BOOKS LATELY PUBLISHED BY
ADAM BLACK, Edinburgh , AND LONGMAN, REES, ORME, BROWN, & GREEN LONDON.
A SYSTEM of UNIVERSAL GEOGRAPHY, by M. Malte-Brun , Editor of the Annales des Voyages, &c. Parts I. to XII. price 7s. 6d. each. To be completed in Fourteen Parts.
The Publishers are extremely happy to be able to state, that, notwithstanding the lamented death of M. Malte-Brun, the remainder of this great work, comprising the description of Western Europe , will be completed in a style every way worthy of what has been already executed. The papers and collections of M. Malte-Brun have been placed in the hands of M. Valcknaer, with whose numerous and valuable contributions to geographical science the scientific portion of the public have been long and familiarly acquainted. M. Balbi, the celebrated author of the Essai Statistique sur le Royaume de Portugal, has undertaken to superintend and complete that portion of the work which relates to Italy, Spain, and Portugal. There can, therefore, be no doubt, that the high and established character of the Original Work will be maintained to its close; and the British Public may be assured, that no efforts will be spared to render the Translation, now in course of publication, not only equal, but even superior, to the original. The account of the British Empire will be carefully revised, and, if necessary, re-written by gentlemen who are extremely well versed in statistical inquiries. The reports and papers printed by order of the House of Commons will be referred to for every fact of importance; and the Publishers believe that they may venture to say, that the account which will be given in this work of the Agriculture, Manufactures, and Commerce of Great Britain, will be decidedly superior to any that has hitherto appeared.
The account of the United States, given in the Translation, is an entirely original composition; and it is admitted by the Americans themselves, to contain the most able, comprehensive, and luminous account of that powerful confederacy that has ever been published.
M. Malte-Brun is probably known to most of our readers as the author of a systematic work on Geography. He is, besides, the editor of a periodical digest, under the title of Nouvelles Annales des Voyages de la Geographie et de lHistoire; the first as much superior to the compilations of our Guthries and Pinkertons, as the other is to the garbled productions of our Truslers and Mavors.Quarterly Review, No. 52.
But however highly we may estimate this publication, which is, in our opinion, infinitely superior to anything of its class which has ever appeared, it is not of a kind which we can illustrate by extracts. We can merely state, that it is admirable in its original form,that it is well translated,that it is printed in a fair style, so as to fit it not only for libraries, but for families and schools,and that, in fine, it is a work that neither library, family, nor school, should be without.Literary Gazette, No. 405.
JOURNAL of a SOLDIER of the 71st REGIMENT, HIGHLAND LIGHT INFANTRY, from 1806 to 1815. Including particulars of the Battles of Vimeira, Corunna, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Toulouse, and Waterloo. Third Edition. 1 vol. 12mo, 5s.
The Journal of a Soldier of the 71st Regiment, first gave the public a taste for narratives of the personal adventures, and the sufferings, and hair-breadth escapes, of military men. That Journal excited a very considerable degree of interest. It was written with ease and simplicity, and indicated no small powers of description and observation. There was a romantic interest, too, attached to the history of the writer, as developed in his own modest and unvarnished tale. But moreover, as disclosing the mode of life, and the hardships and privations of the common soldier, it let in a new light on the commonly received notions of warlike expeditions.Saturday Post.
The EDINBURGH MEDICAL and SURGICAL JOURNAL. Vols. 27 and 28; being those for 1827. Published in Numbers, Quarterly, price 6s.
The EDINBURGH NEW PHILOSOPHICAL JOURNAL; exhibiting a View of the Progressive Discoveries and Improvements in the Sciences and the Arts . Conducted by Robert Jameson , F.R.S.L. & E. Regius Professor of Natural History, Lecturer on Mineralogy, and Keeper of the Museum of the University of Edinburgh, &c. &c. Published Quarterly, price 7s. 6d.
MEMOIRS of the LIFE of JOHN LAW of LAURISTON, Projector of the Mississippi Scheme; containing a Detailed Account of the Rise and Progress of this extraordinary Joint Stock Company, with many curious Anecdotes of the rage for speculating in its Funds, and the disastrous consequences of its Failure. By John Philip Wood, Esq. 1 vol. 12mo, 6s. boards.
It is worth the while of those multitudes of all classes, who are engaging so eagerly, and often so heedlessly, in joint stock and funding speculations, to read the story of the most stupendous scheme of the kind ever conceived; a scheme which absorbed the resources of a powerful kingdom in its vortex, infected a nation with temporary madness, confounded all conditions, raising beggars to boundless wealth, and casting down princes to penury.Scotsman.
LION HUNTING; or, A SUMMERS RAMBLE through Parts of FLANDERS, GERMANY, and SWITZERLAND, in 1825. With some Remarks on Men, Manners, and Things, at Home and Abroad. 1 vol. 12mo, 6s.
An ESSAY on NAVAL TACTICS, Systematical and Historical, with upwards of Fifty Explanatory Plates; in Four Parts. By John Clerk , Esq. of Eldin, Fellow of the Society of Scottish Antiquaries, and of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Third Edition, with Notes by Lord Rodney, and an Introduction by a Naval Officer. 8vo, price .1, 5s. bds.
BIBLIOTHECA BIBLICA, a Select List of Books on Sacred Literature; with Notices, Biographical, Critical, and Bibliographical. Intended as a Guide to the consultation of the most useful Writers on Biblical Subjects. By William Orme , Author of the Life of John Owen, D.D. 1 vol. 8vo, 12s. boards.
This publication contains some account of nearly one thousand books, including editions of the original Scriptures, Concordances to the Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and English Bibles; Hebrew and Greek Lexicon; British and Foreign Commentators on the Scriptures, Books on Sacred Chronology, Geography, and Antiquities; Ecclesiastical Historians; and numerous works of a miscellaneous nature, adapted to the illustration of the Word of God; it also furnishes short notices of the age, country, and profession of the authors.
The theological student cannot fail to derive much advantage from it; and the more learned divine will find it an excellent supplement to the Bibliotheca Theologica Selecta of the laborious Walchius, or to the erudite Bibliotheca Sacra of Le Long.British Critic for November 1824.
ACADEMICAL EXAMINATIONS on the PRINCIPLES of CHEMISTRY; being an Introduction to the Study of that Science. By David Boswell Reid . In 2 vols. 12mo, 15s. boards.
ELEMENTS of CHEMISTRY. By Andrew Fyfe , M.D. F.R.S.E. &c. &c. Illustrated by numerous Engravings on Wood. In 2 vols. 8vo, 21s. boards.
A MANUAL of ANATOMY, arranged so as to afford a concise and accurate Description of the different parts of the Human Body. From the French of A. L. J. Bayle . Revised and improved by William Bennet , M.D. In one closely printed volume, 18mo, 7s. 6d. boards.
A MANUAL of CHEMISTRY, illustrated by upwards of 130 Engravings on Wood. By Andrew Fyfe , M.D. F.R.S.E. Lecturer on Chemistry to the Edinburgh School of Arts. 12mo, 7s. boards.
The NATURAL and AGRICULTURAL HISTORY of PEAT-MOSS or TURF-BOG: to which are annexed, Corroborative Writings, Correspondence, and Observations on the Qualities of Peat or Fen Earth as a Soil and Manure, and on the Methods used in Scotland for converting Moss-soils into Arable and Pasture Grounds, Plantations of Trees, &c. By Andrew Steele , Esq. of Crosswoodhill, Member of the Natural History and Agricultural Societies of Edinburgh. 8vo, 10s. 6d. boards.