industry.
Dr. Eugene Lommel (University of Erlangen), The Nature of Light.
Prof. J. Rosenthal, General Physiology of Muscles and Nerves.
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Prof. S. W. Johnson, M. A., On the Nutrition of Plants.
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Prof. Bernstein (University of Halle), The Five Senses of Man.
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APPLETONS’
AMERICAN CYCLOPÆDIA.
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The work originally published under the title of The New American CyclopÆdia was completed in 1863, since which time the wide circulation which it has attained in all parts of the United States, and the signal developments which have taken place in every branch of science, literature, and art have induced the editors and publishers to submit it to an exact and thorough revision, and to issue a new edition entitled The American CyclopÆdia.
Within the last ten years the progress of discovery in every department of knowledge has made a new work of reference an imperative want.
The movement of political affairs has kept pace with the discoveries of science, and their fruitful application to the industrial and useful arts and the convenience and refinement of social life. Great wars and consequent revolutions have occurred, involving national changes of peculiar moment. The civil war of our own country, which was at its height when the last volume of the old work appeared, has happily been ended, and a new course of commercial and industrial activity has been commenced.
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