NEW ILLUSTRATED BOOKS.A COLONIAL TRAMP: Travels and Adventures in Australia and New Guinea. ByHume Nisbet. Profusely Illustrated by the Author. 2 vols., demy 8vo.BRAYHARD: The Strange Adventures of One Ass and Seven Champions. ByF. M. Allen. Illustrated byHarry Furniss. Crown 8vo. 6s.The Édition de Luxe ofAS IN A LOOKING GLASS. ByF. C. Philips. Illustrated byG. Du Maurier. Extra crown quarto, 31s. 6d.Mrs. Panton's Household Manuals.FROM KITCHEN TO GARRET. Crown 8vo, 6s.NOOKS AND CORNERS. Crown 8vo, 6s.THE FLOATING PRINCE, and other Fairy Tales. By the Author of "Rudder Grange." With Forty Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 6s.PERFERVID: The Career of Ninian Jameison. ByJohn Davidson. Illustrated byHarry Furniss. Crown 8vo, 6s.PICTURESQUE LONDON. ByPercy Fitzgerald. With about 100 Illustrations. Extra crown 4to.SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY. ByJohn Ashton. Profusely Illustrated. 2 vols., demy 8vo, 30s.UP AND DOWN: Sketches of Travel. ByG. Macquoid. Illustrated byThos. R. Macquoid. Demy 8vo, 10s. 6d.MEMORIES OF THE MONTH. ByHume Nisbet. With Photogravure Frontispiece, twelve whole-page, and numerous smaller Illustrations. Foolscap 4to, 21s.TING-A-LING TALES. ByFrank R. Stockton. Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d.AN ARTIST'S TOUR IN NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA AND IN THE SANDWICH ISLANDS. ByB. Kroupa. Profusely Illustrated by the Author. Royal 8vo, 21s.FOLK AND FAIRY TALES. By Mrs.Burton Harrison. With 24 whole-page Illustrations byWalter Crane. Crown 8vo, 6s.WARD AND DOWNEY, PUBLISHERS, LONDON.
NEW ILLUSTRATED BOOKS.
A COLONIAL TRAMP: Travels and Adventures in Australia and New Guinea. ByHume Nisbet. Profusely Illustrated by the Author. 2 vols., demy 8vo.
BRAYHARD: The Strange Adventures of One Ass and Seven Champions. ByF. M. Allen. Illustrated byHarry Furniss. Crown 8vo. 6s.
The Édition de Luxe of
AS IN A LOOKING GLASS. ByF. C. Philips. Illustrated byG. Du Maurier. Extra crown quarto, 31s. 6d.
Mrs. Panton's Household Manuals.
FROM KITCHEN TO GARRET. Crown 8vo, 6s.
NOOKS AND CORNERS. Crown 8vo, 6s.
THE FLOATING PRINCE, and other Fairy Tales. By the Author of "Rudder Grange." With Forty Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 6s.
PERFERVID: The Career of Ninian Jameison. ByJohn Davidson. Illustrated byHarry Furniss. Crown 8vo, 6s.
PICTURESQUE LONDON. ByPercy Fitzgerald. With about 100 Illustrations. Extra crown 4to.
SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY. ByJohn Ashton. Profusely Illustrated. 2 vols., demy 8vo, 30s.
UP AND DOWN: Sketches of Travel. ByG. Macquoid. Illustrated byThos. R. Macquoid. Demy 8vo, 10s. 6d.
MEMORIES OF THE MONTH. ByHume Nisbet. With Photogravure Frontispiece, twelve whole-page, and numerous smaller Illustrations. Foolscap 4to, 21s.
TING-A-LING TALES. ByFrank R. Stockton. Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d.
AN ARTIST'S TOUR IN NORTH AND CENTRAL AMERICA AND IN THE SANDWICH ISLANDS. ByB. Kroupa. Profusely Illustrated by the Author. Royal 8vo, 21s.
FOLK AND FAIRY TALES. By Mrs.Burton Harrison. With 24 whole-page Illustrations byWalter Crane. Crown 8vo, 6s.
WARD AND DOWNEY, PUBLISHERS, LONDON.
1: The Corn Bill passed the Commons on the 10th of March, and the Lords on the 20th.2: Lambeth Street, Whitechapel, removed to Arbour Square, Stepney, and now called the Thames Police Office.3: From this time until Napoleon sailed for St. Helena, I quote, sometimes at length, from my book, "English Caricature and Satire on Napoleon I.," because I then wrote, thoroughly imbued with the subject, and with every authority at hand—I can do no more now, than to add a little to it.—J. A.4: This title was never recognized by the FrenchNationuntil the assumption of Imperial dignity by Louis—under the title of Napoleon III.5: General Gourgaud.6: A measure of about one hundred fathoms. In all marine charts a Cable is deemed 607.56 feet, or one-tenth of a Sea Mile.7: "A Visit to Bonaparte in Plymouth Sound," by a Lady. Plymouth, 1815.8: Mackerel.9: "Interesting Particulars of Napoleon's Deportation for Life to St. Helena," &c. London, 1816. Printed for W. Hone.10: By George Colman the Younger.11:I.e., the midshipmen who took female parts.12: Transported.13: Shaw the Lifeguardsman.14: Battle of Waterloo.15: Cowardice.16: Of course, now-a-days we can hardly understand this; but the old tubs used to take their time then.—It is recorded in the "Annual Register" of 1815, as follows: "16 December.—A vessel is arrived in the Thames from New South Wales after an extraordinarily short passage of less than five months."17: It took longer,videthis extract fromThe Globe, March 18, 1889:—"A Tardy Honour.—Captain Gammell is 92. It is only within the last ten days that he has received an honour which he won nearly three-quarters of a century ago. As Ensign James Gammell he was present at the sortie of Bayonne, and leaving the army shortly afterwards never applied for the medal. At last Captain Gammell has found himself decorated with two—one the Jubilee medal, accompanied by a letter from Sir Henry Ponsonby on behalf of the Queen; the other the Peninsular medal, with the clasp for the Nive, forwarded by the Duke of Cambridge. It is never too late to decorate a gallant man, and Colonel Balguy, who has been active in this matter, is to be congratulated upon the success which his efforts have attained."18: The Regent was then meditating taking proceedings for a divorce from his wife.19: In May, 1816, he was made a General in the British army, and afterwards Field Marshal.20: This gentleman will be noticed in matters theatrical.21: Lord Yarmouth.22: A rough-and-ready way of loading guns, before Cartridges and Breech loaders were introduced, was by measuring out so many bowls of a Tobacco pipe full of powder and shot.23: From Bow Street.24: Hunt must have known he was lying, for George Canning was born in London in 1770. His family was originally of Foxcote, in Warwickshire, and one of his ancestors had emigrated to Ireland, at the commencement of the seventeenth century, as agent of a company of Londoners in the plantation of Ulster, and settled at Garvagh, in the county of Londonderry. His father, George Canning, who had been educated for the bar, to which he was called by the Society of the Middle Temple, having offended his parents by marrying a lady inferior to him both in rank and fortune, was cut off by them with a pittance of £150 per annum. Finding himself thus discarded by his family, who possessed considerable property in Ireland, he left that country, and removed with his wife to London, where, after unavailing efforts to enlarge the means of subsistence, he died broken-hearted, in a year after the birth of his son.25: Hereford House.26: Mat o' the Mint was a character in Gay's Beggar's Opera.27:ColeorCoalis thieves' slang for money, and many people carry a piece of Coal in their pocket, under the belief that so long as they haveColein their pocket they will never want for money.28: Hon. Sec., Miss M. Lyall, 14, Nottingham Place, W.29: Probably Matthew Buchinger, who died 1722.30: A trip to Brighton, say a little over fifty miles, is recorded to have been done in nine hours.31:"O wad some Pow'r the giftie gie us,To see oursels as others see us!"Burns, "To a Louse, on seeing one on a Lady's bonnet, at Church."32: My italics.—J. A.33: Italics are mine.—J. A.34:Spectator, No. 130.35: "Social Life in the Reign of Queen Anne," by John Ashton.36:Isaac Waltonsays, "Now let's go to an honest alehouse where we may have a cup of good barley wine, and sing 'Old Rose,' and all of us rejoice together." And we get a presumed explanation of the Song inThe British Apollo(1708-9)."In good King Stephen's days, the Ram,An ancient inn at Nottingham,Was kept, as our wise father knows,By a brisk female call'dOld Rose;Many, like you, who hated thinking,Or any other theme than drinking,Met there, d'ye see, in sanguine hopeTo kiss their landlady, and tope;But one cross night, 'mongst twenty other,The fire burnt not, without great pother,TillRose, at last, began to sing,And the cold blades to dance and spring;So, by their exercise and kisses,They grew as warm as were their wishes;When, scorning fire, the jolly fellowsCry'd, 'Sing Old Rose, and burn the bellows.'"37: The East India College.
1: The Corn Bill passed the Commons on the 10th of March, and the Lords on the 20th.
2: Lambeth Street, Whitechapel, removed to Arbour Square, Stepney, and now called the Thames Police Office.
3: From this time until Napoleon sailed for St. Helena, I quote, sometimes at length, from my book, "English Caricature and Satire on Napoleon I.," because I then wrote, thoroughly imbued with the subject, and with every authority at hand—I can do no more now, than to add a little to it.—J. A.
4: This title was never recognized by the FrenchNationuntil the assumption of Imperial dignity by Louis—under the title of Napoleon III.
5: General Gourgaud.
6: A measure of about one hundred fathoms. In all marine charts a Cable is deemed 607.56 feet, or one-tenth of a Sea Mile.
7: "A Visit to Bonaparte in Plymouth Sound," by a Lady. Plymouth, 1815.
8: Mackerel.
9: "Interesting Particulars of Napoleon's Deportation for Life to St. Helena," &c. London, 1816. Printed for W. Hone.
10: By George Colman the Younger.
11:I.e., the midshipmen who took female parts.
12: Transported.
13: Shaw the Lifeguardsman.
14: Battle of Waterloo.
15: Cowardice.
16: Of course, now-a-days we can hardly understand this; but the old tubs used to take their time then.—It is recorded in the "Annual Register" of 1815, as follows: "16 December.—A vessel is arrived in the Thames from New South Wales after an extraordinarily short passage of less than five months."
17: It took longer,videthis extract fromThe Globe, March 18, 1889:—"A Tardy Honour.—Captain Gammell is 92. It is only within the last ten days that he has received an honour which he won nearly three-quarters of a century ago. As Ensign James Gammell he was present at the sortie of Bayonne, and leaving the army shortly afterwards never applied for the medal. At last Captain Gammell has found himself decorated with two—one the Jubilee medal, accompanied by a letter from Sir Henry Ponsonby on behalf of the Queen; the other the Peninsular medal, with the clasp for the Nive, forwarded by the Duke of Cambridge. It is never too late to decorate a gallant man, and Colonel Balguy, who has been active in this matter, is to be congratulated upon the success which his efforts have attained."
18: The Regent was then meditating taking proceedings for a divorce from his wife.
19: In May, 1816, he was made a General in the British army, and afterwards Field Marshal.
20: This gentleman will be noticed in matters theatrical.
21: Lord Yarmouth.
22: A rough-and-ready way of loading guns, before Cartridges and Breech loaders were introduced, was by measuring out so many bowls of a Tobacco pipe full of powder and shot.
23: From Bow Street.
24: Hunt must have known he was lying, for George Canning was born in London in 1770. His family was originally of Foxcote, in Warwickshire, and one of his ancestors had emigrated to Ireland, at the commencement of the seventeenth century, as agent of a company of Londoners in the plantation of Ulster, and settled at Garvagh, in the county of Londonderry. His father, George Canning, who had been educated for the bar, to which he was called by the Society of the Middle Temple, having offended his parents by marrying a lady inferior to him both in rank and fortune, was cut off by them with a pittance of £150 per annum. Finding himself thus discarded by his family, who possessed considerable property in Ireland, he left that country, and removed with his wife to London, where, after unavailing efforts to enlarge the means of subsistence, he died broken-hearted, in a year after the birth of his son.
25: Hereford House.
26: Mat o' the Mint was a character in Gay's Beggar's Opera.
27:ColeorCoalis thieves' slang for money, and many people carry a piece of Coal in their pocket, under the belief that so long as they haveColein their pocket they will never want for money.
28: Hon. Sec., Miss M. Lyall, 14, Nottingham Place, W.
29: Probably Matthew Buchinger, who died 1722.
30: A trip to Brighton, say a little over fifty miles, is recorded to have been done in nine hours.
31:
"O wad some Pow'r the giftie gie us,To see oursels as others see us!"
"O wad some Pow'r the giftie gie us,To see oursels as others see us!"
Burns, "To a Louse, on seeing one on a Lady's bonnet, at Church."
32: My italics.—J. A.
33: Italics are mine.—J. A.
34:Spectator, No. 130.
35: "Social Life in the Reign of Queen Anne," by John Ashton.
36:Isaac Waltonsays, "Now let's go to an honest alehouse where we may have a cup of good barley wine, and sing 'Old Rose,' and all of us rejoice together." And we get a presumed explanation of the Song inThe British Apollo(1708-9).
"In good King Stephen's days, the Ram,An ancient inn at Nottingham,Was kept, as our wise father knows,By a brisk female call'dOld Rose;Many, like you, who hated thinking,Or any other theme than drinking,Met there, d'ye see, in sanguine hopeTo kiss their landlady, and tope;But one cross night, 'mongst twenty other,The fire burnt not, without great pother,TillRose, at last, began to sing,And the cold blades to dance and spring;So, by their exercise and kisses,They grew as warm as were their wishes;When, scorning fire, the jolly fellowsCry'd, 'Sing Old Rose, and burn the bellows.'"
"In good King Stephen's days, the Ram,An ancient inn at Nottingham,Was kept, as our wise father knows,By a brisk female call'dOld Rose;Many, like you, who hated thinking,Or any other theme than drinking,Met there, d'ye see, in sanguine hopeTo kiss their landlady, and tope;But one cross night, 'mongst twenty other,The fire burnt not, without great pother,TillRose, at last, began to sing,And the cold blades to dance and spring;So, by their exercise and kisses,They grew as warm as were their wishes;When, scorning fire, the jolly fellowsCry'd, 'Sing Old Rose, and burn the bellows.'"
37: The East India College.
Transcriber's notes: Obvious printer's errors have been silently corrected, all other inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling has been maintained.Other changes made:—Page43: "Generals Savary and Tallemand" changed to "Generals Savary and Lallemand".—Page54: "Argaud lamps" changed to "Argand lamps".—Page125: "'And, will you protect me!" changed to "'And, will you protect me?"—The books' advertisements have been moved from the front to the back of the e-book.In the index, the links in bold green are external links leading to the 1. volume at Gutenberg.org. They will open in a new browser tab.
Transcriber's notes: Obvious printer's errors have been silently corrected, all other inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling has been maintained.
Other changes made:
—Page43: "Generals Savary and Tallemand" changed to "Generals Savary and Lallemand".
—Page54: "Argaud lamps" changed to "Argand lamps".
—Page125: "'And, will you protect me!" changed to "'And, will you protect me?"
—The books' advertisements have been moved from the front to the back of the e-book.
In the index, the links in bold green are external links leading to the 1. volume at Gutenberg.org. They will open in a new browser tab.