Murray's Railway Reading: Containing Works of SOUND INFORMATION and INNOCENT AMUSEMENT, printed in large Readable Type, suited for ALL CLASSES OF READERS. Already published :— MUSIC and DRESS. 1s. LITERARY ESSAYS from "THE TIMES." 48. NIMROD on the TURF. 1s. 6d. LORD MAHON'S HISTORY of the "FORTY-FIVE." 3s. THE FLOWER GARDEN. 1s. LAYARD'S POPULAR ACCOUNT of THE HONEY BEE. 1s. NINEVEH and its REMAINS. 58. NIMROD on the CHACE. 1s. John Murray, Albemarle Street; and to be obtained at all Booksellers, and Railway Stations. (480) ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, Published by CHARLES DALY, 17, Greville Street, Hatton Garden. SHAKSPERE (WILLIAM), the WORKS BURNS (ROBERT), the WORKS of. New Edition of the Poems and Prose Works of Robert Burns, comprising the whole of the Poems hitherto published, with the addition of a few pieces of great beauty, which have more recently fallen into A New and splendid Edition, comprising the whole of the Dramatic Productions, Occasional Poems, and furnished with an elaborate Glossary and Index. This volume contains nearly one thousand pages of close double column matter, printed in a clear and elegant type, on fine paper, with numerous the present Editor's hands; the whole of the CorreIllustrations on Steel, amongst others a Portrait, spondence of Burns; a well-digested Life and Notes, beautifullly executed after the most authentic models. by A. CUNNINGHAM, Esq., and contributions from Fcp. 8vo. cloth gilt, gilt edges 9 0 the Collection of the late Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart., 13 6 an ample Glossary, and every reference to facilitate the comparison of various passages. This volume moreover contains a series of admirable Illustrations on Steel, from new and original designs, and is printed elegantly on fine paper. Imperial morocco. Antique morocco, top gilt edges... 16 0 Imperial morocco 7 6 12 0 Antique morocco, tooled edges 14 O Fcp. 8vo. cloth, gilt edges, and lettered Goldsmith's (Oliver) Works-Poems, Cowper's Poetical Works, with Life and 10 6 5 0 9 0 6 Antique morocco, tooled edges 10 Milton's Paradise Lost and Regained, and other Poems, with Illustrations, cloth gilt, gilt edges......... Imperial morocco. 5 0 9 0 10 6 Antique morocco, tooled edges An accurate copy of Milton's agreement with Simmons for "Paradise Lost" is here printed from the original, together with Milton's second receipt, and his wife's for the third payment. Pope's Poetical Works, Warburton's Life and Notes, with Illustrations, cloth gilt 5 0 Imperial morocco... 9 0 Antique morocco, tooled edges, extra 10 May be ordered of all Booksellers and Newsmen. Every Saturday, 16 pages, fcp. 4to., price 3d., or stamped, 4d.; NOTES AND QUERIES: A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, A Specimen Number sent on Receipt of Four Postage Stamps. Opinions of the Press. "As good a first number as we remember to have seen. There can be no doubt of the value of a literary medium of this peculiar kind."-ATHENAUM. "We like the plan much. ** We wish success to a publication which promises to be agreeable, intelligent, and useful."-LITERARY Gazette. "This publication promises to fill up a void that has constantly been lamented by every person engaged in any particular branch of study that required experience and research. *** It is a publication in which all literary persons must feel a deep interest, and that has our heartiest wishes for its success." "We have perused with intense interest every number of this periodical as it has appeared. We have found that as it has proceeded it has increased in importance and in value; and we have little doubt that, continuing to be managed as it has been, and as carefully edited as it is at present, it must become an established class-book in every library." DUBLIN REVIEW. "Its (The Bank Note's) clever and cheaper contemporary."-DICKENS'S HOUSEHOld Words. "It is easy to see how, with such a plan efficiently carried out, the result may be pleasant and profitable to a class beyond the bounds of the strictly literary and studious. And such is actually the case. The work having been conducted with unflagging spirit, and, we are happy to add, unfailing good taste, has already secured itself a respectable place in public MORNING HERALD. "This is a new periodical, with a new idea, and one that will be sure to receive encouragement amongst scholars and readers really deserving that appellation."-WEEKLY NEWS. "That valuable publication THE NOTES AND estimation. While it has treated of matters perQUERIES, so auspiciously commenced." NEW BELL'S MESSENGER. "With whomsoever the idea of publishing this useful and interesting periodical first originated, that person is entitled to the thanks of every author, antiquary, and scholar in the United Kingdom. *** We recommend, in all sincerity, THE NOTES AND QUERIES to the attention of lovers of literature in general."-MORNING POST. "A medium of inter-communication for men engaged in studious pursuits, of the highest value. Its facilities for collecting out-of-the-way information on doubtful or disputed points is great; and all who are engaged in particular departments of literary inquiry, or in the editing of any of the old English writers, will do well to avail themselves of NOTES AND QUERIES." EXAMINER. "Its utility to scholars, artists, antiquarians, has conducted this periodical to a stage of life when it may be said to have weathered the danger of infancy. *** The utility of the work, as a medium of intercommunication, is, of course, its first feature; but its numbers also form a collection of curious anecdote and gossip."-SPECTATOR. taining to knowledge, and which it is well to have elucidated, it has, we believe, furnished a great fund of innocent entertainment. Few will deny that to be successful within these limits is to deserve well of the republic. We must now take leave of our pleasant cotemporary, and, in doing so, cannot but express, as members of the republic of letters, our grateful sense of his useful and meritorious labours." CHAMBERS'S EDINBURGH JOURNAL. "A glance through the admirable index to this (2nd) volume will convince the most sceptical and least inquisitive students of its value. There is hardly an old subject on which something new is not forthcoming. It is something in this latter half of the nineteenth century to have hit upon a new thing; and to the originator and editor of NOTES AND QUERIES belongs the singular praise of having established, after more than a hundred years' incessant invention in such matters, a new literary periodical that was absolutely wanted. There must be many to whom it has already become little less than an absolute necessity, so rapidly are wants created or discovered, where the means of supply has once been found."-EXAMINER (2nd notice). Vol. 4, with COPIOUS INDEX, price 9s. 6d. (now ready). NOTICE TO THE SUBSCRIBERS TO ALISON'S EUROPE. THE THE PUBLISHERS respectfully inform the Subscribers to the Edition of this Work in Twenty Volumes, crown 8vo. that they will shortly be compelled to discontinue the sale of separate volumes. It is therefore recommended to those who have purchased portions of the work to complete their sets with as little delay as possible.-Lately published, A LIBRARY EDITION of the above Work, handsomely printed in 14 vols. demy 8vo. embellished with Portraits, and with a copious Index, price £10. 10s. An ATLAS to ALISON'S HISTORY of EUROPE, constructed under the direction of Mr. Alison, by A. KEITH JOHNSTON, F.R.S.E., &c., Author of the "National Atlas," &c. In demy 4to. to range with the Library Edition and other Editions in demy 8vo. £3. 3s.; in crown 4to., to range with the Edition in 20 vols. crown 8vo. £2. 12s. 6d. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London. Orders received by all Booksellers. MISCELLANEOUS. (483) To be SOLD, a Bargain, a CIRCULATING TO BOOKSELLERS and STATIONERS. LIBRARY, containing 800 Volumes of the best Novels of the day, in good condition.-For Catalogue or price apply to Mr. Dobson, Bookseller, Brotherton, near Ferrybridge. PARTNERSHIP.-Wanted, in a Wholesale Bookselling Business, an Active or Silent PARTNER, with a capital of Two Thousand Pounds, to supply the place of one retiring from the firm., Address, postpaid, with real name and address, to TO PARENTS and GUARDIANS. -Wanted, by a respectable Female, in her 19th year, a SITUATION. Will give her first two months' service free. Country not objected if within 100 miles of London. Reference given and required. Address E. S. T., Mr. Collett's, Bookseller and Stationer, Sunbury, Middlesex. A YOUNG MAN, a native of Germany, who speaks English fluently, and is well acquainted with the Bookselling Trade, is desirous of obtaining a SITUATION in an English house of good standing (London preferred). Unexceptionable references will be given.-For particulars, apply to Mr. Bosworth, 215, Regent Street. portant Towns in Yorkshire. A premium required. TO MASTER PRINTERS and BINDERS. -For further particulars address B. B., care of NO BOOKSELLERS' ASSISTANTS. то To The to looking out Orders and keeping Stock. WA ANTED to APPRENTICE a YOUTH, To BOOKSELLERS and PUBLISHERS. -The friends of an intelligent, well-educated Youth, aged 16, are desirous of placing him with a respectable Bookseller and Publisher for a term of three years as an IN- or OUT-DOOR APPRENTICE; if the former, Edinburgh or Dublin would not be objected to. A premium would be given. Apply, by letter only, to H. L., The Library, 50, Conduit Street, Hanover Square. -A respectable, steady Young Man, not afraid of work, is in want of a PERMANENT SITUATION as above.-Address H. G., care of Messrs. Thomas and Son, 20, Cornhill, London. TO PUBLISHERS and STATIONERS.— TO BOOKSELLERS and STATIONERS. WAN JANTED, a SITUATION, at either a Wholesale or Retail Bookseller's, by the son of in the Country. He is also thoroughly acquainted a Dissenting Minister, who served his apprenticeship with the Printing Business. Satisfactory reference given.-Address "M. P. P.," Rev. O. Parker's, Deddington, Oxon. YOUNG MAN, well recommended, having a thorough knowledge of Case and Press, and is a good Binder, wishes to meet with an ENGAGEThe advertiser would MENT in a month or two. have no objections to treat with a party wishing to decline business, requiring a moderate capital.Further particulars of W. A., Mr. Beeston's, Castle Gate, Nottingham. TO BOOKSELLERS and STATIONERS. O be accommodated with a well-furnished BED O BOOKSELLERS and STATIONERS. A YOUNG MAN, of respectable habits, can above lines, is desirous of an ENGAGEMENT either as Assistant or Manager. She has a thorough knowledge of the Trade in all its branches, and has been accustomed to a Circulating Library.-Address W. B., Post Office, Birmingham. It The situation is pleasant, within easy walking distance of the Row, and in line with the 3d. omnibuses. would well suit the son of a provincial bookseller who might be in London for improvement.-Apply at 27, Portsmouth Place, Kennington Lane. URRAY'S CONTINENTAL HAND. SPECIAL NOTICE to the TRADE. insertion in the Present Year's Issue of MURRAY'S HANDBOOKS for TRAVELLERS on the CONTINENT, must be forwarded to the Publisher before the 25th of May. 50, Albemarle Street, London: May 10, 1852. MR. COLLINS begs to inform the Trade that he continues to supply, as usual, the whole of his County Maps, revised, enlarged, improved, and corrected to the present time, and with the addition of a list of the Market Towns and Market Days to each County.-H. G. Collins, 22, Paternoster Row. SA WHITE will SELL by AUCTION, at the TSELLERS.-C. E. MUDIE'S LIST of ALE of BOOKS.-MR. WILLIAMO COUNTRY LIBRARIANS and BOOK Public Sale and Exhibition Room, Durham, on Tuesday and Wednesday the 18th and 19th of May, at 11 o'clock, the LIBRARY of a Gentleman deceased. Catalogues may be had of Mr. George Andrews, Bookseller, Durham. TO PRINTERS, BOOKSELLERS, AND STATIONERS. WANTED, a JOBBING OFFICE, well in Town or Country. SURPLUS COPIES of recent Works withdrawn from his Library, and offered at greatly reduced prices to Country Booksellers only, is now ready, and may be obtained on application. то Charles Edward Mudie, 510, New Oxford Street. O BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, and PRINTERS.-Wanted, with early possession, an old-established BUSINESS in a large Manufacturing or County Town.-Address A. B., care of Messrs. Taylor, Walton, and Co., 28, Upper Gower Street, London. TO BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, and то BOOKS WANTED TO PURCHASE. Letters to be addressed to Mr. SAMPSON Low, Office of the Publishers' Circular, stating lowest price, carriage free. Adam's Exposition of Second Epistle of St. Peter. Alison's Europe, 1st Edition, 8vo. Vol. 7. Arabian Nights, translated by Scott, 6 v. 8vo. Vol. 6. 1811. Banker's Magazine. No. 2, May 1844. Barrow's Works. An early edition, folio. Vol. 1. Jones (Rev. W., of Nayland) Sermons. Key to Huntingford's Greek Exercises. Knight's Pictorial Shakspere, 1st edition, royal svo. Bellarmine's (Cardinal) Notes on the Church. Part 4 to. Lancet, for October 25th, 1851. Bell's British Poets-Chaucer, Vol. 5. Benger on the Parables. Miracles. Biographia Americana, by a Gentleman of Philadelphia. Lathbury on Convocations of Church of England. 12mo. Methodist Magazine for 1784 and 1785. Medhurst's Chinese Dictionary. Mémoires pour servir à l'Histoire d'un genre de Polypes d'eau douce, par A. Tremblay, de la Soc. Royale à Morison's Chinese Dictionary. [64, 67. Notes and Queries. Vol. 1. Christian Remembrancer, new series. 39, 46, 53, 56, 59, Dickson's Husbandry of the Ancients, 2 vols. 8vo. Ferrier (Mr.), Memoirs of, and some Account of the Con- Goethe's Letters to a Child. Theory of Colours. [Leidi, 1744. Il Favolleggiatore Italiano Ossia raccolta de Favoli Scilli Wogan on the Lessons. Vol. 4. in prosa, by Fabre. Wordsworth's Poems, 12mo. Vol. 7. Letters to be addressed to Mr. JOHN CHAPMAN, 142, Strand, stating size, description, and lowest price, Printed at 57, Skinner Street, Snowhill, in the City of London, by ELIEZER CHATER WILSON, of 6, Palmer Terrace, in the Parish of St. Mary, Islington; and published by SAMPSON Low, of 14, Great James Street, in the Parish of St. Andrew, Holborn, at the Office, 169, Fleet Street, in the Parish of St. Dunstan in the West.-Monday, May 17, 1852., THE PUBLISHERS" ANCE-MEINE THE AND OF Fourpence. CIRCULAR General Record of British and Foreign Literature ; CONTAINING A COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ALL NEW WORKS PUBLISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN, As will have been anticipated, the decision of Lord Campbell and his co-arbitrators relative to the Bookselling trade, has been recognised by the trade generally as an obligation upon them to abrogate the existing rules; and at a large meeting held last week, above 300 members present, it was determined to relinquish such regulations, and dissolve the Association by which they had been carried out. At the same time it was deemed so important to secure equal facilities for the circulation of new books as hitherto experienced, and that a fair and adequate allowance should be depended upon by those persons trading therein, that an influential list of about 24 leading members in the various branches of Publisher and Wholesale and Retail Bookseller, was appointed to determine upon such general principles and mode of conducting business in future as might be alike beneficial to the interests of literature and the trade, as well as afford public satisfaction. It is gratifying to observe our Transatlantic friend and contemporary, the "Literary World," taking up the subject of International Copyright. The last three or four numbers have contained a series of papers upon the subject, well deserving an extensive circulation. The writer combines all the freshness and zeal of a new advocate in the cause, with the information and complete master ship of the subject of an old hand; he regards it as an American, and from every point of view, under the sections of "Publishers' rights," "Authors'," and "Interests of the Public, "Home and Universal," &c., &c.; and concludes his summing up by exclaiming somewhat enthusiastically, "When one law in literature,-the law that allows all men in all countries to be the equal possessors and sole dispensers of their labours of thought and speech,-shall spread through the world, it will secure higher pledges of peace than statesmen or Congress can ever in their maturest councils furnish." Foreign Literary Journals appear to be favouring us with many favourable criticisms of modern works. It may not be deemed inappropriate to call attention to one or two, such as M. Biot's article in the "Journal des Savans" for March and April,-of Eddleston's "Correspondence of Sir Isaac Newton and Mr. Cotes (Cambridge, 1850),—and the notice of Mr. Mansell's "Prolegomena Logica" (Oxford, 1851). The Bulletin Bibliographique of the "Revue des Deux Mondes" for March, contains a most favourable notice of "Mordaunt Cottage," by the author of "Mary Barton;" and the same Review for April contains similar articles on several American works, including the writings of Hawthorne, and the recently published "Memoirs of Margaret Fuller."-The first volume of a German translation of Charles Dickens's "History of England for Young and Old," has appeared at Berlin. The announcement praises the book as exhibiting the same remarkable qualities that distinguish the author's lighter publications, and nowhere can the German public obtain a more attractive and instructive view of English affairs and institutions."--The "Gaelic Dictionary" of Drs. Macleod and Dewar, (Bohn, 1845,) receives elaborate notice in a first article in the "Archiv für das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen," Vol. 2, Part 1, 1852. Other Celtic works are also incidentally noticed by Prichard, Sir W. Betham, Shaw, Armstrong, Reid, Kavanagh, &c. The Vienna papers express considerable expectation from the expedition of the renowned naturalist, Dr. Wagner, accompanied by his friend Dr. Scherzner, on a three years' natural history exploring journey across the Continent of America to New Orleans, Panama, and Columbia, &c. The literary |