BY THE REV. R. S. HAWKER OF MORWENSTOW.It is from Neot’s sainted steepThe foamy waters flash and leap;It is where shrinking wild-flowers grow,They lave the nymph that dwells below!But wherefore in this far-off dell,The reliques of a human cell?Where the sad stream and lonely windBring Man no tidings of their kind!Long years agone! the old man said,’Twas told him by his grandsire dead,One day two ancient sisters came,None there could tell their race or name.Their speech was not in Cornish phrase,Their garb had marks of loftier days;Slight food they took from hands of men,They wither’d slowly in that glen.One died! the other’s shrunken eyeGush’d till the fount of tears was dry;A wild and wasting thought had she—“I shall have none to weep for me!”They found her silent at the last,Bent in the shape wherein she pass’d—Where her lone seat long used to stand,Her head upon her shrivell’d hand!Did fancy give this legend birth?The grandame’s tale for winter-hearth,Or some dead bard, by Neot’s stream,People these banks with such a dream?We know not! but it suits the scene,To think such wild things here have been;What spot more meet could grief or sinChoose at the last to wither in?Echoes of Old Cornwall.
BY THE REV. R. S. HAWKER OF MORWENSTOW.
It is from Neot’s sainted steepThe foamy waters flash and leap;It is where shrinking wild-flowers grow,They lave the nymph that dwells below!But wherefore in this far-off dell,The reliques of a human cell?Where the sad stream and lonely windBring Man no tidings of their kind!Long years agone! the old man said,’Twas told him by his grandsire dead,One day two ancient sisters came,None there could tell their race or name.Their speech was not in Cornish phrase,Their garb had marks of loftier days;Slight food they took from hands of men,They wither’d slowly in that glen.One died! the other’s shrunken eyeGush’d till the fount of tears was dry;A wild and wasting thought had she—“I shall have none to weep for me!”They found her silent at the last,Bent in the shape wherein she pass’d—Where her lone seat long used to stand,Her head upon her shrivell’d hand!Did fancy give this legend birth?The grandame’s tale for winter-hearth,Or some dead bard, by Neot’s stream,People these banks with such a dream?We know not! but it suits the scene,To think such wild things here have been;What spot more meet could grief or sinChoose at the last to wither in?Echoes of Old Cornwall.
It is from Neot’s sainted steepThe foamy waters flash and leap;It is where shrinking wild-flowers grow,They lave the nymph that dwells below!
It is from Neot’s sainted steep
The foamy waters flash and leap;
It is where shrinking wild-flowers grow,
They lave the nymph that dwells below!
But wherefore in this far-off dell,The reliques of a human cell?Where the sad stream and lonely windBring Man no tidings of their kind!
But wherefore in this far-off dell,
The reliques of a human cell?
Where the sad stream and lonely wind
Bring Man no tidings of their kind!
Long years agone! the old man said,’Twas told him by his grandsire dead,One day two ancient sisters came,None there could tell their race or name.
Long years agone! the old man said,
’Twas told him by his grandsire dead,
One day two ancient sisters came,
None there could tell their race or name.
Their speech was not in Cornish phrase,Their garb had marks of loftier days;Slight food they took from hands of men,They wither’d slowly in that glen.
Their speech was not in Cornish phrase,
Their garb had marks of loftier days;
Slight food they took from hands of men,
They wither’d slowly in that glen.
One died! the other’s shrunken eyeGush’d till the fount of tears was dry;A wild and wasting thought had she—“I shall have none to weep for me!”
One died! the other’s shrunken eye
Gush’d till the fount of tears was dry;
A wild and wasting thought had she—
“I shall have none to weep for me!”
They found her silent at the last,Bent in the shape wherein she pass’d—Where her lone seat long used to stand,Her head upon her shrivell’d hand!
They found her silent at the last,
Bent in the shape wherein she pass’d—
Where her lone seat long used to stand,
Her head upon her shrivell’d hand!
Did fancy give this legend birth?The grandame’s tale for winter-hearth,Or some dead bard, by Neot’s stream,People these banks with such a dream?
Did fancy give this legend birth?
The grandame’s tale for winter-hearth,
Or some dead bard, by Neot’s stream,
People these banks with such a dream?
We know not! but it suits the scene,To think such wild things here have been;What spot more meet could grief or sinChoose at the last to wither in?
We know not! but it suits the scene,
To think such wild things here have been;
What spot more meet could grief or sin
Choose at the last to wither in?
Echoes of Old Cornwall.
Echoes of Old Cornwall.
In the reign of Henry VIII., one Militon, or Millington, appears to have purchased Pengerswick Castle. This Millington is said to have retired into the solitude of this place on account of a murder which he had committed. (Mr Wilkie Collins appears to have founded his novel of “Basil” on this tradition.) In all probability a very much older story is adapted to Mr Millington. So far from his being a recluse, we learn of his purchasing St Michael’s Mount, “whose six daughters and heirs invested their husbands and purchasers therewith.”
That Millington was a man of wealth, and that large possessions were held by his family, is sufficiently evident. St Michael’s Mount appears to have been “granted at first for a term of years to different gentlemen of the neighbourhood. To Millington, supposed of Pengerswick, in Breage; to Harris, of Kenegie, in Gulval; and, perhaps jointly with Millington, to a Billett or Bennett.”—Hals.
The term Saracen is always now supposed to apply to the Moors. This is not exactly correct. Percy, for example, in his “Essay on the Ancient Minstrels,” says, “The old metrical romance of ‘Horn Child,’ which, although from the mention of Saracens, &c., it must have been written, at least, after the First Crusade, in 1096, yet, from its Anglo-Saxon language or idiom, can scarcely be dated later than within a century after the Conquest.” I think this ballad, and several others of an early date, prove the application of this term to some Oriental people previous to the Crusades. Soldàin, soldàn, regarded as a corruption of sultan,—
“Whoever will fight yon grimme soldàn,Right fair his meede shall be,”—
“Whoever will fight yon grimme soldàn,Right fair his meede shall be,”—
“Whoever will fight yon grimme soldàn,Right fair his meede shall be,”—
“Whoever will fight yon grimme soldàn,
Right fair his meede shall be,”—
is clearly a much older term, applied to any grim Eastern tyrant, and especially to the Oriental giants. It would not be a difficult task to shew that the word Saracen, as used in Cornwall,—“Atal Saracen!” “Oh, he’s a Saracen!” &c., was applied to the foreigners who traded with this county for tin—at a very early period.
END OF SECOND SERIES.
JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, PRINTER, PICCADILLY, LONDON.
Catalogueof Useful, Curious, and Interesting Books Published or Sold byJOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN,74 & 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON, W.
⁂Those Books offered at one-fourth of their published prices are warranted to be as clean and as perfect as when sold at the full prices.
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Anacreon’s Odes. Paris, 1864. Didot’s exquisiteEdition,printed in very beautiful Greek characters, with French notes, each page ruled with red lines. 12mo.Illustrated with 54 charming Photographs, from compositions by Girodet, in the purest classical style, and of most surpassing beauty and softness. 40s.The original drawings cost £5,000. The volume is, without exception, the most lovable book ever sent forth by a prodigal publisher.Now ready,New and Popular Edition, post 8vo, pp. 336, price 2s.,Anecdotes of the Green Room and Stage; or, Leaves from an Actor’s Note-Book, at Home and Abroad. By GEORGE VANDENHOFF.Mr. Vandenhoff, who earned for himself, both in the Old and New Worlds, the title ofThe Classic Actor, has retired from the Stage. His Reminiscences are extremely interesting, and include Original Anecdotes of the Keans (father and son), the two Kembles, Macready, Cooke, Liston, Farren, Elliston, Braham and his Sons, Phelps, Buckstone, Webster, Chas. Mathews; Siddons, Vestris, Helen Faucit, Mrs. Nisbett, Miss Cushman, Miss O’Neil, Mrs. Glover, Mrs. Chas. Kean, Rachel, Ristori, and many other dramatic celebrities.Archæological Proceedings held at Winchester in 1845. The thick handsome vol., published by the Institute in 1846, 8vo, pp. 600,with numerousbeautifulandmost curious Wood EngravingsofAncient Architecturaland otherRemainsinHampshire, withFacsimilesandEtchings on Copper, 8vo (sells at £1 10s.), only 8s. 6d.⁂This is a scarce volume.Amongst the very interesting contents may be particularised theArchitectural Historyof oldWinchester,PaintedandStained Glassin the County,Ancient Sealsand MSS.,Surnames,Nicknames,Palaces,Round Tables,MintandExchanges,Coins,Monuments,Brasses; the ancientCastles,Churches,Priories, &c.AN INTERESTING VOLUME TO GENEALOGISTS AND ANTIQUARIES.Now ready, half morocco, handsomely printed by Whittingham and Wilkins, price 7s. 6d.,Army Lists of the Roundheads and Cavaliers in the Civil War:Giving the Names of all the Officers in the Royal and Parliamentary Armies of 1642, now first reprinted from the comparatively unknown originals, and Edited, with Notes, by EDWARD PEACOCK, F.S.A. In 4to, with elaborate floreated capitals.These most curiousListsshow on which side the gentlemen of England were to be found during the great conflict between the King and the Parliament. As illustrations of County History they are exceedingly interesting. The literary antiquary and the genealogist will find much new and out-of-the-way matter in them; and there are but few families in England who cannot claim a relationship to one or other of the names mentioned in the Royalist or Roundhead lists.Only a very few copies have been most carefully reprintedon paper that will gladden the heart of the lover of Choice Books.Now ready, 12mo, in binding after a pattern of the period, very choicely printed, by Whittingham and Wilkins, price 6s. 6d.,THE EARLIEST KNOWN LONDON DIRECTORY.A Collection of the Names of the Merchants Living IN AND ABOUT THE CITY OF LONDON; very usefull and necessary. Carefully Collected for the Benefit of all Dealers that shall have occasion with any of them, directing them at the first sight of their name to the place of their abode. London: Printed forSam Lee, 1677. See Review in theTimes, Jan. 22nd.This curious little volume has been reprinted verbatim from one of the only two copies known to be in existence. It contains an Introduction pointing out some of the principal persons mentioned in the list. For historical and genealogical purposes the little book is of the greatest value. Herein will be found the originators of many of the great firms and copartnerships which have prospered through two pregnant centuries, and which exist some of them in nearly the same names at this day. Its most distinctive feature is the early severance which it marks of ‘goldsmiths that keep running cashes,’ precursors of the modern bankers, from the mass of the merchants of London. Here also will be found in the general list some of the entertainers of the wits of their day; Fountain, the father of the wealthy knight with whom Swift was familiar, as shown in his letters to Stella; Kiffen, the sturdy Baptist, whom James II. could neither affright nor seduce; Bathurst, with Bragg his connexion, the Vansittarts, Van Milderts, Ducanes, Beckfords, Papillons, Burdetts, Biddulphs, and Holfords. Here are Russells, Temples, Palmers, and Harveys, the latter near kinsman of Dr. William Harvey, who discovered the secret of our own circulation. Only two originals are known, and one of these recently produced £30 at public auction. The little book is curious, among other things, as containing the name of Alexander Pope, the father of the poet, among the merchants residing in Broad Street. The names of the Messrs. Hoare, the eminent bankers of Fleet Street, at the sign of the ‘Leathern Bottle’—the house, by the way, where Oliver Cromwell kept his money—occurs in the Directory, as also do those of the Messrs. Child, the well-known bankers of Temple Bar.Only a very few copies have been reprinted on paper made to resemble the original.This day, on tinted paper, price 3s. 6d., by post 3s. 10d.,Artemus Ward—His Book. Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by the Editor of the “Biglow Papers.” One of the wittiest and certainly the most mirth-provoking book which has been published for many years.The author has recently been delighting his countrymen with lectures on “The Babes in the Wood,” “Sixty Minutes in Africa,” and “Life among the Mormons,” and it is expected will shortly visit this country, to take for a time the late Albert Smith’s place among us.“He is as clever as Thackeray In Jeames’s dialogue and Policeman X’s ballads.... There is no merriment in him; it is all dry, sparkling humour.”—Spectator.“Genuine humour.... He is likely to take with the British public.”—Globe.“Bryant, the poet, pays him a high compliment.... Exceedingly amusing.”—Pall Mall Gazette.“We never, not even in the pages of our best humorists, read anything so laughable and so shrewd as we have seen in this book by the mirthful Artemus.”—Public Opinion.“We can heartily commend it to every one of our numerous readers, not an individual of whom, we are assured, will regret the small sum expended on it, should he become a purchaser.”—Western Daily News.Beeton’s (Mrs.) Book of Household Management; Comprising a History of the Origin, Properties, and Uses of All Things connected with Home Life and Comfort; Information for Mistresses and Servants, and Sanitary, Medical, and Legal Information. 1864. Very thick fcap. 8vo, over 1,110 pages,woodcuts and plates printed in colours,neatly half-bound, 5s. 10d.⁂Indispensable to every Household—containing in itself, besides being a CompleteCookery Book, all that is ever wanted to refer to in Housekeeping; with a valuableIndexfor Instant Reference.Berjeau’s (P. C.) Book of Dogs; the Varieties of Dogs as they are found inOld Sculptures,Pictures,Engravings, andBooks. 1865.Half-morocco, the sides richly lettered in gold, 7s. 6d.In this very interesting volume are 52 plates, facsimiled from rare old Engravings, Paintings, Sculptures, &c., in which may be traced over 100 varieties of Dogs known to the Ancients.⁂ The volume forms a handsome small 4to, is printed on tinted paper, and contains numerous admirable facsimiles by Mr. Berjeau. Some of the dogs, from the engravings by Albert Durer, are the veritable Scotch terriers of Leech, so familiar to all readers ofPunch. The book is a most pleasing and satisfactory combination of modern and antiquarian interest. The regular price of the book is 10s. 6d., but Mr. Hotten can sell a copy for 7s. 6d.Book of Common Prayer, according to the Usage of the Church of England.Pickering’s sumptuous Folio Edition, Printed, Red and Black, in Bold Old English Letter,on the finest vellum paper—A TRULY REGAL VOLUME, and one of the few books printed in the present century which will compare with the works of the early printers. Half-vellum, very neat (sells £7 7s.), only 38s.,or bound in half-morocco in the Roxburghe style. £2 7s. 6d.⁂ Admirably adapted for use in the pulpit or reading-stand.With lovers of choice books it is not unfrequently termed the“Cathedral Edition.”Baron Munchausen, Aventures de. Illustratedwith 220 Fantastic and Extraordinary Wood Engravings byGUSTAVE DORE. 4to, cloth elegant, 19s. 6d. With a portrait of the renowned Baron, and his Motto, “Mendace Veritas.”NOTHING CAN EXCEED THE DROLLERY AND HUMOUR OF THESE WONDERFUL AND INIMITABLE ILLUSTRATIONS.YORKSHIRE BIBLIOGRAPHY.Now ready, 8vo, half morocco, very neat, price 5s. 6d.,Bibliographical Account of nearly 1,500 Curious andrareBooks,Tracts,MSS., andEngravingsrelating to theHistoryandTopographyofYorkshire, collected by Mr. Hotten, with numerousDescriptive Notes,Literary Anecdotes, etc.,illustrated with curious wood engravingsfrom blocks formerly in the possession of the eccentricJohn ColeofScarborough, interleaved for MS. notes, additions, etc. 1863.Only Fifty Copies have been printed on thick paper, for the use of Yorkshire Antiquaries and Topographers.WELSH BIBLIOGRAPHY.Now ready, 8vo, half morocco, very neat, price 4s. 6d.,Bibliographical Account of nearly 1,000 Curious andrareBooks,Tracts,MSS., andEngravingsrelating to theHistoryandTopographyofNorth and South Wales, collected by Mr. Hotten, with numerousDescriptive Notes,Literary Anecdotes, etc., interleaved for MS. notes, additions, etc.,illustrated with curious wood engravings from old chap-books and ballads.Only Fifty Copies have been printed on thick paper, for the use of Welsh Antiquaries and Topographers.NEW WORK BY THE LATE DOUGLAS JERROLD.Brownrigg Papers, by Douglas Jerrold. 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Cheke was Tutor and Secretary of State to King Edward VI., and, towards the close of his life, embraced the Catholic Faith. The very peculiar nature of this old Translation Is explained in the Introduction, by J. GOODWIN.A very valuable specimen of the English Languagein 1550.This day, Collected Edition, cloth, neat, 2s. 6d.; by post, 2s. 8d.,Cornish Tales, in Prose and Verse, by J. T. Tregellas. With aGlossary.⁂ This Collection comprises all the best stories of the author, who made a fame peculiarly his own by a wonderful power of story-telling and mimicry. The book includesTremnan,the St. Agnes Bear Hunt,the Queen’s Washing Day,the Perran Cherry-beam,Grammar’s Cat and Ours,the Squire’s Tame Conger,Rozzy Paul and Zacky Martin,Josee Cock, and ten other inimitable stories.AN EXTRAORDINARY BOOK.Beautifully printed, thick 8vo, new half-morocco, gilt back, 14s. 6d.,Contes Drolatiques (Droll Tales collected from the Abbeys of Loraine). ParBalzac. 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FAIRBAIRN’S CRESTS of the Families of Great Britain and Ireland, 2 vols., large 8vo,fine impressions on India paperof the 2,100Engraved Crests,cloth gilt(sells at £3 15s.), 28s. only. 1860.A book invaluable to the Heraldic Student and the Genealogist, with an Appendix of all themottoesused by the Nobility, translated, &c.——. 2 vols. 4to, an extra large papercopy,half morocco, top edge gilt, (sells at £8 8s.) £3 18s. 1860.Dante’s Divina Commedia. The exquisite diamondtype edition, 2 vols. 48mo (sells at 10s.), only 2s. 6d.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 21s.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 25s.In a few days, in 8vo, handsomely printed,Diamonds and Precious Stones: their History, Value, and Properties,with simple tests for ascertaining their reality; byH. Emanuel, F.R.G.S. With numerous illustrations, coloured and plain.⁂ Although this Work is intended as a plain and practical Guide to Buyers and Sellers of Precious Stones, the History and Literature of the subject have not been overlooked. Anecdotes of the peculiar accidents and strange fortune which have attended some Jewels are given, and what is hoped will be found a valuable Bibliography of the subject is added as an Appendix at the end.THE FAMILY HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH COUNTIES.Now ready, in 8vo, on tinted paper, nearly 350 pages, very neat, price 5s.,Descriptive Account of Twenty Thousand most CURIOUS AND RARE BOOKS,Old Tracts,Ancient Manuscripts,Engravings, andPrivately Printed Family Papers, relating to the History of almost everyLanded EstateandOld English Familyin the Country; interspersed with nearlyTwo ThousandOriginal Anecdotes, Topographical and Antiquarian Notes, by JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN.By far the largest collection of English and Welsh Topography and Family History ever Formed.Each article has a small price affixed for the convenience of those who may desire to possess any book or tract that interests them.⁂FIFTY COPIES only have been printed on THICK PAPER; these are interleaved with writing paper for MS. additions, and bound in half-morocco, price 12s. 6d.Thick 8vo, published at £1 5s., only 12s. 6d.,Dictionary of Americanisms; Words and Phrases usually regarded as peculiar to theUnited States. ByJohn Russell Bartlett.ThirdandBest Edition.The work extends to 560 pages, and presents to the English reader a body of admirably-selected extracts from the humorous and dialectical literature of the United States.It is a curious fact connected with Slang, that a great number of vulgar words common in England are equally common in the United States; and when we remember that America began to people two centuries ago, and that these colloquialisms must have crossed the sea with the first emigrants, we can form some idea of the antiquity of popular or street language. Many words, owing to the caprices of fashion or society, have wholly disappeared in the parent country, whilst in the colonies they are yet heard. The wordsskink, to serve drink in company, and the old termmichingormeeching, skulking or playing truant, for instance, are still in use in the United States, although nearly, if not quite, obsolete here.Now ready, only a few copies for sale, original price 5s., now offered at 2s. 6d., aDictionary of the Oldest Words in the English LANGUAGE, from the Semi-Saxon Period ofA.D.1250 to 1300; consisting of an Alphabetical Inventory ofEvery Word found in the printed English Literature of the 13th Century, by the late HERBERT COLERIDGE, Secretary to the Philological Society. 8vo, neat half-morocco.An invaluable work to historical students and those interested in linguistic pursuits. “The present publication may be considered as the foundation-stone of the Historical and Literary Portion” of the greatEnglish Dictionarynow in preparation by the Philological Society. “Explanatory and etymological matter has been added, which, it is hoped, may render the work more generally interesting and useful than could otherwise have been the case.”HERALDRY OF WALES.Only 50 copies printed, in marvellous facsimile, 4to, on old Welsh paper, half-morocco, 12s. 6d.,Display of Herauldry of the particular Coat Armours now in Use in the Six Counties of North Wales, and several others Elsewhere; with theNames of the Families, whereby any Man knowing from what Family he is descended may know his particular Arms. By JOHN REYNOLDS, of Oswestry, Antiquarian;with nearly one hundred Coat Armours blazoned in the old style. Chester, printed 1739.From a Unique Copy, of priceless value to the lover of Heraldry and Genealogy. The work onWelsh Family Historyissued privately by this author in the same year is comparatively common, yet copies of this have realisedtwenty guineas. A few copies have been taken off in marvellous facsimile, on old Welsh paper. They have cost more than the price asked.The owner challenges any facsimile-expert or artist in this country or elsewhere to produce anything more like unto a veritable old book than this.Photozincography is a shallow pretence when compared with it.WINDOW TRACERY IN ENGLAND.8vo, 300 pages, published at £1 1s., only 7s. 6d.,Freeman’s (Ed., M.A., Author of the “History of Architecture”) Origin and Development of Window Tracery in England; with nearly 400 Illustrations.Originally issued by Mr. Parker of Oxford, to whom the antiquarian world is indebted for so many admirable works on ancient architecture. This work gives an interesting and minute account of the most beautiful or remarkable windows existing in old English churches, castles, family mansions, in every county of England and Wales.Fun (the Comic Weekly Journal and Rival toPunch). A Complete Set from its Commencement in September, 1861, to September, 1864. 6 vols., 4to,hundreds of humorous woodcuts,fancy boards(sells 27s.), 18s.Contains many very clever cartoons and comic woodcuts by Mathew Morgan, one of the most notable of our rising caricaturists.Forster and Foster Family. Some Account of the PEDIGREE of the FORSTERS ofCold Hesledon, in the County Palatine of Durham. Also, theFostersof other parts of England. By JOSEPH FOSTER. 4to,exquisitely printed on fine tinted paper, withEmblazoned Coat Armourof theFamilyofForster, orFoster. 12s. 6d.Sunderland, printed 1862.Privately Printed for the Family,and only a very few copies. The information supplied is of the most reliable character, and just the kind that one desires to know respecting departed worthies. A capitalIndexconcludes the volume.AN ENTIRELY NEW BOOK OF DELIGHTFUL FAIRY TALES.Now ready, square 12mo, handsomely printed on toned paper, in cloth, green and gold, price 4s. 6d. plain, 5s. 6d. coloured (by post, 6d. extra),Family Fairy Tales; or, Glimpses of Elfland at Heatherston Hall. Edited by CHOLMONDELEY PENNELL, Author of “The Naturalist Angler,” “Puck on Pegasus,” &c., adorned withbeautiful Picturesof “My Lord Lion,” “King Uggermugger,” and other great folks.CONTENTS.My Lord Lion.The Blue Fish.King Uggermugger; or, The Princess Silver-Silk.See Me.Spider Face.The Great Forest.The Legend of the Little Flower.“Patch;” or, The Smile Fairy.The Story of the Spring Fairies.A Fable with a Moral.⁂ This charming volume of Original Tales has been universally praised by the critical press. From a great many reviews the following notices are selected:—“When children have grown weary of boisterous play, and settled down on chair and footstool and rug, round the brightly-glowing fire, Mr. Cholmondeley Pennell’s ‘Fairy Tales’ will make their influence felt; cheering them up to renew their joyous laughter, and eventually sending them to bed with a store of droll fancies and pretty thoughts—thoughts and fancies which they will think about as they fall asleep, and dream about as they wake up on the following morning.”—Athenæum.“They fully deserve the care which has preserved them, and in their present dress will afford amusement at the fireside at which they may be read. We may instance in particular the story of ‘The Blue Fish’ as one of the best Fairy Tales we have seen. The collection is excellent; the illustrations good.”—London Review.“The tales are of the most charming kind we have read for a long time, and, we have no doubt, will cheer many a fireside. Our author is as tender as he is quaint and humorous, and seems to have imbibed the true spirit of fairy and legendary lore. The illustrations have our heartiest admiration. Miss Edwards works with a pencil as graceful as it is facile.”—Reader.In fcap. 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d., beautifully printed,Gog and Magog; or, the History of the Guildhall Giants. With some Account of the Giants which Guard English and Continental Cities. By F. W. FAIRHOLT, F.S.A.WITH ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD BY THE AUTHOR, COLOURED AND PLAIN.⁂ The critiques which have appeared upon this amusing little work have been uniformly favourable. TheAthenæumpronounces it a perfect model of successful antiquarian exposition, readable from the first line to the last. TheArt Journaldevotes a considerable space to the little work, and congratulates the author upon his success. TheLeadercontributes two full pages of eulogy. TheBuilderdirects its readers to purchase it. TheCriticsays, in a long article, that it thoroughly explains who these old Giants were, the position they occupied in popular mythology, the origin of their names, and a score of other matters, all of much interest in throwing a light upon fabulous portions of our history.Genealogy and Family History. Stemmata CHICHELEANA; or,A Genealogical Accountof theFamiliesderived fromThos. Chichele, ofHigham Ferrars, Northamptonshire.Oxford, 1765. With theRare Supplement,so often wanting, containingCorrectionsandVery Large Additions,Oxford, 1775. 2 vols. in 1, 4to.Plates of monuments, uncut, beautifully preserved, with rough edges, 17s. 6d.⁂Privately printed, compiled by Dr.Benj. Buckler. The 2 vols. contain over 700 carefully-preparedTablesofDescents,Pedigrees, andGenealogiesof Families of theNobilityandGentry, in which may be found traces of the blood ofThos. Chichele, of Higham Ferrars [obit.A.D.1400], all of whom are entitled to become candidates for Fellowships at All Souls’ College, Oxford, by virtue of their consanguinity to Archbishop Chichele, the founder.This work has long been scarce, thesupplement extremelyso, and has generally brought at auctions upwards of £2. Mr. Hotten having fortunately lighted upon a few copies which had lain unnoticed in an old warehouse, bought them in one lot, and is thus enabled to offer them so much below their intrinsic value. Amongst the pedigrees occur the descendants of theTracey,Digby,Shirley,Knatchbull,Dering,Chennock,Sheldon,Bertie,Ferrers,Anstis,Stonor,Montagu,Symen,Lynch,Wild,Kent, and hundreds of other oldEnglish Families.“FAIRY BOOKS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.”Grimm’s Goblins; the Best Legends of all Nations andLanguages.Upwardsof 350Stories,with WoodcutsandPictures printed in Colours by “Phiz”(Hablot K. Browne). 4to,fancy boards(published at 5s.),offered at 2s. 6d.Unsurpassed by any other Book for Children in its Variety of Amusing Stories.The Illustrations, byH. K. Browne, are mostly printed in Colours byEdmund Evans, and are singularly clever and striking.Gray’s Poems, square 12mo, the Classical Edition,very exquisitely Illustratedwith Views by Birket Foster, and delightful little vignettes by Harry Rogers(sells at 5s.), 3s. 6d. only.A perfect gem.It is, perhaps, the most elegant little volume of the kind produced in the present century.Gustave Doré. La Legende de Croque-Mitaine Recueillie par Ernest L’Epine. 4to.Illustrated with nearly 200 Marvellous, Extravagant, and Fantastic Woodcuts.By GUSTAVE DORE, 19s. 6d.In thismadvolume Doré has surpassed all his former efforts.The illustrations are, without exception, the most wonderful ever put into a book.Homeri Ilias et Odyssea. 2 vols. The ExquisiteDiamond Type Edition, 48mo (sells at 12s.), only 2s. 6d.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 21s.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 25s.Hair, Whiskers, Beard, Mustaches, &c. The Whole ART OF HAIR-DRESSING, with ample rules for ladies, women, valets; directions for persons to dress their own hair, false hair, perfumery, &c.; byJames Stewart,the Truefitt of George III.’s time. 8vo, pp. 435, 3s. 6d. only.Withtenmost curious Engravings of Beauties and Fashionable Beaux of the time, showing the extraordinary Headdresses, Topknots, Pigtails, Love-curls, Wigs, &c., then worn.Halliwell’s (J. O., F.R.S.) Notes of Family Excursions IN NORTH WALES, taken from Rhyl, Abergele, Llandudno, and Bagnor, small 4to, pp. 231, very choicely printed, 3s. 6d.Chiswick Press, 1860.Only a very limited number of copies have been privately printed by the accomplished author. A better man could not have been selected to visit the Northern part of the ancient Principality for the purpose of writing a readable book, descriptive of its glorious scenery,Traditions, Folk-lore, and Natural Antiquities. All theAncient Wells,Castles,Old Houses,Hills,Waterfalls,Caves,Cromlechs, andDruidical Remainsare described. We have, also, some curious particulars about those venerable countrymen of ours, theold British Giants.Ancient LegendsandFairy Talesare also given, together with interesting particulars of the various ascents of Snowdon. It is an interesting book, and should be offered at 10s. 6d. instead of the 3s. 6d. now asked. Only a few copies remain.THE BEST GUIDE TO HERALDRY.Heraldry, Historical and Popular. By Charles BOUTELL, M.A. Demy 8vo, with 750 Illustrations, 9s. 6d.“All the devices blazoned on the shieldIn their own tinct.”—Idylls of the King.It is the aim of thisManualto inquire into the true character and right office of Heraldry, and to describe and illustrate both its action in past times in England, and its present condition as it is in use amongst ourselves.In the great and general Art Revival of our own times, Heraldry now appears to be in the act of vindicating its title to honourable recognition as an Art-Science, that may be agreeably as well as advantageously studied, and very happily adapted in its practical application to the existing condition of things.Pp. 336, handsomely printed, cloth extra, price 3s. 6d.,Holidays with Hobgoblins; or, Talk of Strange Things. By DUDLEY COSTELLO.With Humorous Engravings by George Cruikshank.Amongst the chapters may be enumerated:—Shaving a Ghost.Superstitions and Traditions.Monsters.The Ghost of Pit Pond.The Watcher of the Dead.The Haunted House near Hampstead.Dragons, Griffins, and Salamanders.Alchemy and Gunpowder.Mother Shipton.Bird History.Witchcraft and Old Boguey.Crabs.Lobsters,The Apparition of Monsieur Bodry.Now ready, handsomely printed, price 1s. 6d.,Hints on Hats, adapted to the Heads of the People, by HENRY MELTON, of Regent-street. With curious Woodcuts of the various styles of Hats worn at different periods.Anecdotes of eminent and fashionable personages are given, and a fund of interesting information relative to the History of Costume and change of tastes may be found scattered through its pages.This day, handsomely bound, pp. 550, price 7s. 6d.,History of Playing Cards, with Anecdotes of theirUseinAncientandModern Games,Conjuring,Fortune-telling, andCard-Sharping. Edited by the late Rev.Ed. S. Taylor, B.A., and others.With Sixty curious Illustrations on toned paper.With Anecdotes ofSkill and Sleight of Hand.Gambling and Calculation.Cartomancy and Cheating.Old Games and Gaming-houses.Card Revels and Blind Hookey.Piquet and Vingt-et-un.Whist and Cribbage.Old-Fashioned Tricks.“A highly-entertaining volume.”—Morning Post.This most amusing work, introducing the reader to a curious chapter of our social history, gives an interesting account, replete with anecdotes, of the most popular and widely-known pastime which has ever been invented by man for his amusement. A more instructive and entertaining book could not be taken in hand for a pleasant hour’s reading.Hone’s Every-Day Book and Table Book; or, Everlasting Calendar of Popular Amusements, Sports, Pastimes, Ceremonies, Manners, Customs, and Events, incident to each of the 365 Days in Past and Present Times:—Year Bookof Daily Recreation and Information, forming a complete History of the Year, and a perpetual Key to the Almanack, together four very thick vols. 8vo, withseven hundred and thirty woodcuts,new cloth, good paper(sells at 34s.), only 24s. The same in half calf, neat, 36s.One of the most delightful works that can be imagined for half-hour readings. Wm. Hone was one of the very few authors who could invest generally dry subjects with a peculiar charm that made them readable.How to See Scotland; or, a Fortnight in the Highlands for £6. Price 1s.A plain and practical guide.Hunter’s (Rev. Jos., Historian of Yorkshire) Hallamshire GLOSSARY.Wm. Pickering.1829. Crown 8vo, cloth, 5s. 6d.This book may serve as a model to all intending glossarists. Copies have long been scarce. In the Appendices are contained reprints of “Ray’s Catalogue of Words heard in the West Ridinq of Yorkshire, 1718,” and “Watson’s Vocabulary of Uncommon Words used in Halifax.”Horace. The Exquisite Diamond Type Edition. 48mo.Dedicated to Lord Spencer(sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.Horatii Opera. Didot’s Exquisite Edition, in smallbut very legible type,with numerous most beautiful Photographs from PaintingsbyM. Barrias,with Views of Horace’s Villa, and the various spots immortalised in his Poems. 30s.Bound in thefinest polished morocco, exquisitely finished and gilt, 45s.; or, with elaborately-tooled sides, after an ancient pattern, 55s.The archæological part is from an actual survey of the localities by Benouville.This little Volume is the most beautiful edition of Horace ever Published.EVERY HOUSEKEEPER SHOULD POSSESS A COPY.Now ready, in cloth, price 2s. 6d., by post, 2s. 8d., theHousekeeper’s Assistant; a Collection of the most valuable Recipes, carefully written down for future use, by Mrs. B——, during her forty years’ active service.⁂ As much as two guineas has been paid for a copy of this invaluable little work.“Truly a ‘Housekeeper’s Assistant.’ We should think the little book would very quickly find a place in all the housekeepers’ rooms in the country. No instructions appear to be given but those which are of the greatest service to persons in the charge of family arrangements.”—Illustrated News.Jeffery’s (Fred. J.) Genealogical Chart (Enlarged), showing all the Branches of the House of Oldenburg, commonly styled Schleswig-Holstein, now living and occupying the Thrones of Denmark, Russia, Oldenburg, and Greece, and formerly those of Sweden and Norway. Price 1s. 6d.An interesting Genealogical elucidation of the recent Danish difficulty. The typography is exquisite, and by the adoption of variously-coloured inks, the whole of this difficult question—in its genealogical aspect—is laid plainly before the eye of the student.THE ORIGINAL EDITION OF JOE MILLER’S JESTS. 1739.Joe Miller’s Jests; or, the Wit’s Vade Mecum, being a Collection of the most Brilliant Jests, the politest Repartees, the most elegant Bons Mots, and most pleasant short Stories in the English Language. An interesting specimen of remarkable facsimile, 8vo. half morocco, old Dutch paper sides, price 9s. 6d.London: printed by T. Read, 1739.The book is well known, or rather the Jests are, for the veritablefirst editionof Joe Miller is one of the rarest books in the English language. With regard to the contents of Joe Miller’sJests, the plain-spoken words are neither better nor worse than those in any other similar collection of the period. It is to be regretted that the author did not employ expressions a little less coarse than he has done: his wit and pungency, however, it is impossible to deny. Only a very few copies of this humorous book have been reproduced.Letters of the Marchioness Broglio Solari, one of the Maids of Honour to the Princess Lamballe, &c.; with a Sketch of her Life, and Recollections of Celebrated Characters. Fcap. 8vo, beautifully printed by Whittingham, price 2s. (Intended to have been sold at 5s.)The Marchioness Broglio Solari was the natural grand-daughter of Lord Hyde Clarendon, and consequently one of the collateral branches of the Queens Mary and Anne, and their grandfather, the great Chancellor of England. She played an important part in the French Revolution; was the friend of Emperors and Princes; was intimately acquainted with George the Fourth, Burke, Sheridan, Madame de Staël, the Duke of Wellington, Sir Robert Peel, Sir H. Davy, Paganini, &c., of most of whom she gives characteristic anecdotes. The Marchioness endured many troubles, was robbed of her fortune, and for some time obtained her living as an actress at the theatres of London and Dublin. This work was published by an intimate friend, and the entire impression (with the exception of a few copies) passed into the hands of the family. It is believed that only 150 copies were printed. The book (by those who know of its existence) has always been considered as asuppressed work.Linley’s (Geo., the Song-Writer) Modern Hudibras; a Poem, in Three Cantos. 8vo, 4s.A rattling satirical poem, the title to which gives a very fair idea of its nature. Social abuses, the sighs and groans of gentility, the trickeries of literature, the cash-prices of art and musical criticisms, and a score of other subjects engage his satirical pen.Now ready, 8vo, price 1s.,List of British Plants. Compiled and Arranged by ALEX. MORE, F.L.S.This comparativeList of British Plantswas drawn up for the use of the country botanist, to show the differences in opinion which exist between different authors as to the number of species which ought to be reckoned within the compass of theFloraof Great Britain.Second Edition, fcap. 8vo, neatly printed (price 1s.), only 9d.,Macaulay, the Historian, Statesman, and Essayist: Anecdotes of his Life and Literary Labours, with some Account of his Early and Unknown Writings.The fine paper edition, cloth, neat, with aPhotographic Portrait(the only one known to have been taken) byMaullandPolyblank(price 2s. 6d.), afew copies only at1s. 6d.⁂ Includes Anecdotes ofSydney Smith,Moore,Rogers, andLord Jeffrey: and gives numerous examples of Lord Macaulay’s extraordinary memory and great powers of conversation.Map of Munster (1560-80), including “ye cyties Corke, Lymeryke, Waterforde,” &c., 2 feet square, with both the Old English and Irish Names. Coloured Facsimile, giving very minutely all the Places. 4s. 6d.Now ready, price 5s.; by post, on roller, 5s. 4d.,Magna Charta. An Exact Facsimile of the Original Document, preserved in the British Museum, very carefully drawn, and printed on fine plate paper, nearly 3 feet long by 2 wide, with theArms and Seals of the Barons elaborately emblazoned in Gold and Colours.A.D.1215.Copied by express permission, and the onlycorrectdrawing of the Great Charterever taken. This important memorial of the liberties and rights of Englishmen is admirably adapted for framing, and would hang with propriety from the walls of every house in the country. As a guarantee to the purchaser that the facsimile is exact, the publisher need only state that Sir Frederick Madden has permitted copies to hang for public inspection upon the walls of the Manuscript Department in the British Museum. It was executed by Mr. Harrison, under whose auspices the splendid work on the Knights of the Garter was produced some years ago.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 22s. 6d.It is uniform with the “Roll of Battle Abbey.”AFull Translation, with Notes, has just been prepared, price 6d. It has been very beautifully printed on a large sheet of tinted paper by Messrs. Whittingham and Wilkins. It may be framed and hung beside the original, or can be pasted at the back, according to the taste of the purchaser.Map of Ireland, 1567. Facsimile of an extremely curious and interesting old Map, about 2 feet square, giving the Names of the different Tribes, Towns, Villages, Castles, &c., with the Names and Territories of the various great Landed Proprietors in those days; also the Coats of Arms of the old Irish Nobles. 4s. 6d.PRIVATELY PRINTED HISTORY OF THE MILLAIS FAMILY.Millais Family, the Lineage and Pedigree of, recording its History from 1331 to 1865, by J. BERTRAND PAYNE, with Illustrations from Designs by the Author. Folio, exquisitely printed on toned paper, with the following Etchings, &c., price 28s.:—1. TheMillais Arms, Crest and Motto, exquisitely engraved byJohn Everett Millais.2. Arms of the Payne Family.3. Arms of William Henry Millais, of Kingston, Surrey.4. Arms of George Henry Millais.5. Etching of the old Keystone of the Great Entrance Arch, at Tapon, S. Saviour.6. Pedigree of the Millais Family, with numerous engraved Coats of Arms, from John Millays, of 1331, to 1865.7. Arms over the Principal Entrance to Elizabeth Castle, Jersey.8. Tapon Farm, the ancient residence (for three centuries) of the Millais Family.Of this beautiful volume onlysixty copieshave beenprivately printedfor presents to the several members of the family. The work is magnificently bound in blue and gold, theFleur-de-lysand eight-pointed star ornamenting the sides in gilt. These are believed to be the only etchings of an Heraldic character everdesigned and engravedby the distinguished artist of the name.Mediæval Writers of English History, Gibson (Wm. Sidney,author of the History of Tynemouth), Remarks on the. A popular Sketch of the Advantages and Pleasures derivable fromMonastic Literature. 8vo, 1s. 6d.Pickering, 1848.An interesting survey of the famous oldEnglish Monastic Writers, to whose pens we are solely indebted for the History of England from the Invasion to the reign of Henry VIII.Miniatures from Manuscripts of the 14th and 15th Centuries, Four different Collections, each containingtenof thefinest and most exquisite Illuminated Miniature Paintings known to exist, in bright and delicateColoursheightened inGoldandSilver, 7s. 6d. each.Perfect Gems.The faces are equal to the finest miniatures on ivory. The costumes are resplendent in colour and gold. Of very great use to those who occasionally illuminate, as showing thevery highest perfection of the ancient art.Monastic Ruins of Yorkshire, from their Foundation to their Decay, byArchdeacon Churton, with magnificent Lithographs in imitation of theOriginal Drawings, byW. Richardson, 2 vols., imp. folio, proof impressions, withinitial letters coloured(published at £18 18s), only £5 18s.This imposing work is exactly similar, and in every respect equal, to the celebrated Sketches of the Holy Land, by David Roberts. Although it is now offered at a great reduction, the difficulty of reproducing the illustrations insures the work being soon sought after, even at a premium on the published price.Musée Francais et Musée Royal; ou, Recueil desTableaux et Bas-Reliefs qui composent les Galeries Napoleon et Royale, par Robillard-Peronville et Laurent.Paris, 1816-18.Both Series Complete, together 6 Vols., atlas folio, £18 18s.Now offered at a lower price than on any previous occasion.The “Musée Francais,” in 4 vols., was published in 80 livraisons at 48 francs each, being 3,840 francs; with the “Musée Royal” the 6 vols. were published at over £300! Copies when sold by auction have never brought less than £50; and it is believed that the lowest price they have ever sold for on any previous occasion is £35.The work comprises upwards of 500 large plates in the finest style ofLine Engraving, from the mostcelebrated Paintings and Statues is the World, with Descriptions and very masterly Dissertations, inFrenchandEnglish, on the state of the Fine Arts in various ages,Illustrated with Vignettes.It is possible that a passing apprehension that the Louvre might not always be allowed to retain the Art Treasures for which he had laid most of the countries of Europe under contribution for its choicest pieces, ledNapoleonto think of forming this splendid series of Line Engravings, the cost of which, for engraving alone, exceededseventy-five thousand pounds sterling, defrayed mostly from the Imperial Treasury. Since the publication of these volumes many of the paintings and sculptures have been claimed and restored to their rightful owners; and the dispersion of so many choice gems enhances the value of the work which describes them in a collected form.Mr. Hotten keeps sets richly bound in half red morocco, appropriately gilt.Musée Secret de Naples.—A most curious work in a case,privately printed in Paris,representing some of the more remarkable“Peintures, Bronzes, Mosaiques,” &c.,depicting theCeremonies observed at the earliest known form of Worship.Paris,MD.CCC.XL.The “Secret Museum” at Naples, from the extraordinary nature of its contents, has always excited the liveliest curiosity amongst antiquaries and students.Mundy’s (Gen.) Pen and Pencil Sketches in India; or, JOURNAL OF A TOUR IN INDIA. 3rd edition, with many illustrations. 8vo (sells at 5s.), only 2s. 6d.An exceedingly amusing and instructive volume, giving Europeans an admirable idea of the everyday life of a resident in India. The author visited every portion of our vast empire in company with Viscount Combermere. The hunting stories and exploits are admirably told.Nell Gwyn, the Story of, and the Sayings of Charles the Second, related and collected by PETER CUNNINGHAM, F.S.A., small 8vo,beautifully printed, with numerous woodcuts relating toNell Gwynne,cloth gilt(sells at 6s.), 2s. 6d.Novum Testamentum Græcum. The exquisiteDiamond type edition,with a beautiful Frontispiece of Da Vinci’s Last Supper, engraved by Worthington, 48mo (sells at 10s. 6d.), only 2s.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 11s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 13s. 6d.Ornamental Art, the Treasury of, Illustrative of Objects of Art and Virtù, photographed from the originals in the Museum of Ornamental Art, and drawn on stone by F. Bedford, with descriptive notices by J. C. Robinson, F.S.A., imp. 8vo,71 plates, richly illuminated in colours and gold(pub. at £3 13s. 6d.),elegantly bound in cloth extra, gilt edges, new, £1 7s.The prejudice is gradually decaying which assigned an inferior status in Art to every production not a picture or a statue; and in this book a choice selection of the finest specimens ofvirtùis made to combat those narrow ideas of the subject which are still popular. The æsthetic value and practical utility of such art is proved thus in a most attractive and magnificent way.The above is one of the most magnificent volumes of Ornamental Art (Ancient Jewellery, Carvings in Wood and Ivory, Cashmere Shawls, Ancient Metal-Work, Sculpture, Glass-Work, &c. &c.) ever produced in any country.⁂The stones have been destroyed, and Mr. Hotten has the few remaining copies.Petrarca. The exquisite Diamond type Edition, 48mo. (sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d. Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.Pansie; the Last Literary Effort of Nathaniel HAWTHORNE.⁂ All that remains of Hawthorne’s unfinished Romance—a little sketch full of that quaint and delightful genius which gave to the world “The House with the Seven Gables” and “Twice-told Tales.”Philobiblon. Excellent Traite sur l’Amour desLivres, par Richard de Bury. Small 8vo,half-morocco, very neat,exquisitely printed on ribbed paper, 12s. 6d. 1856.Only a small number of copies were printed. This edition contains numerous notes on the ancient manuscript copies existing in the old Cathedral Libraries.This day, in 2 vols., 8vo, very handsomely printed, price 16s.,THE HOUSEHOLD STORIES OF ENGLAND.Popular Romances of the West of England; or, the DROLLS OF OLD CORNWALL. Collected and Edited by ROBERT HUNT, F.R.S.⁂For an analysis of this important work see printed description, which may be obtained gratis at the Publisher’s.The Work is in Two Series. TheFirstembraces theFabulous Age, orPrehistoric Period; theSecond,The Romances and Superstitions of Historic Times. Many of these Stories are remarkable for their wild poetic beauty; others surprise us by their quaintness; whilst others, again, show forth a tragic force which can only be associated with those rude ages which existed long before the period of authentic history.Mr. George Cruikshankhas supplied two wonderful pictures as illustrations to the work. One is a portrait of Giant Bolster, a personage 12miles high. The perspective of this extraordinary figure is one of the most marvellous pieces of drawing that ever came from Cruikshank’s magic pencil. The artist acknowledges that it is his most daring conception.⁂ A limited number of proofs, onIndia paper, have been struck off, price 7s. 6d. the two illustrations.THE NEW BOOK OF HUMOROUS VERSE.Now ready, in square 8vo, handsomely printed byClay, cloth extra, full gilt (price 7s. 6d.), a few copies at 3s. 6d. each,Puck on Pegasus. By H. Cholmondeley Pennell. WithNumerous IllustrationsbyJohn Leech,George Cruikshank,Tenniel, “Phiz” (Hablot K. Browne), andJulian Portch.“Humorous Poetry of the genuine Ingoldsby or Bon Gaultier kind, with Pictures by the right Artists, is always welcomed by the reading public. The illustrations of ‘Puck on Pegasus’ are by John Leech, George Cruikshank, Tenniel, Phiz (Hablot K. Browne), and Julian Portch, names redolent of mirth and humour.”—London Review.Now ready,Second Edition, in binding ornamented with postage stamps, price 1s., by post 1s. 2d.,Postage-Stamp Collecting, a Standard Guide to; Or, A Complete List of all the Postage Stamps known to exist, with their Values and Degrees of Rarity. ByMessrs. Bellars and Davie.⁂ThisSecond Editiongives upwards of 300 Stamps not in the previous issue.“A new handbook is about to appear, with the title, ‘The Standard Guide to Postage-Stamp Collecting, with their Values and Degrees of Rarity,’ a work upon which the authors, Messrs. Bellars and Davie, have been engaged for three years. It will include an account of the Mormon Stamp issued by Brigham Young in 1852.”—London Review.“Unexceptionable in the quality of the paper, clearness of print, &c., it affords an addition to the scientific knowledge attainable by means of the study of postage stamps. A table of characters affords the possessor an opportunity of obtaining an acquaintance with the shape and comparative rarity of stamps. This insight into the marketable value and scarcity of postage stamps is a new feature in books on the subject. The exact words of the inscription on the stamps is greatly conducive to facility of identification, and the queer characters on the Moldavian, Russian, &c., stamps, copied without error, demonstrate the extreme care with which the work must have been got up. The index and money table appended will be found very convenient.”—The Stamp Collectors’ Magazine.The hitherto Unknown Poem, written by John Bunyan, whilst confined in Bedford Jail, for the Support of his Family, entitled,Profitable Meditations, Fitted to Man’s Different CONDITION: in a Conference between Christ and a Sinner. By JOHN BUNYAN, Servant to the Lord Jesus Christ.Small 4to, half-morocco, very neat, price 7s. 6d.The few remaining copies now offered at4s. 6d.This very interesting literary memorial of the Author of the celebrated Pilgrim’s Progress has been choicely reprinted by Whittingham, from the only known copy lately discovered by the publisher. It has been edited, with an Introduction, by George Offor, Esq. The impression is limited.“A highly-interesting memorial of the great allegorist.”—Athenæum.Roberts’ (David) Sketches of the Holy Land, Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt, and Nubia,with two hundred and fifty splendid lithographic plates, from those of Louis Haghe, and Historical and Descriptive Notices by the Rev. G. CROLY, LL.D.Library edition, 6 vols., 4to, bound in 3,crimson morocco gilt,gilt edges(sells at £21 21s.), only £4 18s.Ib.6 vols. Half morocco, very neat, £4 4s.Ib.6 vols. In cloth, elegant, £3 18s.This day, on toned paper, price 6d.,Robson; a Sketch, by George Augustus Sala. An interesting Biography of the great Serio-Comic Actor, with sketches of his famous characters, “Jem Baggs,” “Boots at the Swan,” “The Yellow Dwarf,” “Daddy Hardacre,” &c.Anecdotes of the old Olympic Theatre are also given.Rodd’s Collection of Scarce and Curious Portraits, to illustrate Grainger’s History of England, forming a Supplement toRichardson’swell-known collection, above 50plates, faithfully copied fromRare Originals, 2 vols in 1, 4to, half bound, neat,edges uncut,large paper, 12s. 6d. only.A very interesting collection. Many of the portraits are from unique copies.ILLUSTRATED EDITION OF ROGERS’ POEMS.Rogers’ (Samuel) Poems, 1860. The Author’sLuxurious Edition, with the delightful Vignettes of W. M. Turner, Stothard, Flaxman, and others, Engraved in the most delicate and highly-finished stylebyFinden. 8vo,with portrait and memoir,fine impressions,cloth gilt(sells at 28s.), 8s. 6d.A few picked copies have been selected and bound to various patterns in the best morocco.Morocco, very plain and neat, with a simple gold thread around the sides, gilt edges, 17s. 6d.In polished morocco of the very finest grain, with bevelled boards, very highly finished, the edges gilt and burnished, 25s.Now ready, in 4to, very handsomely printed, with curious woodcut initial letters, by Whittingham and Wilkins, extra cloth, 18s.; or crimson morocco extra, the sides and back covered in rich fleur-de-lys, gold tooling, 55s.,Roll of Carlaverlock; with the Arms of the Earls,Barons, and Knights who were present at the Siege of this Castle in Scotland, 28 Edward I.,A.D.1300; including theOriginal Anglo-Norman Poem, and anEnglish Translationof the MS. in the British Museum; the whole newly edited by THOMAS WRIGHT, Esq., M.A., F.S.A.A very handsome volume, and a delightful one to lovers of Heraldry, as it is theearliest blazon of arms known to exist. “It contains the accurate blazon of above one hundred Knights or Bannerets of the reign of Edward I., among whom were the King, the Prince of Wales, and a greater part of the Peers of the realm;” thus affording evidence of the perfect state of the Science of Heraldry at that early period.The arms are exquisitely emblazoned in gold and colours.Now ready, uniform with “Magna Charta,” price 5s.; by post, on roller, 5s. 4d.,Roll of Battle Abbey; or, a List of the PrincipalWarriorswho came over from Normandy withWilliam the Conquerorand settled in this country,A.D.1066-7, from Authentic Documents, very carefully drawn, and printed on fine plate paper, nearly three feet long by two feet wide, with theArms of the principal Barons elaborately emblazoned in gold and colours.Amost curious document, and of the greatest interest, as the descendants of nearly all these Norman Conquerors are at this moment living amongst us, bearing the old Anglo-Norman names, slightly altered, but little dreaming of the relationship betwixt them and the bold warriors who fought and won at Hastings nearly a thousand years ago. The writing, of the period, is very legible.No names are believed to be in this “Battel Roll” which are not fully entitled to the distinction.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, price 22s. 6d.NEW DICTIONARY OF COLLOQUIAL ENGLISH.Slang Dictionary; or, The Vulgar Words, StreetPhrases, and“Fast” Expressions of HighandLow Society; many with their Etymology, and a few with their History traced.With curious illustrations.Pp. 328, in 8vo, price 6s. 6d., by post, 7s.⁂ One hundred and forty newspapers in this country alone have reviewed with approbation this Dictionary of Colloquial English. TheTimesdevoted three columns to explain its merits, and the littleJohn o’ Groat’s Journalgave its modest paragraph in eulogy. “It may be doubted if there exists a more amusing volume in the English language.”—Spectator.“Valuable as a work of reference.”—Saturday Review.“All classes of society will find amusement and instruction in its pages.”—Times.Literary Slang.Religious Slang.Fashionable Slang.Military Slang.City Slang.Sporting Slang.University Slang.Dandy Slang.Legal Slang.Theatrical Slang.Shopkeepers’ Slang.Street Slang.⁂ With this work is incorporatedThe Dictionary of Modern Slang, Cant, and Vulgar Words, issued by “a London Antiquary” in 1859. The first edition of that work contained about 3,000 words; the second, issued twelve months later, gave upwards of 5,000. Both editions were reviewed by the critical press with an approval seldom accorded to small works of the kind. During the six years that have elapsed, the compiler has gone over the field of unrecognised English once more. The entire subject has been resurveyed, outlying terms and phrases have been brought in, new street-words have been added, and better illustrations of old colloquial expressions given. The result is the volume before the reader, which offers, for his amusement or instruction, nearly 10,000 words and phrases commonly deemed “vulgar,” but which are used by the highest and lowest, the best, the wisest, as well as the worst and most ignorant of society.Shakspeare’s Dramatic Works. One of a few Copieson a fine and beautiful paper,the printing by Whittingham of Chiswick,the illustrations by Stothard,with charming little ornamental head-pieces, half morocco, very neat, top edge crimsoned, contents lettered, 10 vols., post 8vo (sells at £6 15s., unbound), 58s. only; or, in yellow (or green) calf extra and delicately-tooled backs, £5 18s.Whittingham, 1856.The only really handsome and readable edition of Shakspeare, convenient in size and accurate in text, ever printed. Achoicely-printededition has long been a positive want. I can recommend the above in the strongest terms.But a limited number were printed on this beautiful paper, with glorious margins.Stokes (H. Sewell of Truro) the Vale of Lanherne, and other Poems, 8vo,best edition, with numeroustinted Illustrations Depicting the Lovely Scenery of the Neighbourhood(sells at 12s. 6d.),perfectly new and fresh, in cloth, elegant, for 3s. 6d. Longman, 1853.It was quite by accident that the publisher fell in with a few copies of this delightful volume at an exceedingly low price. In the old book market copies have been scarce for some time past. Amongst theIllustrationsmay be enumerated theVale of Lanherne—Nunnery of Lanherne and Church of St. Mawgan—Ancient Cross in Mawgan Churchyard—Tregurrion Bay—The Norwegian’s Rock, and theEyry.Tasso, la Gerusalemme Liberata. The exquisiteDiamond Type Edition, 2 vols., 48mo. (sells at 10s.), only 2s.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 21s. or, with the sides delicately tooled, 25s.Ten Thousand Wonderful Things, comprising theMarvellousandRare,Odd,Curious,Quaint,Eccentric, andExtraordinaryin All Ages and Nations, in Art, Nature, and Science, including many Wonders of the World. By ED. FILLINGHAM KING, M.A. Post 8vo, 684 pages,with upwards of 400 very interesting woodcuts, comprising nearly everything noticeable in Nature and Art,neatly half-bound morocco, cloth sides, 4s. 10d. only.A most amusing at the same time that it is a very instructive volume. It contains the pith ofNotes and Queries, the whole of Mr. John Timbs’ labours in the world of literary curiosity, the essence of half-a-dozen Encyclopædias, the marrow of such journals as the oldPenny Magazine, and admirable selections from the most rare, quaint, and marvellous books in the British Museum and elsewhere. Open the work at any page, and the reader is sure to beedified and interested—and this is more than can be said of one book in ten thousand.Terentius. The exquisite Diamond Type Edition, 48mo. (sells at 6s), only 1s. 6d.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.LIFE AND ANECDOTES OF THACKERAY.Now ready, in post 8vo, beautifully printed, price 7s. 6d.,Thackeray: the Humourist and the Man of Letters. The Story of his Life and Literary Labours. With some particulars of his Early Career never before made public. By THEODORE TAYLOR, Esq., Membre de la Société des Gens de Lettres.Illustrated with aPhotographic Portrait(one of the mostcharacteristicknown to have been taken) byErnest Edwards, B.A.; view ofMr. Thackeray’s house, built after a favourite design of the great Novelist’s;facsimile of his handwriting, long noted in London literary circles for its exquisite neatness; and a curious little sketch of hiscoat of arms, a pen and pencil humorously introduced as the crest, the motto “Nobilitas est sola virtus” (Virtue is the sole nobility).Includes anecdotesof the London Literati during the past thirty years; account of theThackeray family, showing the origin of their connexion with India;Thackeray’s school-daysat the Charterhouse; his career atCambridge; residence inGermany, andArt-studies in Paris; literary apprenticeship in London; his connexion with “Fraser” and Maginn’s staff; his marriage; partiality to Kensington as a place of residence; his publication of “Vanity Fair,” and the establishment of his fame; with many other interesting matters connected with his literary career.12th Thousand, beautifully printed, 12mo, neat, 1s.; by post, 1s. 2d., THE CHOICEST HUMOROUS POETRY OF THE AGE.The Biglow Papers. By James Russell Lowell.⁂This Edition has been Edited with additional Notes explanatory of the persons and subjects mentioned therein, and is the only complete and correct Edition published in this country.“The celebrated ‘Biglow Papers.’”—Times, July 25th.“The Rhymes are as startling and felicitous as any in ‘Hudibras.’ ‘Sam Slick’ is a mere pretender in comparison.”—Blackwood’s Magazine.“The fun of the ‘Biglow Papers’ is quite equal to the fun of the ‘Ingoldsby Legends.’ This is the real doggerel, the Rabelaiesque of poetry.”—Fraser.⁂An Edition withColoured IllustrationsbyGeorge Cruikshankhas been prepared, strongly bound in cloth, price 3s. 6d. per copy.ANECDOTES OF THE “LONG PARLIAMENT” OF 1645.Now ready, in small 4to, half morocco, very choicely printed by Whittingham, with floreated capitals, price 7s. 6d.,The Mystery of the Good Cause: Sarcastic Notices of those Members of theLong Parliamentthat held Places, both Civil and Military, contrary to the Self-denying Ordinance of April 3, 1645; with the Sums of Money and Lands they divided among themselves.Gives many curious particulars about the famous Assembly not mentioned by historians or biographers. It has just been very carefully reprinted from the excessively rare original. The history of almost every county in England receives some illustration from it. Genealogists and antiquaries will find in it much interesting matter.GUNTER’S CONFECTIONERY.Now ready, handsomely printed, post 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, price 6s. 6d.,The Modern Confectioner: a Practical Guide to the latest and most improved methods for making the various kinds of Confectionery; with the manner of Preparing and Laying out Desserts; adapted for Private Families or Large Establishments. By WILLIAM JEANES, Chief Confectioner at Messrs. Gunter’s (Confectioners to Her Majesty), Berkeley-square.⁂ A new and reliable work on the making of Confectionery and the Laying out of Desserts has long been wanted. No pains have been spared to make the present book a useful and safe guide to all Cooks and Housekeepers in private families or large establishments. The Name of the Chief Confectioner at the justly-celebrated house of Gunter & Co., in Berkeley-square, is a sufficient guarantee of the usefulness of the book.“The most important work which has been published for many years upon the art of making Confectionery, Pastry, and on the arrangement and general ordering of Desserts.”—Daily News.“The language is so simple that a child can with ease understand the longest recipes.”—Observer.“All housekeepers should have it.”—Daily Telegraph.Now ready, in cloth extra (only a few copies for sale), price 15s.,The Noble and Gentlemen of England; or, Notes touching the Arms and Descentsof the Ancient Knightly and Gentle Houses of England, arranged in their respective Counties, attempted by EVELYN PHILIP SHIRLEY, Esq., M.A., F.S.A., one of the Knights of the Shire for the County of Warwick, 4to,handsomely printed, pp. 321,with numerous heraldic illustrations.A very interesting work on the English Families now existing, that were regularly established either asknightlyorgentlehouses before 1500. It notices also the ancient and present estates of these county families. The work possesses considerable value to those who are interested in genealogical and heraldic studies.SHAKESPEARE’S ENGLAND.Thornbury’s (Walter) Shakespeare’s England: Sketches ofSocial Historyin theReignofElizabeth. 2 vols, crown 8vo.Published byLongmanat 21s., only 4s. 9d., quite perfect, and newly bound in cloth.Two most interesting andreadablevolumes, thoroughly entering into the spirit of that most romantic period of English history, containing Chapters on theStreets of Old London,Mansions and Palaces,Bear Gardens,Bartholomew Fair,Elizabethan Amusements,Curious Dishes,Drinks,Superstitions,Alchemy,Witchcraft,Revels,Youthful Sports, &c. &c.Tobacco; its History, Cultivation, Manufacture, and Adulterations. By ANDREW STEINMETZ. 12mo, 9d.A curious little Book of nearly 200 pages, relative to the often-repeated question, “IS SMOKING INJURIOUS TO HEALTH?”The author, however, speaks somewhat in favour of the habit.Now ready, 8vo, price 1s.,Traditionary Anecdotes of Shakespeare, collected in Warwickshire in the year 1693, from the original MS. Edited by J. P. COLLIER.Trelawny’s (E. J.) Recollections of the Last Days ofShelleyandByron. 8vo,fine portrait and plate(sells at 9s.), only 3s. 6d.Trelawny was the intimate companion of Byron and Shelley, and was the first to find the body of the latter after the unfortunate accident which was the cause of his death. The book gives many particulars never before made public.Now ready, on toned paper, handsomely printed, price 1s. 6d.,Vere Vereker’s Vengeance; A Sensation in Several PAROXYSMS,by THOMAS HOOD, idiotically illustrated by WILLIAM BRUNTON.⁂ One of the most amusing volumes which have been published for a long time. For a piece of broad humour, of the highly-sensational kind, it is perhaps the best effort of Mr. Hood’s pen.Virgilii Opera, ed. Joannis Bond. Didot’s exquisiteedition, in small but very legible type,with numerous most beautiful Photographs, from PaintingsbyM. Barrias. 24mo. 35s.The most exquisite Classically illustrated edition of Virgil ever published.Choicely bound in morocco of the finest quality, tooled and gilt in the most finished style, 58s.; or with elaborately tooled sides, after an ancient pattern, £3 5s.BEST FRENCH LESSON BOOK EVER PUBLISHED.Ordinary price, 5s., a few copies now offered at 3s. 6d.,Vocabulaire Symbolique. A Symbolic French and English Vocabulary, for Students of every age. By RAGONET. Illustrated by many hundred Woodcuts, exhibiting familiar objects of every description, with French and English Explanations, thus stamping the French terms and phrases indelibly on the mind.Walton’s Lives of Donne, Wotton, Hooker, Herbert, and Sanderson. 48mo.The Exquisite Diamond Type Edition.Portraits(sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d.Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862.Waring’s Masterpieces of Industrial Art and Sculpture at theExhibitionof 1862.3 vols. folio, an original Subscriber’s Copy, perfectly clean, in Parts(cost £18 18s.), £12 18s.The publishers destroyed the stones on the closing of the subscription list, and no more copies were printed than those subscribed for.Now ready, price 2s.; by post, on roller, 2s. 4d.,Warrant to Execute Charles I. An Exact Facsimile of this Important Document in the House of Lords, with theFifty-nine Signaturesof the Regicides, and Corresponding Seals, admirably executed on paper made to imitate the original Document, 22 in. by 14 in.Copied by express permission.—King Charles I., January 20th, 1648, was brought from St. James’s to Sir R. Cotton’s house (now the Speaker’s residence), and was four days arraigned at the bar of the House of Commons by Bradshaw, and seventy-nine Judges Commissioners, named for his Trial. The original document was kept in the Old House of Peers’ Library, and being saved from the Fire, was preserved in the Poet’s Tower, and is now under the librarian’s care at the House of Lords. Some of the Regicides died in America, while many of the children of those executed at the Restoration betook themselves to that country, and laid the foundations of many of the first families in New England.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 14s. 6d.Now ready, safe on roller, 2s.; by post, 2s. 4d.,Warrant to Execute Mary Queen of Scots. The Exact Facsimile of this Important Document, including the Signature of Queen Elizabeth and Facsimile of the Great Seal, on tinted paper,made to imitate the original MS.“I praise and thank my God that it pleases Him to put an end by this to the many miseries and calamities that they have compelled me to endure; for, since nineteen years up to the present moment, I have been constituted a prisoner, and very evilly entreated by the Queen of England, my sister, without ever having injured, as God is my principal witness.”—Mary’s Reply to my Lord Beale, who was commissioned to inform her of Elizabeth’s Sentence of Death.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 14s. 6d.ANTIQUITIES OF DENMARK AND ENGLAND.Worsaæ’s Primeval Antiquities of Denmark. Translated andappliedto the Illustration ofsimilar RemainsinEnglandbyW. J. Thoms. 8vo.Abounding with finely-cut Wood Engravings by Jewitt.Anew copy in cloth, 3s. 9d. (sells at 10s. 6d.)The history and account ofAncientDenmark, itsMonuments,Burial Mounds,Sepulchral Stones, andFire Beacons, itsGiantandFairy Lore, offer many curious points of resemblance to our own early history. Whilst the Antiquities of Rome, Greece, and Egypt have been carefully examined and systematically described by English writers, the primeval national antiquities of the British Islands have never hitherto been brought into a scientific arrangement. The close connexion which in the old time existed between Denmark and the British Islands renders it natural that British antiquaries should turn with interest to the antiquities of Denmark, and compare them with those of their own country.The book has long been scarce.Now ready, with nearly 300 Drawings from Nature, 2s. 6d. plain, 4s. coloured by hand, TheYoung Botanist: a Popular Guide to Elementary Botany. By T. S. RALPH, of the Linnean Society.⁂ An excellent book for the young beginner. “The plan which has been adopted is as simple as the author has found it to be in his power to follow out. As few hard names as possible have been employed, and when so used will generally be found accompanied with some familiar expression which can be adopted as a substitute. The objects selected as illustrations are either easy of access as specimens of wild plants, or are common in gardens.”
Anacreon’s Odes. Paris, 1864. Didot’s exquisiteEdition,printed in very beautiful Greek characters, with French notes, each page ruled with red lines. 12mo.Illustrated with 54 charming Photographs, from compositions by Girodet, in the purest classical style, and of most surpassing beauty and softness. 40s.
The original drawings cost £5,000. The volume is, without exception, the most lovable book ever sent forth by a prodigal publisher.
Now ready,New and Popular Edition, post 8vo, pp. 336, price 2s.,
Anecdotes of the Green Room and Stage; or, Leaves from an Actor’s Note-Book, at Home and Abroad. By GEORGE VANDENHOFF.
Mr. Vandenhoff, who earned for himself, both in the Old and New Worlds, the title ofThe Classic Actor, has retired from the Stage. His Reminiscences are extremely interesting, and include Original Anecdotes of the Keans (father and son), the two Kembles, Macready, Cooke, Liston, Farren, Elliston, Braham and his Sons, Phelps, Buckstone, Webster, Chas. Mathews; Siddons, Vestris, Helen Faucit, Mrs. Nisbett, Miss Cushman, Miss O’Neil, Mrs. Glover, Mrs. Chas. Kean, Rachel, Ristori, and many other dramatic celebrities.
Archæological Proceedings held at Winchester in 1845. The thick handsome vol., published by the Institute in 1846, 8vo, pp. 600,with numerousbeautifulandmost curious Wood EngravingsofAncient Architecturaland otherRemainsinHampshire, withFacsimilesandEtchings on Copper, 8vo (sells at £1 10s.), only 8s. 6d.
⁂This is a scarce volume.Amongst the very interesting contents may be particularised theArchitectural Historyof oldWinchester,PaintedandStained Glassin the County,Ancient Sealsand MSS.,Surnames,Nicknames,Palaces,Round Tables,MintandExchanges,Coins,Monuments,Brasses; the ancientCastles,Churches,Priories, &c.
AN INTERESTING VOLUME TO GENEALOGISTS AND ANTIQUARIES.
Now ready, half morocco, handsomely printed by Whittingham and Wilkins, price 7s. 6d.,
Army Lists of the Roundheads and Cavaliers in the Civil War:Giving the Names of all the Officers in the Royal and Parliamentary Armies of 1642, now first reprinted from the comparatively unknown originals, and Edited, with Notes, by EDWARD PEACOCK, F.S.A. In 4to, with elaborate floreated capitals.
These most curiousListsshow on which side the gentlemen of England were to be found during the great conflict between the King and the Parliament. As illustrations of County History they are exceedingly interesting. The literary antiquary and the genealogist will find much new and out-of-the-way matter in them; and there are but few families in England who cannot claim a relationship to one or other of the names mentioned in the Royalist or Roundhead lists.Only a very few copies have been most carefully reprintedon paper that will gladden the heart of the lover of Choice Books.
Now ready, 12mo, in binding after a pattern of the period, very choicely printed, by Whittingham and Wilkins, price 6s. 6d.,
THE EARLIEST KNOWN LONDON DIRECTORY.
A Collection of the Names of the Merchants Living IN AND ABOUT THE CITY OF LONDON; very usefull and necessary. Carefully Collected for the Benefit of all Dealers that shall have occasion with any of them, directing them at the first sight of their name to the place of their abode. London: Printed forSam Lee, 1677. See Review in theTimes, Jan. 22nd.
This curious little volume has been reprinted verbatim from one of the only two copies known to be in existence. It contains an Introduction pointing out some of the principal persons mentioned in the list. For historical and genealogical purposes the little book is of the greatest value. Herein will be found the originators of many of the great firms and copartnerships which have prospered through two pregnant centuries, and which exist some of them in nearly the same names at this day. Its most distinctive feature is the early severance which it marks of ‘goldsmiths that keep running cashes,’ precursors of the modern bankers, from the mass of the merchants of London. Here also will be found in the general list some of the entertainers of the wits of their day; Fountain, the father of the wealthy knight with whom Swift was familiar, as shown in his letters to Stella; Kiffen, the sturdy Baptist, whom James II. could neither affright nor seduce; Bathurst, with Bragg his connexion, the Vansittarts, Van Milderts, Ducanes, Beckfords, Papillons, Burdetts, Biddulphs, and Holfords. Here are Russells, Temples, Palmers, and Harveys, the latter near kinsman of Dr. William Harvey, who discovered the secret of our own circulation. Only two originals are known, and one of these recently produced £30 at public auction. The little book is curious, among other things, as containing the name of Alexander Pope, the father of the poet, among the merchants residing in Broad Street. The names of the Messrs. Hoare, the eminent bankers of Fleet Street, at the sign of the ‘Leathern Bottle’—the house, by the way, where Oliver Cromwell kept his money—occurs in the Directory, as also do those of the Messrs. Child, the well-known bankers of Temple Bar.Only a very few copies have been reprinted on paper made to resemble the original.
This day, on tinted paper, price 3s. 6d., by post 3s. 10d.,
Artemus Ward—His Book. Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by the Editor of the “Biglow Papers.” One of the wittiest and certainly the most mirth-provoking book which has been published for many years.
The author has recently been delighting his countrymen with lectures on “The Babes in the Wood,” “Sixty Minutes in Africa,” and “Life among the Mormons,” and it is expected will shortly visit this country, to take for a time the late Albert Smith’s place among us.
“He is as clever as Thackeray In Jeames’s dialogue and Policeman X’s ballads.... There is no merriment in him; it is all dry, sparkling humour.”—Spectator.
“Genuine humour.... He is likely to take with the British public.”—Globe.
“Bryant, the poet, pays him a high compliment.... Exceedingly amusing.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
“We never, not even in the pages of our best humorists, read anything so laughable and so shrewd as we have seen in this book by the mirthful Artemus.”—Public Opinion.
“We can heartily commend it to every one of our numerous readers, not an individual of whom, we are assured, will regret the small sum expended on it, should he become a purchaser.”—Western Daily News.
Beeton’s (Mrs.) Book of Household Management; Comprising a History of the Origin, Properties, and Uses of All Things connected with Home Life and Comfort; Information for Mistresses and Servants, and Sanitary, Medical, and Legal Information. 1864. Very thick fcap. 8vo, over 1,110 pages,woodcuts and plates printed in colours,neatly half-bound, 5s. 10d.
⁂Indispensable to every Household—containing in itself, besides being a CompleteCookery Book, all that is ever wanted to refer to in Housekeeping; with a valuableIndexfor Instant Reference.
Berjeau’s (P. C.) Book of Dogs; the Varieties of Dogs as they are found inOld Sculptures,Pictures,Engravings, andBooks. 1865.Half-morocco, the sides richly lettered in gold, 7s. 6d.
In this very interesting volume are 52 plates, facsimiled from rare old Engravings, Paintings, Sculptures, &c., in which may be traced over 100 varieties of Dogs known to the Ancients.
⁂ The volume forms a handsome small 4to, is printed on tinted paper, and contains numerous admirable facsimiles by Mr. Berjeau. Some of the dogs, from the engravings by Albert Durer, are the veritable Scotch terriers of Leech, so familiar to all readers ofPunch. The book is a most pleasing and satisfactory combination of modern and antiquarian interest. The regular price of the book is 10s. 6d., but Mr. Hotten can sell a copy for 7s. 6d.
Book of Common Prayer, according to the Usage of the Church of England.Pickering’s sumptuous Folio Edition, Printed, Red and Black, in Bold Old English Letter,on the finest vellum paper—A TRULY REGAL VOLUME, and one of the few books printed in the present century which will compare with the works of the early printers. Half-vellum, very neat (sells £7 7s.), only 38s.,or bound in half-morocco in the Roxburghe style. £2 7s. 6d.
⁂ Admirably adapted for use in the pulpit or reading-stand.With lovers of choice books it is not unfrequently termed the“Cathedral Edition.”
Baron Munchausen, Aventures de. Illustratedwith 220 Fantastic and Extraordinary Wood Engravings byGUSTAVE DORE. 4to, cloth elegant, 19s. 6d. With a portrait of the renowned Baron, and his Motto, “Mendace Veritas.”
NOTHING CAN EXCEED THE DROLLERY AND HUMOUR OF THESE WONDERFUL AND INIMITABLE ILLUSTRATIONS.
YORKSHIRE BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Now ready, 8vo, half morocco, very neat, price 5s. 6d.,
Bibliographical Account of nearly 1,500 Curious andrareBooks,Tracts,MSS., andEngravingsrelating to theHistoryandTopographyofYorkshire, collected by Mr. Hotten, with numerousDescriptive Notes,Literary Anecdotes, etc.,illustrated with curious wood engravingsfrom blocks formerly in the possession of the eccentricJohn ColeofScarborough, interleaved for MS. notes, additions, etc. 1863.
Only Fifty Copies have been printed on thick paper, for the use of Yorkshire Antiquaries and Topographers.
WELSH BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Now ready, 8vo, half morocco, very neat, price 4s. 6d.,
Bibliographical Account of nearly 1,000 Curious andrareBooks,Tracts,MSS., andEngravingsrelating to theHistoryandTopographyofNorth and South Wales, collected by Mr. Hotten, with numerousDescriptive Notes,Literary Anecdotes, etc., interleaved for MS. notes, additions, etc.,illustrated with curious wood engravings from old chap-books and ballads.
Only Fifty Copies have been printed on thick paper, for the use of Welsh Antiquaries and Topographers.
NEW WORK BY THE LATE DOUGLAS JERROLD.
Brownrigg Papers, by Douglas Jerrold. Edited by his Son, BLANCHARD JERROLD. Coloured Illustration by GEORGE CRUIKSHANK. 8vo, sells at 10s. 6d.; a few copies offered at 4s. 6d., cloth gilt.
⁂ Containing some of the most characteristic pieces from the pen of the master-wit, now first collected. “Henry Brownrigg” was the favouritenom-de-plumeof the author. Amost entertaining volume.
Burke’s Genealogical and Heraldic History ofExtinct and Dormant Baronetcies. 1838. 8vo.Fine Portrait of James I., and upwards of1,000 Coats of Arms, engraved on Wood,neatly bound, half-morocco, 10s.6d.
⁂ An invaluable work of reference; giving theLineage of nearly a Thousand Families, with minute and accurate details of the alliances, fortunes, and memorable events of each generation; the search for which, through public and private records, occupied the Author many years.
Cambridge Slang Phrases—Gradus ad Cantabrigiam; or, Guide to theAcademical Customs and Colloquial, orCant Terms, peculiar to the University of Cambridge. 8vo,with coloured humorous engravings. 3s. 6d.
Without the Illustrations the book is common enough.
Cheke’s (Sir J.) Gospel according to St. Matthew, and part of St. Mark’s Gospel, translated into English, withNotes, and seven Original Letters. 8vo, new cloth,with facsimile plates, 2s. 6d.
Sir J. Cheke was Tutor and Secretary of State to King Edward VI., and, towards the close of his life, embraced the Catholic Faith. The very peculiar nature of this old Translation Is explained in the Introduction, by J. GOODWIN.A very valuable specimen of the English Languagein 1550.
This day, Collected Edition, cloth, neat, 2s. 6d.; by post, 2s. 8d.,
Cornish Tales, in Prose and Verse, by J. T. Tregellas. With aGlossary.
⁂ This Collection comprises all the best stories of the author, who made a fame peculiarly his own by a wonderful power of story-telling and mimicry. The book includesTremnan,the St. Agnes Bear Hunt,the Queen’s Washing Day,the Perran Cherry-beam,Grammar’s Cat and Ours,the Squire’s Tame Conger,Rozzy Paul and Zacky Martin,Josee Cock, and ten other inimitable stories.
AN EXTRAORDINARY BOOK.
Beautifully printed, thick 8vo, new half-morocco, gilt back, 14s. 6d.,
Contes Drolatiques (Droll Tales collected from the Abbeys of Loraine). ParBalzac. With Four Hundred and Twenty-five Marvellous, Extravagant, and Fantastic Woodcuts byGustave Doré.
⁂ The most singular designs ever attempted by any artist. This book is a fund of amusement. So crammed is it with pictures that even theContentsare adorned with thirty-three illustrations. Now the reader is made to smile at the mishaps of some fat monks; then a battle scene, with fighting men jammed in inextricable confusion until the picture becomes painful to look at, occupies his attention; next, some portraits of fellows who would pass for Pluto’s firemen, all seared, as though they had been for a thousand years stirring molten lava; then knights making love, and kissing through their visors; then dreamy old German cities, with diablerie, or satanello, going on right and left—but all so quaint, so wonderful, that the beholder confesses he never looked upon the like before.
Common Prayer. Illustrated by Holbein and Albert Durer. Facsimile of the Prayer Book of Queen Elizabeth, adapted to the present Reign, with wood-engravings ofAlbert Durer’s“Life of Christ,”rich woodcut Borderon every page of Fruit and Flowers; also theDance of Death, asingularly curious seriesafterHolbein, with Scriptural Quotations andProverbsin the Margin. Sqr. 8vo, cloth neat, exquisitely printed on tinted paper, price 10s. 6d.
This book, from the variety and quaintness of the borders surrounding each page—resembling some of the beautiful early printed Missals—is worthy of the most elaborate binding. Few modern works sustain the character of a rich exterior. This volume, on the contrary, on account of the softness and beauty of the paper, appears to the greatest advantage in the most brilliant covers. Mr. Hotten has just had some copies bound as samples of the artistic beauty which may be displayed in binding.
1.In dark morocco, very plain and neat, with block in the Elizabethan style impressed on the sides,gilt edges, 17s. 6d.
2. In the finest polishedgros-grainedLevant morocco, the back and sides simply but elegantly gilt, crimson, dark blue, or green, cut fromcarefully-selected skins, the edges gilt and burnished, 30s.
3. In a very splendid piece of dark blue morocco, admirably polished, the sides and back hand-tooled in gold to a very pleasing and original design of entwined laurel-leaves, the edges gilt, 48s. 6d.
4. In rich brown morocco, blind-tooled and inlaid with red Maltese crosses on the back, and elegant Latin crosses on the sides, all bordered with a fine thread of gold, carmine edges, gauffred with a diaper in gold, 43s.
5. In very choice red morocco, the sides covered with hand-tooling in gold of singular beauty, delicacy, and finish, 55s.
6. Another, in fine open-grain crimson morocco of great beauty, with an inlaid monogram of very artistic design, in dark blue morocco, within a frame, also inlaid in dark blue, ornamented with hand-tooling to a very chaste Italian design, solid gilt edges, 63s.Another, in olive morocco of a very subdued and rare tint, with similar monogram and border, the edges gilt in dull gold, 63s.
7. A very sumptuous specimen of InlaidMaioliBinding, dark blue morocco, with an elaborate design, inlaid in red and green morocco, defined with gold lines—reproduced from an antique volume of great value, £6 6s.
8. The same design, hand-tooled in gold on dark blue morocco, £3 15s.
9. In theGrolierstyle, with the peculiar and favourite interlacings carried out in red and green morocco on a dark blue ground, with great precision and good taste, £5 10s.
10. A similar pattern, hand-tooled with great accuracy in gold, on a choice piece of dark blue morocco, £3 8s.
This edition has been prepared expressly for Mr. Hotten.All thelatestalterations in the Common Prayer Book of our Established Church are given. Several new and most curiously engraved woodcut borders have been added. It is only necessary to remark that theoldedition, without these improvements, sold for £1 1s. per copy.
A GARLAND OF
Christmas Carols, Ancient and Modern; including several never before given in any collection. Beautifully printed by Whittingham, fcap 8vo., price 4s. 6d.
⁂ This Garland comprises those delightful Carols that for generations have charmed the good people of our country at the festive season. They have been collected from every source that would afford materials, including rare old broadsides, ballad-sheets, chap-books, and the various other kinds of street literature. None have been included but what were genuine, and no modern adaptations or imitations are given. Several of the Legendary Carols possess all the delightful characteristics of our most admired old ballads.
Cicero de Officiis, &c., &c. The exquisite DiamondType Edition, 48mo (sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.
Costume. Picturesque Representations of the Dress and Manners of the English. Royal 8vo.,with fifty coloured engravingsof the various classes of English Society fifty years ago, half crimson morocco, Roxburghe style,very scarce, 11s. 6d.
Crests, Orders, Mitres, Crowns, Flags of all Nations,Choice Monograms. FAIRBAIRN’S CRESTS of the Families of Great Britain and Ireland, 2 vols., large 8vo,fine impressions on India paperof the 2,100Engraved Crests,cloth gilt(sells at £3 15s.), 28s. only. 1860.
A book invaluable to the Heraldic Student and the Genealogist, with an Appendix of all themottoesused by the Nobility, translated, &c.
——. 2 vols. 4to, an extra large papercopy,half morocco, top edge gilt, (sells at £8 8s.) £3 18s. 1860.
Dante’s Divina Commedia. The exquisite diamondtype edition, 2 vols. 48mo (sells at 10s.), only 2s. 6d.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 21s.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 25s.
In a few days, in 8vo, handsomely printed,
Diamonds and Precious Stones: their History, Value, and Properties,with simple tests for ascertaining their reality; byH. Emanuel, F.R.G.S. With numerous illustrations, coloured and plain.
⁂ Although this Work is intended as a plain and practical Guide to Buyers and Sellers of Precious Stones, the History and Literature of the subject have not been overlooked. Anecdotes of the peculiar accidents and strange fortune which have attended some Jewels are given, and what is hoped will be found a valuable Bibliography of the subject is added as an Appendix at the end.
THE FAMILY HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH COUNTIES.
Now ready, in 8vo, on tinted paper, nearly 350 pages, very neat, price 5s.,
Descriptive Account of Twenty Thousand most CURIOUS AND RARE BOOKS,Old Tracts,Ancient Manuscripts,Engravings, andPrivately Printed Family Papers, relating to the History of almost everyLanded EstateandOld English Familyin the Country; interspersed with nearlyTwo ThousandOriginal Anecdotes, Topographical and Antiquarian Notes, by JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN.
By far the largest collection of English and Welsh Topography and Family History ever Formed.Each article has a small price affixed for the convenience of those who may desire to possess any book or tract that interests them.
⁂FIFTY COPIES only have been printed on THICK PAPER; these are interleaved with writing paper for MS. additions, and bound in half-morocco, price 12s. 6d.
Thick 8vo, published at £1 5s., only 12s. 6d.,
Dictionary of Americanisms; Words and Phrases usually regarded as peculiar to theUnited States. ByJohn Russell Bartlett.ThirdandBest Edition.
The work extends to 560 pages, and presents to the English reader a body of admirably-selected extracts from the humorous and dialectical literature of the United States.
It is a curious fact connected with Slang, that a great number of vulgar words common in England are equally common in the United States; and when we remember that America began to people two centuries ago, and that these colloquialisms must have crossed the sea with the first emigrants, we can form some idea of the antiquity of popular or street language. Many words, owing to the caprices of fashion or society, have wholly disappeared in the parent country, whilst in the colonies they are yet heard. The wordsskink, to serve drink in company, and the old termmichingormeeching, skulking or playing truant, for instance, are still in use in the United States, although nearly, if not quite, obsolete here.
Now ready, only a few copies for sale, original price 5s., now offered at 2s. 6d., a
Dictionary of the Oldest Words in the English LANGUAGE, from the Semi-Saxon Period ofA.D.1250 to 1300; consisting of an Alphabetical Inventory ofEvery Word found in the printed English Literature of the 13th Century, by the late HERBERT COLERIDGE, Secretary to the Philological Society. 8vo, neat half-morocco.
An invaluable work to historical students and those interested in linguistic pursuits. “The present publication may be considered as the foundation-stone of the Historical and Literary Portion” of the greatEnglish Dictionarynow in preparation by the Philological Society. “Explanatory and etymological matter has been added, which, it is hoped, may render the work more generally interesting and useful than could otherwise have been the case.”
HERALDRY OF WALES.
Only 50 copies printed, in marvellous facsimile, 4to, on old Welsh paper, half-morocco, 12s. 6d.,
Display of Herauldry of the particular Coat Armours now in Use in the Six Counties of North Wales, and several others Elsewhere; with theNames of the Families, whereby any Man knowing from what Family he is descended may know his particular Arms. By JOHN REYNOLDS, of Oswestry, Antiquarian;with nearly one hundred Coat Armours blazoned in the old style. Chester, printed 1739.
From a Unique Copy, of priceless value to the lover of Heraldry and Genealogy. The work onWelsh Family Historyissued privately by this author in the same year is comparatively common, yet copies of this have realisedtwenty guineas. A few copies have been taken off in marvellous facsimile, on old Welsh paper. They have cost more than the price asked.The owner challenges any facsimile-expert or artist in this country or elsewhere to produce anything more like unto a veritable old book than this.Photozincography is a shallow pretence when compared with it.
WINDOW TRACERY IN ENGLAND.
8vo, 300 pages, published at £1 1s., only 7s. 6d.,
Freeman’s (Ed., M.A., Author of the “History of Architecture”) Origin and Development of Window Tracery in England; with nearly 400 Illustrations.
Originally issued by Mr. Parker of Oxford, to whom the antiquarian world is indebted for so many admirable works on ancient architecture. This work gives an interesting and minute account of the most beautiful or remarkable windows existing in old English churches, castles, family mansions, in every county of England and Wales.
Fun (the Comic Weekly Journal and Rival toPunch). A Complete Set from its Commencement in September, 1861, to September, 1864. 6 vols., 4to,hundreds of humorous woodcuts,fancy boards(sells 27s.), 18s.
Contains many very clever cartoons and comic woodcuts by Mathew Morgan, one of the most notable of our rising caricaturists.
Forster and Foster Family. Some Account of the PEDIGREE of the FORSTERS ofCold Hesledon, in the County Palatine of Durham. Also, theFostersof other parts of England. By JOSEPH FOSTER. 4to,exquisitely printed on fine tinted paper, withEmblazoned Coat Armourof theFamilyofForster, orFoster. 12s. 6d.Sunderland, printed 1862.
Privately Printed for the Family,and only a very few copies. The information supplied is of the most reliable character, and just the kind that one desires to know respecting departed worthies. A capitalIndexconcludes the volume.
AN ENTIRELY NEW BOOK OF DELIGHTFUL FAIRY TALES.
Now ready, square 12mo, handsomely printed on toned paper, in cloth, green and gold, price 4s. 6d. plain, 5s. 6d. coloured (by post, 6d. extra),
Family Fairy Tales; or, Glimpses of Elfland at Heatherston Hall. Edited by CHOLMONDELEY PENNELL, Author of “The Naturalist Angler,” “Puck on Pegasus,” &c., adorned withbeautiful Picturesof “My Lord Lion,” “King Uggermugger,” and other great folks.
CONTENTS.
⁂ This charming volume of Original Tales has been universally praised by the critical press. From a great many reviews the following notices are selected:—
“When children have grown weary of boisterous play, and settled down on chair and footstool and rug, round the brightly-glowing fire, Mr. Cholmondeley Pennell’s ‘Fairy Tales’ will make their influence felt; cheering them up to renew their joyous laughter, and eventually sending them to bed with a store of droll fancies and pretty thoughts—thoughts and fancies which they will think about as they fall asleep, and dream about as they wake up on the following morning.”—Athenæum.
“They fully deserve the care which has preserved them, and in their present dress will afford amusement at the fireside at which they may be read. We may instance in particular the story of ‘The Blue Fish’ as one of the best Fairy Tales we have seen. The collection is excellent; the illustrations good.”—London Review.
“The tales are of the most charming kind we have read for a long time, and, we have no doubt, will cheer many a fireside. Our author is as tender as he is quaint and humorous, and seems to have imbibed the true spirit of fairy and legendary lore. The illustrations have our heartiest admiration. Miss Edwards works with a pencil as graceful as it is facile.”—Reader.
In fcap. 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d., beautifully printed,
Gog and Magog; or, the History of the Guildhall Giants. With some Account of the Giants which Guard English and Continental Cities. By F. W. FAIRHOLT, F.S.A.
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS ON WOOD BY THE AUTHOR, COLOURED AND PLAIN.
⁂ The critiques which have appeared upon this amusing little work have been uniformly favourable. TheAthenæumpronounces it a perfect model of successful antiquarian exposition, readable from the first line to the last. TheArt Journaldevotes a considerable space to the little work, and congratulates the author upon his success. TheLeadercontributes two full pages of eulogy. TheBuilderdirects its readers to purchase it. TheCriticsays, in a long article, that it thoroughly explains who these old Giants were, the position they occupied in popular mythology, the origin of their names, and a score of other matters, all of much interest in throwing a light upon fabulous portions of our history.
Genealogy and Family History. Stemmata CHICHELEANA; or,A Genealogical Accountof theFamiliesderived fromThos. Chichele, ofHigham Ferrars, Northamptonshire.Oxford, 1765. With theRare Supplement,so often wanting, containingCorrectionsandVery Large Additions,Oxford, 1775. 2 vols. in 1, 4to.Plates of monuments, uncut, beautifully preserved, with rough edges, 17s. 6d.
⁂Privately printed, compiled by Dr.Benj. Buckler. The 2 vols. contain over 700 carefully-preparedTablesofDescents,Pedigrees, andGenealogiesof Families of theNobilityandGentry, in which may be found traces of the blood ofThos. Chichele, of Higham Ferrars [obit.A.D.1400], all of whom are entitled to become candidates for Fellowships at All Souls’ College, Oxford, by virtue of their consanguinity to Archbishop Chichele, the founder.
This work has long been scarce, thesupplement extremelyso, and has generally brought at auctions upwards of £2. Mr. Hotten having fortunately lighted upon a few copies which had lain unnoticed in an old warehouse, bought them in one lot, and is thus enabled to offer them so much below their intrinsic value. Amongst the pedigrees occur the descendants of theTracey,Digby,Shirley,Knatchbull,Dering,Chennock,Sheldon,Bertie,Ferrers,Anstis,Stonor,Montagu,Symen,Lynch,Wild,Kent, and hundreds of other oldEnglish Families.
“FAIRY BOOKS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.”
Grimm’s Goblins; the Best Legends of all Nations andLanguages.Upwardsof 350Stories,with WoodcutsandPictures printed in Colours by “Phiz”(Hablot K. Browne). 4to,fancy boards(published at 5s.),offered at 2s. 6d.
Unsurpassed by any other Book for Children in its Variety of Amusing Stories.The Illustrations, byH. K. Browne, are mostly printed in Colours byEdmund Evans, and are singularly clever and striking.
Gray’s Poems, square 12mo, the Classical Edition,very exquisitely Illustratedwith Views by Birket Foster, and delightful little vignettes by Harry Rogers(sells at 5s.), 3s. 6d. only.
A perfect gem.It is, perhaps, the most elegant little volume of the kind produced in the present century.
Gustave Doré. La Legende de Croque-Mitaine Recueillie par Ernest L’Epine. 4to.Illustrated with nearly 200 Marvellous, Extravagant, and Fantastic Woodcuts.By GUSTAVE DORE, 19s. 6d.
In thismadvolume Doré has surpassed all his former efforts.The illustrations are, without exception, the most wonderful ever put into a book.
Homeri Ilias et Odyssea. 2 vols. The ExquisiteDiamond Type Edition, 48mo (sells at 12s.), only 2s. 6d.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 21s.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 25s.
Hair, Whiskers, Beard, Mustaches, &c. The Whole ART OF HAIR-DRESSING, with ample rules for ladies, women, valets; directions for persons to dress their own hair, false hair, perfumery, &c.; byJames Stewart,the Truefitt of George III.’s time. 8vo, pp. 435, 3s. 6d. only.
Withtenmost curious Engravings of Beauties and Fashionable Beaux of the time, showing the extraordinary Headdresses, Topknots, Pigtails, Love-curls, Wigs, &c., then worn.
Halliwell’s (J. O., F.R.S.) Notes of Family Excursions IN NORTH WALES, taken from Rhyl, Abergele, Llandudno, and Bagnor, small 4to, pp. 231, very choicely printed, 3s. 6d.Chiswick Press, 1860.
Only a very limited number of copies have been privately printed by the accomplished author. A better man could not have been selected to visit the Northern part of the ancient Principality for the purpose of writing a readable book, descriptive of its glorious scenery,Traditions, Folk-lore, and Natural Antiquities. All theAncient Wells,Castles,Old Houses,Hills,Waterfalls,Caves,Cromlechs, andDruidical Remainsare described. We have, also, some curious particulars about those venerable countrymen of ours, theold British Giants.Ancient LegendsandFairy Talesare also given, together with interesting particulars of the various ascents of Snowdon. It is an interesting book, and should be offered at 10s. 6d. instead of the 3s. 6d. now asked. Only a few copies remain.
THE BEST GUIDE TO HERALDRY.
Heraldry, Historical and Popular. By Charles BOUTELL, M.A. Demy 8vo, with 750 Illustrations, 9s. 6d.
“All the devices blazoned on the shieldIn their own tinct.”—Idylls of the King.
“All the devices blazoned on the shieldIn their own tinct.”—Idylls of the King.
“All the devices blazoned on the shieldIn their own tinct.”—Idylls of the King.
“All the devices blazoned on the shield
In their own tinct.”—Idylls of the King.
It is the aim of thisManualto inquire into the true character and right office of Heraldry, and to describe and illustrate both its action in past times in England, and its present condition as it is in use amongst ourselves.
In the great and general Art Revival of our own times, Heraldry now appears to be in the act of vindicating its title to honourable recognition as an Art-Science, that may be agreeably as well as advantageously studied, and very happily adapted in its practical application to the existing condition of things.
Pp. 336, handsomely printed, cloth extra, price 3s. 6d.,
Holidays with Hobgoblins; or, Talk of Strange Things. By DUDLEY COSTELLO.With Humorous Engravings by George Cruikshank.
Amongst the chapters may be enumerated:—
Now ready, handsomely printed, price 1s. 6d.,
Hints on Hats, adapted to the Heads of the People, by HENRY MELTON, of Regent-street. With curious Woodcuts of the various styles of Hats worn at different periods.
Anecdotes of eminent and fashionable personages are given, and a fund of interesting information relative to the History of Costume and change of tastes may be found scattered through its pages.
This day, handsomely bound, pp. 550, price 7s. 6d.,
History of Playing Cards, with Anecdotes of theirUseinAncientandModern Games,Conjuring,Fortune-telling, andCard-Sharping. Edited by the late Rev.Ed. S. Taylor, B.A., and others.With Sixty curious Illustrations on toned paper.
With Anecdotes of
“A highly-entertaining volume.”—Morning Post.
This most amusing work, introducing the reader to a curious chapter of our social history, gives an interesting account, replete with anecdotes, of the most popular and widely-known pastime which has ever been invented by man for his amusement. A more instructive and entertaining book could not be taken in hand for a pleasant hour’s reading.
Hone’s Every-Day Book and Table Book; or, Everlasting Calendar of Popular Amusements, Sports, Pastimes, Ceremonies, Manners, Customs, and Events, incident to each of the 365 Days in Past and Present Times:—Year Bookof Daily Recreation and Information, forming a complete History of the Year, and a perpetual Key to the Almanack, together four very thick vols. 8vo, withseven hundred and thirty woodcuts,new cloth, good paper(sells at 34s.), only 24s. The same in half calf, neat, 36s.
One of the most delightful works that can be imagined for half-hour readings. Wm. Hone was one of the very few authors who could invest generally dry subjects with a peculiar charm that made them readable.
How to See Scotland; or, a Fortnight in the Highlands for £6. Price 1s.
A plain and practical guide.
Hunter’s (Rev. Jos., Historian of Yorkshire) Hallamshire GLOSSARY.Wm. Pickering.1829. Crown 8vo, cloth, 5s. 6d.
This book may serve as a model to all intending glossarists. Copies have long been scarce. In the Appendices are contained reprints of “Ray’s Catalogue of Words heard in the West Ridinq of Yorkshire, 1718,” and “Watson’s Vocabulary of Uncommon Words used in Halifax.”
Horace. The Exquisite Diamond Type Edition. 48mo.Dedicated to Lord Spencer(sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.
Horatii Opera. Didot’s Exquisite Edition, in smallbut very legible type,with numerous most beautiful Photographs from PaintingsbyM. Barrias,with Views of Horace’s Villa, and the various spots immortalised in his Poems. 30s.
Bound in thefinest polished morocco, exquisitely finished and gilt, 45s.; or, with elaborately-tooled sides, after an ancient pattern, 55s.
The archæological part is from an actual survey of the localities by Benouville.This little Volume is the most beautiful edition of Horace ever Published.
EVERY HOUSEKEEPER SHOULD POSSESS A COPY.
Now ready, in cloth, price 2s. 6d., by post, 2s. 8d., the
Housekeeper’s Assistant; a Collection of the most valuable Recipes, carefully written down for future use, by Mrs. B——, during her forty years’ active service.
⁂ As much as two guineas has been paid for a copy of this invaluable little work.
“Truly a ‘Housekeeper’s Assistant.’ We should think the little book would very quickly find a place in all the housekeepers’ rooms in the country. No instructions appear to be given but those which are of the greatest service to persons in the charge of family arrangements.”—Illustrated News.
Jeffery’s (Fred. J.) Genealogical Chart (Enlarged), showing all the Branches of the House of Oldenburg, commonly styled Schleswig-Holstein, now living and occupying the Thrones of Denmark, Russia, Oldenburg, and Greece, and formerly those of Sweden and Norway. Price 1s. 6d.
An interesting Genealogical elucidation of the recent Danish difficulty. The typography is exquisite, and by the adoption of variously-coloured inks, the whole of this difficult question—in its genealogical aspect—is laid plainly before the eye of the student.
THE ORIGINAL EDITION OF JOE MILLER’S JESTS. 1739.
Joe Miller’s Jests; or, the Wit’s Vade Mecum, being a Collection of the most Brilliant Jests, the politest Repartees, the most elegant Bons Mots, and most pleasant short Stories in the English Language. An interesting specimen of remarkable facsimile, 8vo. half morocco, old Dutch paper sides, price 9s. 6d.London: printed by T. Read, 1739.
The book is well known, or rather the Jests are, for the veritablefirst editionof Joe Miller is one of the rarest books in the English language. With regard to the contents of Joe Miller’sJests, the plain-spoken words are neither better nor worse than those in any other similar collection of the period. It is to be regretted that the author did not employ expressions a little less coarse than he has done: his wit and pungency, however, it is impossible to deny. Only a very few copies of this humorous book have been reproduced.
Letters of the Marchioness Broglio Solari, one of the Maids of Honour to the Princess Lamballe, &c.; with a Sketch of her Life, and Recollections of Celebrated Characters. Fcap. 8vo, beautifully printed by Whittingham, price 2s. (Intended to have been sold at 5s.)
The Marchioness Broglio Solari was the natural grand-daughter of Lord Hyde Clarendon, and consequently one of the collateral branches of the Queens Mary and Anne, and their grandfather, the great Chancellor of England. She played an important part in the French Revolution; was the friend of Emperors and Princes; was intimately acquainted with George the Fourth, Burke, Sheridan, Madame de Staël, the Duke of Wellington, Sir Robert Peel, Sir H. Davy, Paganini, &c., of most of whom she gives characteristic anecdotes. The Marchioness endured many troubles, was robbed of her fortune, and for some time obtained her living as an actress at the theatres of London and Dublin. This work was published by an intimate friend, and the entire impression (with the exception of a few copies) passed into the hands of the family. It is believed that only 150 copies were printed. The book (by those who know of its existence) has always been considered as asuppressed work.
Linley’s (Geo., the Song-Writer) Modern Hudibras; a Poem, in Three Cantos. 8vo, 4s.
A rattling satirical poem, the title to which gives a very fair idea of its nature. Social abuses, the sighs and groans of gentility, the trickeries of literature, the cash-prices of art and musical criticisms, and a score of other subjects engage his satirical pen.
Now ready, 8vo, price 1s.,
List of British Plants. Compiled and Arranged by ALEX. MORE, F.L.S.
This comparativeList of British Plantswas drawn up for the use of the country botanist, to show the differences in opinion which exist between different authors as to the number of species which ought to be reckoned within the compass of theFloraof Great Britain.
Second Edition, fcap. 8vo, neatly printed (price 1s.), only 9d.,
Macaulay, the Historian, Statesman, and Essayist: Anecdotes of his Life and Literary Labours, with some Account of his Early and Unknown Writings.
The fine paper edition, cloth, neat, with aPhotographic Portrait(the only one known to have been taken) byMaullandPolyblank(price 2s. 6d.), afew copies only at1s. 6d.
⁂ Includes Anecdotes ofSydney Smith,Moore,Rogers, andLord Jeffrey: and gives numerous examples of Lord Macaulay’s extraordinary memory and great powers of conversation.
Map of Munster (1560-80), including “ye cyties Corke, Lymeryke, Waterforde,” &c., 2 feet square, with both the Old English and Irish Names. Coloured Facsimile, giving very minutely all the Places. 4s. 6d.
Now ready, price 5s.; by post, on roller, 5s. 4d.,
Magna Charta. An Exact Facsimile of the Original Document, preserved in the British Museum, very carefully drawn, and printed on fine plate paper, nearly 3 feet long by 2 wide, with theArms and Seals of the Barons elaborately emblazoned in Gold and Colours.A.D.1215.
Copied by express permission, and the onlycorrectdrawing of the Great Charterever taken. This important memorial of the liberties and rights of Englishmen is admirably adapted for framing, and would hang with propriety from the walls of every house in the country. As a guarantee to the purchaser that the facsimile is exact, the publisher need only state that Sir Frederick Madden has permitted copies to hang for public inspection upon the walls of the Manuscript Department in the British Museum. It was executed by Mr. Harrison, under whose auspices the splendid work on the Knights of the Garter was produced some years ago.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 22s. 6d.It is uniform with the “Roll of Battle Abbey.”
AFull Translation, with Notes, has just been prepared, price 6d. It has been very beautifully printed on a large sheet of tinted paper by Messrs. Whittingham and Wilkins. It may be framed and hung beside the original, or can be pasted at the back, according to the taste of the purchaser.
Map of Ireland, 1567. Facsimile of an extremely curious and interesting old Map, about 2 feet square, giving the Names of the different Tribes, Towns, Villages, Castles, &c., with the Names and Territories of the various great Landed Proprietors in those days; also the Coats of Arms of the old Irish Nobles. 4s. 6d.
PRIVATELY PRINTED HISTORY OF THE MILLAIS FAMILY.
Millais Family, the Lineage and Pedigree of, recording its History from 1331 to 1865, by J. BERTRAND PAYNE, with Illustrations from Designs by the Author. Folio, exquisitely printed on toned paper, with the following Etchings, &c., price 28s.:—
Of this beautiful volume onlysixty copieshave beenprivately printedfor presents to the several members of the family. The work is magnificently bound in blue and gold, theFleur-de-lysand eight-pointed star ornamenting the sides in gilt. These are believed to be the only etchings of an Heraldic character everdesigned and engravedby the distinguished artist of the name.
Mediæval Writers of English History, Gibson (Wm. Sidney,author of the History of Tynemouth), Remarks on the. A popular Sketch of the Advantages and Pleasures derivable fromMonastic Literature. 8vo, 1s. 6d.Pickering, 1848.
An interesting survey of the famous oldEnglish Monastic Writers, to whose pens we are solely indebted for the History of England from the Invasion to the reign of Henry VIII.
Miniatures from Manuscripts of the 14th and 15th Centuries, Four different Collections, each containingtenof thefinest and most exquisite Illuminated Miniature Paintings known to exist, in bright and delicateColoursheightened inGoldandSilver, 7s. 6d. each.
Perfect Gems.The faces are equal to the finest miniatures on ivory. The costumes are resplendent in colour and gold. Of very great use to those who occasionally illuminate, as showing thevery highest perfection of the ancient art.
Monastic Ruins of Yorkshire, from their Foundation to their Decay, byArchdeacon Churton, with magnificent Lithographs in imitation of theOriginal Drawings, byW. Richardson, 2 vols., imp. folio, proof impressions, withinitial letters coloured(published at £18 18s), only £5 18s.
This imposing work is exactly similar, and in every respect equal, to the celebrated Sketches of the Holy Land, by David Roberts. Although it is now offered at a great reduction, the difficulty of reproducing the illustrations insures the work being soon sought after, even at a premium on the published price.
Musée Francais et Musée Royal; ou, Recueil desTableaux et Bas-Reliefs qui composent les Galeries Napoleon et Royale, par Robillard-Peronville et Laurent.Paris, 1816-18.
Both Series Complete, together 6 Vols., atlas folio, £18 18s.
Now offered at a lower price than on any previous occasion.The “Musée Francais,” in 4 vols., was published in 80 livraisons at 48 francs each, being 3,840 francs; with the “Musée Royal” the 6 vols. were published at over £300! Copies when sold by auction have never brought less than £50; and it is believed that the lowest price they have ever sold for on any previous occasion is £35.
The work comprises upwards of 500 large plates in the finest style ofLine Engraving, from the mostcelebrated Paintings and Statues is the World, with Descriptions and very masterly Dissertations, inFrenchandEnglish, on the state of the Fine Arts in various ages,Illustrated with Vignettes.
It is possible that a passing apprehension that the Louvre might not always be allowed to retain the Art Treasures for which he had laid most of the countries of Europe under contribution for its choicest pieces, ledNapoleonto think of forming this splendid series of Line Engravings, the cost of which, for engraving alone, exceededseventy-five thousand pounds sterling, defrayed mostly from the Imperial Treasury. Since the publication of these volumes many of the paintings and sculptures have been claimed and restored to their rightful owners; and the dispersion of so many choice gems enhances the value of the work which describes them in a collected form.
Mr. Hotten keeps sets richly bound in half red morocco, appropriately gilt.
Musée Secret de Naples.—A most curious work in a case,privately printed in Paris,representing some of the more remarkable“Peintures, Bronzes, Mosaiques,” &c.,depicting theCeremonies observed at the earliest known form of Worship.Paris,MD.CCC.XL.
The “Secret Museum” at Naples, from the extraordinary nature of its contents, has always excited the liveliest curiosity amongst antiquaries and students.
Mundy’s (Gen.) Pen and Pencil Sketches in India; or, JOURNAL OF A TOUR IN INDIA. 3rd edition, with many illustrations. 8vo (sells at 5s.), only 2s. 6d.
An exceedingly amusing and instructive volume, giving Europeans an admirable idea of the everyday life of a resident in India. The author visited every portion of our vast empire in company with Viscount Combermere. The hunting stories and exploits are admirably told.
Nell Gwyn, the Story of, and the Sayings of Charles the Second, related and collected by PETER CUNNINGHAM, F.S.A., small 8vo,beautifully printed, with numerous woodcuts relating toNell Gwynne,cloth gilt(sells at 6s.), 2s. 6d.
Novum Testamentum Græcum. The exquisiteDiamond type edition,with a beautiful Frontispiece of Da Vinci’s Last Supper, engraved by Worthington, 48mo (sells at 10s. 6d.), only 2s.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 11s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 13s. 6d.
Ornamental Art, the Treasury of, Illustrative of Objects of Art and Virtù, photographed from the originals in the Museum of Ornamental Art, and drawn on stone by F. Bedford, with descriptive notices by J. C. Robinson, F.S.A., imp. 8vo,71 plates, richly illuminated in colours and gold(pub. at £3 13s. 6d.),elegantly bound in cloth extra, gilt edges, new, £1 7s.
The prejudice is gradually decaying which assigned an inferior status in Art to every production not a picture or a statue; and in this book a choice selection of the finest specimens ofvirtùis made to combat those narrow ideas of the subject which are still popular. The æsthetic value and practical utility of such art is proved thus in a most attractive and magnificent way.The above is one of the most magnificent volumes of Ornamental Art (Ancient Jewellery, Carvings in Wood and Ivory, Cashmere Shawls, Ancient Metal-Work, Sculpture, Glass-Work, &c. &c.) ever produced in any country.
⁂The stones have been destroyed, and Mr. Hotten has the few remaining copies.
Petrarca. The exquisite Diamond type Edition, 48mo. (sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d. Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.
Pansie; the Last Literary Effort of Nathaniel HAWTHORNE.
⁂ All that remains of Hawthorne’s unfinished Romance—a little sketch full of that quaint and delightful genius which gave to the world “The House with the Seven Gables” and “Twice-told Tales.”
Philobiblon. Excellent Traite sur l’Amour desLivres, par Richard de Bury. Small 8vo,half-morocco, very neat,exquisitely printed on ribbed paper, 12s. 6d. 1856.
Only a small number of copies were printed. This edition contains numerous notes on the ancient manuscript copies existing in the old Cathedral Libraries.
This day, in 2 vols., 8vo, very handsomely printed, price 16s.,
THE HOUSEHOLD STORIES OF ENGLAND.
Popular Romances of the West of England; or, the DROLLS OF OLD CORNWALL. Collected and Edited by ROBERT HUNT, F.R.S.
⁂For an analysis of this important work see printed description, which may be obtained gratis at the Publisher’s.
The Work is in Two Series. TheFirstembraces theFabulous Age, orPrehistoric Period; theSecond,The Romances and Superstitions of Historic Times. Many of these Stories are remarkable for their wild poetic beauty; others surprise us by their quaintness; whilst others, again, show forth a tragic force which can only be associated with those rude ages which existed long before the period of authentic history.
Mr. George Cruikshankhas supplied two wonderful pictures as illustrations to the work. One is a portrait of Giant Bolster, a personage 12miles high. The perspective of this extraordinary figure is one of the most marvellous pieces of drawing that ever came from Cruikshank’s magic pencil. The artist acknowledges that it is his most daring conception.
⁂ A limited number of proofs, onIndia paper, have been struck off, price 7s. 6d. the two illustrations.
THE NEW BOOK OF HUMOROUS VERSE.
Now ready, in square 8vo, handsomely printed byClay, cloth extra, full gilt (price 7s. 6d.), a few copies at 3s. 6d. each,
Puck on Pegasus. By H. Cholmondeley Pennell. WithNumerous IllustrationsbyJohn Leech,George Cruikshank,Tenniel, “Phiz” (Hablot K. Browne), andJulian Portch.
“Humorous Poetry of the genuine Ingoldsby or Bon Gaultier kind, with Pictures by the right Artists, is always welcomed by the reading public. The illustrations of ‘Puck on Pegasus’ are by John Leech, George Cruikshank, Tenniel, Phiz (Hablot K. Browne), and Julian Portch, names redolent of mirth and humour.”—London Review.
Now ready,Second Edition, in binding ornamented with postage stamps, price 1s., by post 1s. 2d.,
Postage-Stamp Collecting, a Standard Guide to; Or, A Complete List of all the Postage Stamps known to exist, with their Values and Degrees of Rarity. ByMessrs. Bellars and Davie.
⁂ThisSecond Editiongives upwards of 300 Stamps not in the previous issue.
“A new handbook is about to appear, with the title, ‘The Standard Guide to Postage-Stamp Collecting, with their Values and Degrees of Rarity,’ a work upon which the authors, Messrs. Bellars and Davie, have been engaged for three years. It will include an account of the Mormon Stamp issued by Brigham Young in 1852.”—London Review.
“Unexceptionable in the quality of the paper, clearness of print, &c., it affords an addition to the scientific knowledge attainable by means of the study of postage stamps. A table of characters affords the possessor an opportunity of obtaining an acquaintance with the shape and comparative rarity of stamps. This insight into the marketable value and scarcity of postage stamps is a new feature in books on the subject. The exact words of the inscription on the stamps is greatly conducive to facility of identification, and the queer characters on the Moldavian, Russian, &c., stamps, copied without error, demonstrate the extreme care with which the work must have been got up. The index and money table appended will be found very convenient.”—The Stamp Collectors’ Magazine.
The hitherto Unknown Poem, written by John Bunyan, whilst confined in Bedford Jail, for the Support of his Family, entitled,
Profitable Meditations, Fitted to Man’s Different CONDITION: in a Conference between Christ and a Sinner. By JOHN BUNYAN, Servant to the Lord Jesus Christ.Small 4to, half-morocco, very neat, price 7s. 6d.The few remaining copies now offered at4s. 6d.
This very interesting literary memorial of the Author of the celebrated Pilgrim’s Progress has been choicely reprinted by Whittingham, from the only known copy lately discovered by the publisher. It has been edited, with an Introduction, by George Offor, Esq. The impression is limited.
“A highly-interesting memorial of the great allegorist.”—Athenæum.
Roberts’ (David) Sketches of the Holy Land, Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt, and Nubia,with two hundred and fifty splendid lithographic plates, from those of Louis Haghe, and Historical and Descriptive Notices by the Rev. G. CROLY, LL.D.Library edition, 6 vols., 4to, bound in 3,crimson morocco gilt,gilt edges(sells at £21 21s.), only £4 18s.
Ib.6 vols. Half morocco, very neat, £4 4s.
Ib.6 vols. In cloth, elegant, £3 18s.
This day, on toned paper, price 6d.,
Robson; a Sketch, by George Augustus Sala. An interesting Biography of the great Serio-Comic Actor, with sketches of his famous characters, “Jem Baggs,” “Boots at the Swan,” “The Yellow Dwarf,” “Daddy Hardacre,” &c.Anecdotes of the old Olympic Theatre are also given.
Rodd’s Collection of Scarce and Curious Portraits, to illustrate Grainger’s History of England, forming a Supplement toRichardson’swell-known collection, above 50plates, faithfully copied fromRare Originals, 2 vols in 1, 4to, half bound, neat,edges uncut,large paper, 12s. 6d. only.
A very interesting collection. Many of the portraits are from unique copies.
ILLUSTRATED EDITION OF ROGERS’ POEMS.
Rogers’ (Samuel) Poems, 1860. The Author’sLuxurious Edition, with the delightful Vignettes of W. M. Turner, Stothard, Flaxman, and others, Engraved in the most delicate and highly-finished stylebyFinden. 8vo,with portrait and memoir,fine impressions,cloth gilt(sells at 28s.), 8s. 6d.
A few picked copies have been selected and bound to various patterns in the best morocco.
Morocco, very plain and neat, with a simple gold thread around the sides, gilt edges, 17s. 6d.
In polished morocco of the very finest grain, with bevelled boards, very highly finished, the edges gilt and burnished, 25s.
Now ready, in 4to, very handsomely printed, with curious woodcut initial letters, by Whittingham and Wilkins, extra cloth, 18s.; or crimson morocco extra, the sides and back covered in rich fleur-de-lys, gold tooling, 55s.,
Roll of Carlaverlock; with the Arms of the Earls,Barons, and Knights who were present at the Siege of this Castle in Scotland, 28 Edward I.,A.D.1300; including theOriginal Anglo-Norman Poem, and anEnglish Translationof the MS. in the British Museum; the whole newly edited by THOMAS WRIGHT, Esq., M.A., F.S.A.
A very handsome volume, and a delightful one to lovers of Heraldry, as it is theearliest blazon of arms known to exist. “It contains the accurate blazon of above one hundred Knights or Bannerets of the reign of Edward I., among whom were the King, the Prince of Wales, and a greater part of the Peers of the realm;” thus affording evidence of the perfect state of the Science of Heraldry at that early period.The arms are exquisitely emblazoned in gold and colours.
Now ready, uniform with “Magna Charta,” price 5s.; by post, on roller, 5s. 4d.,
Roll of Battle Abbey; or, a List of the PrincipalWarriorswho came over from Normandy withWilliam the Conquerorand settled in this country,A.D.1066-7, from Authentic Documents, very carefully drawn, and printed on fine plate paper, nearly three feet long by two feet wide, with theArms of the principal Barons elaborately emblazoned in gold and colours.
Amost curious document, and of the greatest interest, as the descendants of nearly all these Norman Conquerors are at this moment living amongst us, bearing the old Anglo-Norman names, slightly altered, but little dreaming of the relationship betwixt them and the bold warriors who fought and won at Hastings nearly a thousand years ago. The writing, of the period, is very legible.No names are believed to be in this “Battel Roll” which are not fully entitled to the distinction.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, price 22s. 6d.
NEW DICTIONARY OF COLLOQUIAL ENGLISH.
Slang Dictionary; or, The Vulgar Words, StreetPhrases, and“Fast” Expressions of HighandLow Society; many with their Etymology, and a few with their History traced.With curious illustrations.Pp. 328, in 8vo, price 6s. 6d., by post, 7s.
⁂ One hundred and forty newspapers in this country alone have reviewed with approbation this Dictionary of Colloquial English. TheTimesdevoted three columns to explain its merits, and the littleJohn o’ Groat’s Journalgave its modest paragraph in eulogy. “It may be doubted if there exists a more amusing volume in the English language.”—Spectator.“Valuable as a work of reference.”—Saturday Review.“All classes of society will find amusement and instruction in its pages.”—Times.
⁂ With this work is incorporatedThe Dictionary of Modern Slang, Cant, and Vulgar Words, issued by “a London Antiquary” in 1859. The first edition of that work contained about 3,000 words; the second, issued twelve months later, gave upwards of 5,000. Both editions were reviewed by the critical press with an approval seldom accorded to small works of the kind. During the six years that have elapsed, the compiler has gone over the field of unrecognised English once more. The entire subject has been resurveyed, outlying terms and phrases have been brought in, new street-words have been added, and better illustrations of old colloquial expressions given. The result is the volume before the reader, which offers, for his amusement or instruction, nearly 10,000 words and phrases commonly deemed “vulgar,” but which are used by the highest and lowest, the best, the wisest, as well as the worst and most ignorant of society.
Shakspeare’s Dramatic Works. One of a few Copieson a fine and beautiful paper,the printing by Whittingham of Chiswick,the illustrations by Stothard,with charming little ornamental head-pieces, half morocco, very neat, top edge crimsoned, contents lettered, 10 vols., post 8vo (sells at £6 15s., unbound), 58s. only; or, in yellow (or green) calf extra and delicately-tooled backs, £5 18s.Whittingham, 1856.
The only really handsome and readable edition of Shakspeare, convenient in size and accurate in text, ever printed. Achoicely-printededition has long been a positive want. I can recommend the above in the strongest terms.But a limited number were printed on this beautiful paper, with glorious margins.
Stokes (H. Sewell of Truro) the Vale of Lanherne, and other Poems, 8vo,best edition, with numeroustinted Illustrations Depicting the Lovely Scenery of the Neighbourhood(sells at 12s. 6d.),perfectly new and fresh, in cloth, elegant, for 3s. 6d. Longman, 1853.
It was quite by accident that the publisher fell in with a few copies of this delightful volume at an exceedingly low price. In the old book market copies have been scarce for some time past. Amongst theIllustrationsmay be enumerated theVale of Lanherne—Nunnery of Lanherne and Church of St. Mawgan—Ancient Cross in Mawgan Churchyard—Tregurrion Bay—The Norwegian’s Rock, and theEyry.
Tasso, la Gerusalemme Liberata. The exquisiteDiamond Type Edition, 2 vols., 48mo. (sells at 10s.), only 2s.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 21s. or, with the sides delicately tooled, 25s.
Ten Thousand Wonderful Things, comprising theMarvellousandRare,Odd,Curious,Quaint,Eccentric, andExtraordinaryin All Ages and Nations, in Art, Nature, and Science, including many Wonders of the World. By ED. FILLINGHAM KING, M.A. Post 8vo, 684 pages,with upwards of 400 very interesting woodcuts, comprising nearly everything noticeable in Nature and Art,neatly half-bound morocco, cloth sides, 4s. 10d. only.
A most amusing at the same time that it is a very instructive volume. It contains the pith ofNotes and Queries, the whole of Mr. John Timbs’ labours in the world of literary curiosity, the essence of half-a-dozen Encyclopædias, the marrow of such journals as the oldPenny Magazine, and admirable selections from the most rare, quaint, and marvellous books in the British Museum and elsewhere. Open the work at any page, and the reader is sure to beedified and interested—and this is more than can be said of one book in ten thousand.
Terentius. The exquisite Diamond Type Edition, 48mo. (sells at 6s), only 1s. 6d.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.
LIFE AND ANECDOTES OF THACKERAY.
Now ready, in post 8vo, beautifully printed, price 7s. 6d.,
Thackeray: the Humourist and the Man of Letters. The Story of his Life and Literary Labours. With some particulars of his Early Career never before made public. By THEODORE TAYLOR, Esq., Membre de la Société des Gens de Lettres.
Illustrated with aPhotographic Portrait(one of the mostcharacteristicknown to have been taken) byErnest Edwards, B.A.; view ofMr. Thackeray’s house, built after a favourite design of the great Novelist’s;facsimile of his handwriting, long noted in London literary circles for its exquisite neatness; and a curious little sketch of hiscoat of arms, a pen and pencil humorously introduced as the crest, the motto “Nobilitas est sola virtus” (Virtue is the sole nobility).
Includes anecdotesof the London Literati during the past thirty years; account of theThackeray family, showing the origin of their connexion with India;Thackeray’s school-daysat the Charterhouse; his career atCambridge; residence inGermany, andArt-studies in Paris; literary apprenticeship in London; his connexion with “Fraser” and Maginn’s staff; his marriage; partiality to Kensington as a place of residence; his publication of “Vanity Fair,” and the establishment of his fame; with many other interesting matters connected with his literary career.
12th Thousand, beautifully printed, 12mo, neat, 1s.; by post, 1s. 2d., THE CHOICEST HUMOROUS POETRY OF THE AGE.
The Biglow Papers. By James Russell Lowell.
⁂This Edition has been Edited with additional Notes explanatory of the persons and subjects mentioned therein, and is the only complete and correct Edition published in this country.
“The celebrated ‘Biglow Papers.’”—Times, July 25th.
“The Rhymes are as startling and felicitous as any in ‘Hudibras.’ ‘Sam Slick’ is a mere pretender in comparison.”—Blackwood’s Magazine.
“The fun of the ‘Biglow Papers’ is quite equal to the fun of the ‘Ingoldsby Legends.’ This is the real doggerel, the Rabelaiesque of poetry.”—Fraser.
⁂An Edition withColoured IllustrationsbyGeorge Cruikshankhas been prepared, strongly bound in cloth, price 3s. 6d. per copy.
ANECDOTES OF THE “LONG PARLIAMENT” OF 1645.
Now ready, in small 4to, half morocco, very choicely printed by Whittingham, with floreated capitals, price 7s. 6d.,
The Mystery of the Good Cause: Sarcastic Notices of those Members of theLong Parliamentthat held Places, both Civil and Military, contrary to the Self-denying Ordinance of April 3, 1645; with the Sums of Money and Lands they divided among themselves.
Gives many curious particulars about the famous Assembly not mentioned by historians or biographers. It has just been very carefully reprinted from the excessively rare original. The history of almost every county in England receives some illustration from it. Genealogists and antiquaries will find in it much interesting matter.
GUNTER’S CONFECTIONERY.
Now ready, handsomely printed, post 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, price 6s. 6d.,
The Modern Confectioner: a Practical Guide to the latest and most improved methods for making the various kinds of Confectionery; with the manner of Preparing and Laying out Desserts; adapted for Private Families or Large Establishments. By WILLIAM JEANES, Chief Confectioner at Messrs. Gunter’s (Confectioners to Her Majesty), Berkeley-square.
⁂ A new and reliable work on the making of Confectionery and the Laying out of Desserts has long been wanted. No pains have been spared to make the present book a useful and safe guide to all Cooks and Housekeepers in private families or large establishments. The Name of the Chief Confectioner at the justly-celebrated house of Gunter & Co., in Berkeley-square, is a sufficient guarantee of the usefulness of the book.
“The most important work which has been published for many years upon the art of making Confectionery, Pastry, and on the arrangement and general ordering of Desserts.”—Daily News.
“The language is so simple that a child can with ease understand the longest recipes.”—Observer.
“All housekeepers should have it.”—Daily Telegraph.
Now ready, in cloth extra (only a few copies for sale), price 15s.,
The Noble and Gentlemen of England; or, Notes touching the Arms and Descentsof the Ancient Knightly and Gentle Houses of England, arranged in their respective Counties, attempted by EVELYN PHILIP SHIRLEY, Esq., M.A., F.S.A., one of the Knights of the Shire for the County of Warwick, 4to,handsomely printed, pp. 321,with numerous heraldic illustrations.
A very interesting work on the English Families now existing, that were regularly established either asknightlyorgentlehouses before 1500. It notices also the ancient and present estates of these county families. The work possesses considerable value to those who are interested in genealogical and heraldic studies.
SHAKESPEARE’S ENGLAND.
Thornbury’s (Walter) Shakespeare’s England: Sketches ofSocial Historyin theReignofElizabeth. 2 vols, crown 8vo.Published byLongmanat 21s., only 4s. 9d., quite perfect, and newly bound in cloth.
Two most interesting andreadablevolumes, thoroughly entering into the spirit of that most romantic period of English history, containing Chapters on theStreets of Old London,Mansions and Palaces,Bear Gardens,Bartholomew Fair,Elizabethan Amusements,Curious Dishes,Drinks,Superstitions,Alchemy,Witchcraft,Revels,Youthful Sports, &c. &c.
Tobacco; its History, Cultivation, Manufacture, and Adulterations. By ANDREW STEINMETZ. 12mo, 9d.
A curious little Book of nearly 200 pages, relative to the often-repeated question, “IS SMOKING INJURIOUS TO HEALTH?”
The author, however, speaks somewhat in favour of the habit.
Now ready, 8vo, price 1s.,
Traditionary Anecdotes of Shakespeare, collected in Warwickshire in the year 1693, from the original MS. Edited by J. P. COLLIER.
Trelawny’s (E. J.) Recollections of the Last Days ofShelleyandByron. 8vo,fine portrait and plate(sells at 9s.), only 3s. 6d.
Trelawny was the intimate companion of Byron and Shelley, and was the first to find the body of the latter after the unfortunate accident which was the cause of his death. The book gives many particulars never before made public.
Now ready, on toned paper, handsomely printed, price 1s. 6d.,
Vere Vereker’s Vengeance; A Sensation in Several PAROXYSMS,by THOMAS HOOD, idiotically illustrated by WILLIAM BRUNTON.
⁂ One of the most amusing volumes which have been published for a long time. For a piece of broad humour, of the highly-sensational kind, it is perhaps the best effort of Mr. Hood’s pen.
Virgilii Opera, ed. Joannis Bond. Didot’s exquisiteedition, in small but very legible type,with numerous most beautiful Photographs, from PaintingsbyM. Barrias. 24mo. 35s.
The most exquisite Classically illustrated edition of Virgil ever published.
Choicely bound in morocco of the finest quality, tooled and gilt in the most finished style, 58s.; or with elaborately tooled sides, after an ancient pattern, £3 5s.
BEST FRENCH LESSON BOOK EVER PUBLISHED.
Ordinary price, 5s., a few copies now offered at 3s. 6d.,
Vocabulaire Symbolique. A Symbolic French and English Vocabulary, for Students of every age. By RAGONET. Illustrated by many hundred Woodcuts, exhibiting familiar objects of every description, with French and English Explanations, thus stamping the French terms and phrases indelibly on the mind.
Walton’s Lives of Donne, Wotton, Hooker, Herbert, and Sanderson. 48mo.The Exquisite Diamond Type Edition.Portraits(sells at 6s.), only 1s. 6d.
Artistically bound in morocco, with exquisite taste and neatness, 10s. 6d.; or, with the sides delicately tooled, 12s. 6d.
INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862.
Waring’s Masterpieces of Industrial Art and Sculpture at theExhibitionof 1862.3 vols. folio, an original Subscriber’s Copy, perfectly clean, in Parts(cost £18 18s.), £12 18s.
The publishers destroyed the stones on the closing of the subscription list, and no more copies were printed than those subscribed for.
Now ready, price 2s.; by post, on roller, 2s. 4d.,
Warrant to Execute Charles I. An Exact Facsimile of this Important Document in the House of Lords, with theFifty-nine Signaturesof the Regicides, and Corresponding Seals, admirably executed on paper made to imitate the original Document, 22 in. by 14 in.
Copied by express permission.—King Charles I., January 20th, 1648, was brought from St. James’s to Sir R. Cotton’s house (now the Speaker’s residence), and was four days arraigned at the bar of the House of Commons by Bradshaw, and seventy-nine Judges Commissioners, named for his Trial. The original document was kept in the Old House of Peers’ Library, and being saved from the Fire, was preserved in the Poet’s Tower, and is now under the librarian’s care at the House of Lords. Some of the Regicides died in America, while many of the children of those executed at the Restoration betook themselves to that country, and laid the foundations of many of the first families in New England.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 14s. 6d.
Now ready, safe on roller, 2s.; by post, 2s. 4d.,
Warrant to Execute Mary Queen of Scots. The Exact Facsimile of this Important Document, including the Signature of Queen Elizabeth and Facsimile of the Great Seal, on tinted paper,made to imitate the original MS.
“I praise and thank my God that it pleases Him to put an end by this to the many miseries and calamities that they have compelled me to endure; for, since nineteen years up to the present moment, I have been constituted a prisoner, and very evilly entreated by the Queen of England, my sister, without ever having injured, as God is my principal witness.”—Mary’s Reply to my Lord Beale, who was commissioned to inform her of Elizabeth’s Sentence of Death.Handsomely framed and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 14s. 6d.
ANTIQUITIES OF DENMARK AND ENGLAND.
Worsaæ’s Primeval Antiquities of Denmark. Translated andappliedto the Illustration ofsimilar RemainsinEnglandbyW. J. Thoms. 8vo.Abounding with finely-cut Wood Engravings by Jewitt.Anew copy in cloth, 3s. 9d. (sells at 10s. 6d.)
The history and account ofAncientDenmark, itsMonuments,Burial Mounds,Sepulchral Stones, andFire Beacons, itsGiantandFairy Lore, offer many curious points of resemblance to our own early history. Whilst the Antiquities of Rome, Greece, and Egypt have been carefully examined and systematically described by English writers, the primeval national antiquities of the British Islands have never hitherto been brought into a scientific arrangement. The close connexion which in the old time existed between Denmark and the British Islands renders it natural that British antiquaries should turn with interest to the antiquities of Denmark, and compare them with those of their own country.The book has long been scarce.
Now ready, with nearly 300 Drawings from Nature, 2s. 6d. plain, 4s. coloured by hand, The
Young Botanist: a Popular Guide to Elementary Botany. By T. S. RALPH, of the Linnean Society.
⁂ An excellent book for the young beginner. “The plan which has been adopted is as simple as the author has found it to be in his power to follow out. As few hard names as possible have been employed, and when so used will generally be found accompanied with some familiar expression which can be adopted as a substitute. The objects selected as illustrations are either easy of access as specimens of wild plants, or are common in gardens.”