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MESSRS. SAUNDERS AND OTLEY,
CONDUIT STREET, HANOVER SQUARE LONDON,

Being engaged in Publishing the Works of the first Authors, and having
in progress a variety of publications of the highest interest and importance,
beg leave respectfully to announce, that in order to secure their
appearance Simultaneously in England and America, they have opened
a House in New-York, where all Their own Publications may be obtained,
and where their New Works will in future appear at the same
time as at their house in London, printed under their especial arrangements
for that purpose, from the Author's original manuscripts, Embellished
with the Original English Illustrations
, and in the usual style of
American Publications.

THE FOLLOWING ARE AMONG THE IMPORTANT
NEW WORKS NOW IN THE PRESS.

I.

THE PRINCE LUCIEN BONAPARTE'S MEMOIRS.
MEMOIRS OF LUCIEN BONAPARTE,
WRITTEN BY HIMSELF,
(VOLUME FIRST nearly ready.)

II.

MRS. HEMANS' MEMOIRS.
MEMORIALS OF MRS. HEMANS,
With Illustrations of her Literary Character from her Private Correspondence.

BY H. F. CHORLEY, ESQ.
With the Original English Illustrations.
(Nearly Ready.)

III.

SIR GRENVILLE TEMPLE'S NEW WORK.
TRAVELS IN GREECE AND TURKEY,
BY MAJOR SIR GRENVILLE TEMPLE, BART.
(With the Original Engravings.)


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IV.

NEW WORK ON FLOWERS.
THE FLORAL TELEGRAPH,
(With beautifully colored Plates.)

V.

MR. EDWARD LANDOR'S NEW WORK.
ADVENTURES IN THE NORTH OF EUROPE,
BY EDWARD LANDOR, ESQ.
(With the Original London Engravings.)

VI.

In 1 Vol. with a beautiful Portrait,
LITERARY REMAINS OF THE LATE
WILLIAM HAZLITT,
With a Notice of his Life by his Son, and thoughts on his Genius
and Writings, &c.
By E. L. Bulwer, Esq.
(Now Ready.)

“A work with all the author's characteristic faults and merits. Hazlitt
is often extravagant, often unsound in his reasoning, and unsafe in
his conclusions; but on the other hand, he is almost always ingenious,
and often very eloquent. He has the faculty of making his readers think.”

N. Y. Evening Post.

VII.

NEW WORK ON DOMESTIC LIFE IN SPAIN.
With the Original English Plates.
MADRID IN 1835.
Sketches of the Metropolis of Spain and its Inhabitants, and of
Society and Manners in the Peninsula.
BY A RESIDENT OFFICER.
(New Ready.)

“This work, which is one of great interest and value is superbly got
up by the publishers, containing most splendid Engravings. We have
rarely read a work of higher interest, and not often lately seen one
upon which the publishers have done their duty so well.”

Morn. Courier.


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NEW AND SPLENDIDLY EMBELLISHED WORK,
In one large Vol. 8vo.
THE BOOK OF GEMS.
(The Poets and Artists of Great Britain.)
WITH UPWARDS OF
FIFTY BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVINGS
FROM
ORIGINAL PICTURES,
BY FIFTY LIVING PAINTERS.

This beautiful Work, which is a perfect novelty among the embellished
publications of the day, presents the combined attractions of Poetry, Painting,
and Engraving. It is splendidly illustrated with upwards of Fifty exquisitely
finished Engravings from Original Pictures by the most distinguished
living Painters, and altogether forms one of the most beautiful library,
drawing-room, and present books which the advanced state of the Arts has
hitherto produced.

“The Book of Gems seems too fair to be looked upon, combining all those
external decorations which made the Annuals so attractive, with something
far better than the vapid prose and milk-and-water poetry of which their
staple generally consisted. It is a book more lovely to the sense than the
most gorgeous of the tribe of Souvenirs and Forget me-nots; and, unlike them,
it will be as valuable twenty years hence as it is now. The very conception
of such a book deserves no little praise, and its execution the very highest.
For its combined attractions to the man of taste and the lover of art, this
work has no rival in the annals of book making.”

American Monthly Mag.

“This is, in all respects, so beautiful a book, that it would be scarcely
possible to suggest an improvement. Its contents are not for a year, nor for
an age, but for all time.”

Examiner.

“The plan of this beautiful and splendid work is as admirable as it is
novel.”

Literary Gazette.

“It is indeed a Book of Gems.”

Times.

“A more desirable `Present Book' could not have been devised.”

Court
Journal
.

“It surpasses all that Art and Poetry have as yet completed among us.”


News.

“A truly aristocratic and chastely elegant book.”

S. Times.

“A work which for beauty of illustration and elegance of arrangement, has
seldom if ever, been surpassed.”

John Bull.

“This sumptuous book has not less than fifty three illustrations.”


Athenæum.

“It reflects high credit on the taste and ability displayed in its composition.”


Morning Post.

“The Pleasure-book of the year—a treasury of sweets and beauties.”


Atlas.

“It is a book of itself. We believe that the combined talents of fifty-three
artists were never before brought
to the illustration of one volume.”

Observer.

A few Proof Impressions of the Splendid Illustrations
to the above work may still be had.


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I.

SIR WILLIAM GELL'S NEW WORK.
In 2 vols. 8vo.
THE TOPOGRAPHY OF ROME AND ITS
VICINITY.
By Sir William Gell.
WITH A NEW AND BEAUTIFUL MAP MADE BY THE AUTHOR,
EXPRESSLY FOR THIS WORK, FROM AN ACTUAL AND
LABORIOUS SURVEY.
(The Map and Work sold separately.)

“This very able and standard work is, indeed, a lasting memorial of
eminent literary exertion, devoted to a subject of great importance, and
one dear not only to every scholar, but to every reader of intelligence to
whom the truth of history is an object of consideration.”

Literary
Gazette
.

“These elegant volumes are indispensable to the complete scholar
and the classical traveler.”

Spectator.

II.

MRS. JAMESON'S CHARACTERISTICS.
New and revised Edition, in 2 vols. post 8vo. with 52 beautiful
Etchings by the Author.
CHARACTERISTICS OF WOMEN,
By Mrs. Jameson, Author of “Diary of an Ennyee,” &c.

“A beautiful and touching commentary on the heart and mind of
woman.”

Lit. Gaz.

“Two truly delightful volumes—the most charming of all works of
a charming writer.”

III.

MR. JAMES'S WORK ON EDUCATION.
In One Vol. Post 8vo.
THE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF
GERMANY.
By G. P. R. James, Esq.

“In this masterly volume, Mr. James endeavors to arouse the country
to the important interests of the momentous subject on which he writes;
he evinces a patriotic feeling of the most elevated order.”

Metropoliton.


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IV.

M. DE TOCQUEVILLE'S NEW WORK.
In 2 vols. with Maps.
DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA.
By M. De Tocqueville.

Translated by his friend H. Reeve, Esq., under the Author's inspection.

“We recommend M. de Tocqueville's work as the very best on the
subject of America we have ever met with.”

Blackwood.

“The most complete work that ever appeared on the government of
the United States.”

Sun.

V.

MISS LANDON'S NEW WORK.
In one Volume Foolscap, with a beautiful Portrait of the Author.
THE VOW OF THE PEACOCK,
By the Author of “The Golden Violet,” “The Improvisatore,” &c.

“A Poem characterised by exquisite gracefulness and power of
imagery.”

Morning Post.

VI.

DR. HOGG'S TRAVELS.
In 2 Vols. Plates.
VISIT TO ALEXANDRIA, DAMASCUS AND
JERUSALEM.
During the Successful Campaign of Ibraham Pacha,
By Edward Hogg, M. D.

“We have derived unmixed pleasure from the perusal of these
volumes, and have no hesitation in assigning to them a very high place
amongst the best modern works of travel.”

Atlas.

VII.

MRS. JAMESON'S FEMALE SOVEREIGNS.
New Edition, Revised and Enlarged, in 2 vols.
CELEBRATED FEMALE SOVEREIGNS.
By Mrs. Jameson.

“We are indebted to Mrs. Jameson for two very delightful volumes,
equally creditable to herself, and advantageous to her readers.”

New
Monthly Mag
.


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VIII.

MRS. JAMESON'S FEMALE BIOGRAPHY.
Second Edition. In 2 vols. Post 8vo.
FEMALE POETICAL BIOGRAPHY.
By Mrs. Jameson.

IX.

RETZSCH'S FANCIES.
A Series of beautiful Outlines. By Moritz Retzch.
With Remarks by Mrs. Jameson.

X.

THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS.
Third Edition. Bound in Embossed Silk.
THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS.
Revised by the Editor of the Forget-me-Not.
(With the London colored Plates.)

XI.

THE REV. R. MONTGOMERY'S POEM.
A New and beautiful Edition.
THE MESSIAH.
A Poem by the Rev. R. Montgomery.

“This work is, in our judgment, a lasting monument to the fame of
its author.”

Literary Gazette.

XII.

MR. LODGE'S PEERAGE FOR 1836,
From the Personal Communications of the Nobility.
Corrected to the present date,

“A work which corrects all errors of former works. It is the production
of an herald—we had almost said by birth, but certainly by
profession and studies—Mr. Lodge, the Norray King of Arms. It
is a most useful publication.”

Times.

“Mr. Lodge's Peerage must supersede all other works of the kind
for two reasons—first, it is on a better plan, and second, it is better executed.
We can safely pronounce this to be the readiest, the most useful,
and exactest of modern works on the subject.”

Spectator.


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XIII.

MISS. STICKNEY'S NEW WORK.
In 2 vols. post 8 vo.
THE POETRY OF LIFE.
By Miss Stickney, Author of “Pictures of Private Life.”

“We can recommend `the Poetry of Life' to all who delight in elegant
and tasteful, but animating composition. It contains a series of
elegant essays, on various delightful subjects in nature, art, and the human
mind.”

Spectator.

XIV.

In 2 vols. 8vo. Plates.
RECORDS OF TRAVELS
IN TURKEY, GREECE, &C. IN THE YEARS 1829, 1830,
AND 1831;
And of a cruise in the Black Sea with the Capitan Pasha.
By Adolphus Slade, Esq.

“We can assure our readers that no record of Travels in modern
times with which we are acquainted, presents so many features of general
attraction as the volumes before us.”

Monthly Review.

“One of the most amusing and instructing of Oriental travelers.”


Spectator.

“The work before us supplies the best description of this remarkable
nation.”

Courier.

“These volumes are full of highly entertaining and curious matter.”


Court Journal.

XV.

In 8vo. with Portrait, price 14s.
PRIVATE MEMOIRS OF
SIR KENELM DIGBY.

XVI.

Now first published from Original Manuscripts.
CITATION AND EXAMINATION
OF WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE, EUSEBY TREEN, JOSEPH
CARNBY, AND SILUS GOUCH, Clerk.
Before the worshipful Sir Thomas Lucy, Knight,
TOUCHING DEER STEALING.
By Walter Savage Landor, Esq.


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XVII.

In eight vols. bound in embossed cloth and lettered.
WITH THE BEAUTIFUL EMBELLISHMENTS BY THE FINDENS.
From Drawings taken on the spot expressly for this work, by
J. D. Harding, Esq.
COWPER'S LIFE AND WORKS.
The Complete Stereotype Edition.
Including the whole of
HIS PRIVATE CORRESPONDENCE.

Chronologically arranged, and forming the First and only Complete Collection
of his admirable Letters that has been or can be published; a
considerable proportion of them being still Copyright, and exclusively
appropriated to this Edition
.

Revised, Arranged, and Edited by
REV. T. S. GRIMSHAWE, A. M.
Rector of Burton, Northamptonshire, and Vicar of Biddenham, Bedfordshire
Author of
the life of the Rev. Legh Richmond.”
WITH AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS AND POETRY OF COWPER.
BY THE REV. J. CUNNINGHAM.
VICAR OF HARROW.

The following are from the numerous Critical Notices.

“A delightful work. The Letters, now for the first time incorporated,
are even better than those which have so long secured the public favor.
Their unaffected pleasantry, abundant variety, and unstudied elequence
remind us of the best efforts of Addison and Steele, over which authors
Cowper had the advantage in a more generally informed understanding.”


Times.

“The works of Cowper need no recommendation; they are incorporated
into our living literature, and will be read as long as men shall
read for amusement, or to gather wisdom, of which no poet is a greater
teacher. The peculiar merit of the present edition is, that it contains
the whole of Cowper's Private Correspondence.”

Courier.

“An elegant edition of the writings of Cowper, his Life and Letters,
now first completed by the introduction of his `Private Correspondence.'
The engravings are very beautiful, and render the work fit for the library
of the most fastidious, while the price is within the compass of the mechanic.
The letters of the amiable Cowper cannot be too extensively
circulated.”

Dispatch.