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Letters of John Randolph, to a young relative

embracing a series of years, from early youth, to mature manhood.
  
  
  

 I. 
 II. 
 III. 
 IV. 
 V. 
 VI. 
 VII. 
 VIII. 
 IX. 
 X. 
 XI. 
 XII. 
 XIII. 
 XIV. 
 XV. 
 XVI. 
 XVII. 
 XVIII. 
 XIX. 
 XX. 
 XXI. 
 XXII. 
 XXIII. 
 XXIV. 
 XXV. 
 XXVI. 
 XXVII. 
 XXVIII. 
 XXIX. 
 XXX. 
 XXXI. 
 XXXII. 
 XXXIII. 
 XXXIV. 
 XXXV. 
 XXXVI. 
 XXXVII. 
 XXXVIII. 
 XXXIX. 
 XL. 
 XLI. 
 XLII. 
 XLIII. 
 XLIV. 
 XLV. 
 XLVI. 
 XLVII. 
 XLVIII. 
 XLIX. 
 L. 
 LI. 
 LII. 
 LIII. 
 LIV. 
 LV. 
 LVI. 
 LVII. 
 LVIII. 
 LIX. 
 LX. 
 LXI. 
 LXII. 
 LXIII. 
 LXIV. 
 LXV. 
 LXVI. 
 LXVII. 
 LXVIII. 
 LXIX. 
 LXX. 
 LXXI. 
 LXXII. 
 LXXIII. 
 LXXIV. 
 LXXV. 
 LXXVI. 
 LXXVII. 
 LXXVIII. 
 LXXIX. 
 LXXX. 
 LXXXI. 
 LXXXII. 
 LXXXIII. 
 LXXXIV. 
 LXXXV. 
 LXXXVI. 
 LXXXVII. 
 LXXXVIII. 
 LXXXIX. 
 XC. 
 XCI. 
 XCII. 
 XCIII. 
 XCIV. 
 XCV. 
 XCVI. 
 XCVII. 
 XCVIII. 
 XCIX. 
 C. 
 CI. 
 CII. 
 CIII. 
 CIV. 
 CV. 
 CVI. 
 CVII. 
 CVIII. 
 CIX. 
 CX. 
 CXI. 
 CXII. 
 CXIII. 
 CXIV. 
 CXV. 
 CXVI. 
 CXVII. 
 CXVIII. 
 CXIX. 
 CXX. 
 CXXI. 
 CXXII. 
 CXXIII. 
 CXXIV. 
 CXXV. 
 CXXVI. 
 CXXVII. 
 CXXVIII. 
 CXXIX. 
 CXXX. 
 CXXXI. 
 CXXXII. 
 CXXXIII. 
 CXXXIV. 
 CXXXV. 
 CXXXVI. 
 CXXXVII. 
 CXXXVIII. 
 CXXXIX. 
 CXL. 
 CXLI. 
 CXLII. 
 CXLIII. 
 CXLIV. 
 CXLV. 
 CXLVI. 
 CXLVII. 
 CXLVIII. 
 CXLIX. 
 CL. 
 CLI. 
 CLII. 
 CLIII. 
 CLIV. 
 CLV. 
 CLVI. 
 CLVII. 
 CLVIII. 
 CLIX. 
 CLX. 
 CLXI. 
 CLXII. 
 CLXIII. 
 CLXIV. 
 CLXV. 
 CLXVI. 
 CLXVII. 
 CLXVIII. 
 CLXIX. 
 CLXX. 
 CLXXI. 
 CLXXII. 
 CLXXIII. 
 CLXXIV. 
 CLXXV. 
 CLXXVI. 
 CLXXVII. 
 CLXXVIII. 
 CLXXIX. 
 CLXXX. 
 CLXXXI. 
 CLXXXII. 
 CLXXXIII. 
 CLXXXIV. 
 CLXXXV. 
 CLXXXVI. 
 CLXXXVII. 
 CLXXXVIII. 
 CLXXXIX. 
 CXC. 
 CXCI. 
 CXCII. 

  
  
  
MISCELLANEOUS.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  

MISCELLANEOUS.

TRAITS AND TRADITIONS OF PORTUGAL.
By Miss Pardoe. 2 vols. 12mo.

"Miss Pardoe is a charming traveller, enjoying what
she sees, entering with good taste into the feelings, and
with liveliness into the peculiarities of the people
among whom she resided, and telling all that she has
heard and seen in an animated and picturesque style.

"We dismiss these attractive volumes with warm
praise and congratulations."—Lit. Gazette.

"Two more entertaining volumes than those before
is could not easily be found.

"Her work is a series of lively pictures, always skilful.

"Miss Pardoe entered Portugal determined to please
and be pleased; petty annoyances afforded her mirth;
difficulties roused her to exertion, dangers, like a soldier's
daughter, she scorned, and severe toil was her
favorite pleasure.

"We heartily recommend them to all who love vigorous
sketches of national manners, racy anecdotes, and
interesting traits of character."—Athenæum.

"The work is light and pleasant reading, the mode of
sketching slight, but effective, the style classic, elegant,
and smacking even of enthusiasm."—Spectator.

THE PREMIUM, A PRESENT FOR ALL
SEASONS: consisting of elegant selections
from British and American writers of the
19th century. In one small neat volume,
elegantly bound in morocco; with engravings,
by Ellis, from designs by Westall and
Richter.

This work particularly commends itself to
school teachers, parents, and others, who
may be in search of a volume to present to
either sex.

"A delightful little bouquet of `elegant extracts' from
the best writers of prose and poetry in Great Britain
and America. The Premium would be a pretty present
for young ladies, or students, emulous to be noticed or
rewarded."—Sentinel.

"It is a collection, or rather let us say, a selection of
pieces in prose and verse, that have real merit, with
reference both to style and sentiment. They are choice,
and will be useful to improve the taste and strengthen
the morals. The author has done a good work, and those
who wish to give the most deserving a beautiful and
useful `premium,' will find the work to which we refer
altogether suitable."—U. S. Gazette.

"Carey, Lea & Blanchard have given us a choice selection
of gems, from the best popular writers of the day,
under the above title. It contains articles from the pens
of Croley, Wilson, Byron, Mary Howitt, Mrs. Hemans,
Moore, Hood, Dr. Bird, Campbell, Manning, Irving, Webster,
Sprague, Braining, Percival, &c. The volume is a
pleasant one, and the selections such as their respective
authors have no need to be ashamed of."—N. Y. Com.
Advertiser.

"This is a neat volume, composed of extracts from the
celebrated writers of the present century. The selections
are admirably made, and the work is got up with unusual
elegance. The binding is a beautiful specimen of
the skill which has been attained in this important department
of book-making. The volume is one of rare
beauty, and constitutes a cheap, elegant, and appropriate
present."—Daily Intelligencer.

"A very neat and instructive present for youth at all
seasons."—Nat. Gazette.

RECOLLECTIONS OF MIRABEAU AND
THE TWO FIRST LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLIES
OF FRANCE. By Ettienne
Dumont,
of Geneva. In 1 vol. 8vo.

"This is a very instructive book, and interesting as a
relie of a wise and virtuous man. It is more lively,
more picturesque, and more amusing than we had promised
ourselves."—Edinburgh Review.

"CHRISTIAN YEAR." By the Rev. John
Keble,
Professor of Poetry in the University
of Oxford: with an introduction, and occasional
notes, by the Rt. Rev. George W.
Doane,
Bishop of New Jersey. (In the press.)

"The Christian Year, a collection of little poems."—
"By the Rev. John Keble, a name well known, and
justly dear to Oxford."—"We scarcely ever remember
to have read so exquisite an invocation of religion in
poetry."—"We have so high a sense of its genuine
worth, that we hope this notice of it may be the means
of introducing it into many families."—British Critic.



No Page Number

TOUR OF A GERMAN PRINCE, (Puckler
Muskau,
) through the Southern and Western
parts of England, Wales, Ireland, and
France. In 8vo.

"It contains the least prejudiced and most acute notices
we have read of the habits and modes of thinking
of Englishmen, and the merits and defects of the country
and society."—Globe.

CONVERSATIONS WITH LORD BYRON
ON THE SUBJECT OF RELIGION.
By Kennedy. 12mo.

TRAVELS OF AN IRISH GENTLEMAN,
IN SEARCH OF A RELIGION. With
Notes and Illustrations. By the Editor of
Captain Rock's Memoirs. In 1 vol. 12mo.

"Considering the circumstances under which these
volumes are given to the public, we consider their contents
as amongst the most interesting records of which
the assertion of the human mind ever formed the
theme."—Monthly Review.

"The masterly manner in which Mr. Moore has
brought together his arguments, the great extent and
minuteness of his researches into ancient authorities,
his intimacy with the customs and traditions of
other times, and his close and critical knowledge of the
ancient languages, will surprise the reader of his Travels,
who may have measured his talents by his songs."
American Sentinel.

A GUIDE TO AN IRISH GENTLEMAN
IN HIS SEARCH FOR A RELIGION.
By the Rev. Mortimer O'Sullivan, A. M.
1 vol. 12mo. Being an answer to Moore's
work.

THE ECONOMY OF MACHINERY AND
MANUFACTURES. By Chares Babbage.
18mo.

"Of the many publications which have recently issued
from the press, calculated to give a popular and attractive
form to the results of science, we look upon this volume
as by far the most valuable. Mr. Babbage's name is
well known in connexion with the general subject of
which he has here undertaken to treat. But it will be
difficult for the reader who does not possess the volume
itself, to understand the happy style, the judgment and
fact, by means of which the author has contrived to lend
almost the charm of romance to the apparently dry and
technical theme which he has chosen."—Monthly Rev.

OUSELEY'S REMARKS ON THE STATISTICS
AND POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
OF THE UNITED STATES.

"The author is a man of solid sense, friendly to this
country, and his remarks have the value and interest
of which his character and inquiries authorized the expectation."—National
Gazette.

TWO YEARS AND A HALF IN THE
NAVY, or, Journal of a Cruise in the
Mediterranean and Levant, on board
the U. S. Frigate Constellation, in the
Years
1829, 1830, and 1831. By E. C.
Wines. In 2 vols. 12mo.

"The author is a gentleman of classical education, a
shrewd observer, a lively writer, whose natural manner
is always agrecable; whose various matter is generally
entertaining and instructive; and whose descriptions
are remarkably graphic. The greater portion of his pages
have yielded us both profit and pleasure."—Nat. Gaz.

THE NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE.
By the late Rev. Gilbert White,
A. M., Fellow of the Oriel College, with
additions, by Sir William Jardine, Bart.,
F. R. S. E. F. L. S. M. W. S., Author of "Illustrations
of Ornithology." 1 vol. 18mo.

"White's History of Selborne, the most fascinating
piece of rural writing and sound English philosophy that
has ever issued from the press."—Athenæum.

The DUCHESS of BERRI in LA VENDEE,
comprising a Narrative of her Adventures,
with her private papers and secret correspondence.
By General Dermoncourt, who
arrested her royal highness at Nantes. In 1
vol. 12mo.

[This edition exclusively contains the important documents and papers
which would have led to the seizure of the work in France, had they been
published there.]

"Upon its high interest we need not enlarge: the personal adventures of
the princess, her journeyings on foot and on horseback, in disguise and in
her own character, her mental and bodily sufferings, her hopes and her despair,
are a romance, and seem to belong to another age. They recall the
wanderings and the perils of our own Charles Edward, with all the additional
interest which must attach to the daring and the suffering of a woman."Athenæum.

AN HISTORICAL INQUIRY INTO THE
PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
OF THE PRECIOUS METALS, from
the Earliest Ages, and into the Influence of
their Increase or Diminution on the Prices
of Commodities. By William Jacob, Esq.
F. R. S. In 8vo.

"Mr. Jacob's Historical Inquiry into the Production
and Consumption of the Precious Metals, is one of the
most curious and important works which has lately issued
from the press."—Spectator.

"It was written at the suggestion of the late Mr.
Huskisson, and displays the fruits of much industry and
research, guided by a sound judgment, and embodying
more learning than is usually brought to bear on statistical
or economical subjects. We recommend the
book to general attention."—Times, Sept 2, 1831.

NARRATIVE OF A VOYAGE TO THE
PACIFIC AND BEHRING'S STRAIT,
to co-operate with the Polar Expeditions:
performed in his Majesty's ship Blossom,
under the command of Capt. F. W. Beechey,
R. N., in the years 1825, 26, 27, 28. 8vo.

"The most interesting of the whole series of expeditions
to the North Pole."—Quarterly Review.

"This expedition will be for ever memorable as one
which has added immensely to our knowledge of this
earth that we inhabit."—Blackwood's Mag.

"Captain Beechey's work is a lasting monument of his
own abilities, and an honor to his country."—Lit. Gaz.

A GENERAL VIEW OF THE PROGRESS
OF ETHICAL PHILOSOPHY, chiefly
during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth
Centuries. By Sir James Mackintosh,
M. P. In 8vo.

"The best offspring of the pen of an author who in
philosophical spirit, knowledge and reflection, richness
of moral sentiment, and elegance of style, has altogether
no superior—perhaps no equal—among his contemporaries.
Some time ago we made copious extracts from the
beautiful work. We could not recommend the whole
too earnestly."—National Gazette.

HISTORY OF ENGLAND, by Sir James
Mackintosh.
Octavo edition. In the press.

*** The first volume of this edition will contain the
same matter as the first three volumes of the 18mo.
edition.

THE INFIRMITIES OF GENIUS, illustrated
by referring the anomalies in the
literary character, to the habits and constitutional
peculiarities of Men of Genius.
By R. R. Madden, Esq. In 2 vols. 12mo.

"This is a very valuable and interesting work, full of new views and
curious deductions; beginning with general remarks on the influence of literary
habits on the constitution, and thence proceeding to make the theory
more actual by its application to particular instances.

"His physical biographies, if we may so term them, of Burns, Cowper,
Byron, and Scott, are of a very curious and novel kind; written with equal
feeling and observation. He traces Cowper's malady to its true source,
monomania on religious subjects, and the tone of the remarks is at once
just and so candid, that we cannot do better than give a brief portion."—Literary Gazette.