1 MAY 1852, Page 17

PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.

Boom.

China, during the War and since the Peace. By Sir John Francis Davis, Bart., late her Majesty's Plenipotentiary in China, &e. In two volumes.

Life and Times of Francesco Sforza Duke of Milan. With a Pre- liminary Sketch of the History of Italy. By William Pollard Urquhart, Esq. In two volumes.

Tlie Melvilles. By the Author of "John Drayton." In three volumes. Great Artists and Great Anatomists; a Biographical and Philosophical Study. By it. Knox, M.D., F.R.S.E., &o.

A Grammar of the Hungarian Language; with appropriate Exereises, a Copious Vocabulary, and Specimens of Hungarian Poetry. By Sigismund Wekey, late Aide-de-camp to Kossuth.

The Eclipse of Faith ; or a Visit to a Religious Sceptic.

Passages in the life of Gilbert Arnold; or the Tale of the Four Ser- mons. By Sullivan Earle. [A story of a prodigal son, who became vicious under every human advan- tage, and was converted under circumstances which, if not open to every profligate, are merely accidental. The story contains many sketches of character and of pretty rural pictures ; it is told with elegance and some pathos, and conducted throughout with consistency, except as regards the son of so pious and thoroughly excellent a father turning out such a profli- gate. The final reception of Gilbert Arnold into the church, and the eata- blishment of his victim Jessie in the parsonage as the parson's wife, will give rise to objections ; and perhaps rightly. Repentance and regeneration re- fer te another state ; the parables of the Vineyard and the Prodigal Son ap- ply to heaven and the family—hardly, perhaps, to society at large.] The Poetic Works of Louis Napoleon, now first Done into plain Eng- lish. Illustrated by H. G. Hine.

LA batch of comic pieces in verse professing to contain the opinions of the French President, or descriptive Of the incidents of his career. Many of the poems have a kind of double parody—they burlesque the subject, and they imitate some well-known poem. They are ludicrous, with many hits of a town kind of wit ; but the verse is doggrel. The little book is full of clever wood- cuts, representing the President in all manner of situations.]

Political Economy, for use in Schools, and for Private Instruction. (Chambers's Educational Course.)

[The subjects of this little book are a good deal more extensive than political economy proper ; embracing questions connected with politics,. government, and social economy. The political economy itself is not handled in the form ef systematic exposition, but as a series of essays on particular branches of the science,—as Wages, Capital, Banking. These are treated on the principles of "sound doctrine " ; the manner is distinguished by the sense and shrewdness which characterize the original essays in Chambers's Journal. A wider range as well as a more systematic treatment would have been ad- vantageous ; and perhaps the "whatever is is right" dogma, in reference to capitalists and labour, might have admitted some of the doubts which the modern school of economists have raised upon the question.]

The Natural History of Animals ; being the substance of three Courses of Lectures delivered before the Royal Institution of Great Britain. By Thomas Rymer Jones, F.R.S., &c. Volume IL With one hundred and four Engravings. [The continuation of a very able work, the first volume of which was pub- lished in 1844. The treatment of his subjects by Mr. Rymer Jones is broad, lifelike, and comprehensive a general view of the species rather than a par- ticular account of individuals—the history rather than the biography of animals.] A System of Book-keeping, drawn up for and expressly adapted to the Tanning rrade, embracing Transactions for an entire Year, &c. By Joseph Sawyer' Accountant.

[The tanning trade has this peculiarity, that from the nature of the stock, i a man can never be certain whether he s doing business at a profit or a loss, by the balancing of his books in the regular way. To overcome this dif- ficulty is the object of Mr. Sawyer's publication. It consists of two divi- sions; the first presenting a system of bookkeeping on the usual principles somewhat simphfied ; the second part containing an elaborate exhibition of the method of keeping the books peculiarly adapted to the tanning trade,— as stock-book, tanning-material book, wages-book.]

Zingra, the Gipsy. By Annette Marie Mallard. (Railway Library.) The most noticeable reprint is Mr. Peter Cunningham's "Nell Gwyn," originally published in the Gentleman's Magazine, and now appearing in a handsome volume with additions and revisions. Of the translations, "The Republic of Plato," and possibly Werne's "African Wanderings," are for future notice. "'Catherine Sinclair" is an English edition of an American book written as a set-off to the Mayhews' Greatest Plague in Life. The interest lies in its glimpses of domestic life in America.

The Story of Nell Gwyn, and the Sayings of Charles the Second. Re- lated and Collected by Peter Cunningham, F.S.A. African Wanderings; or an Expedition from Belmar to Take, Base, and Beni-Amer, with a particular Glance at the Races of Belled Sudan. By Ferdinand Werne. Translated from the German by J. R. Jo - ston. (Traveller's Library.) The Republic of Plato. Translated into English, with an Introduction. Analysis, and Notes, by John Llewelyn Davies, M.A., and David James Vaughan, M.A. Michaud's History of the Crusades. Translated from the French, by W. Robson. In three volumes. Volume IL Catherine Sinclair ; or the Adventures of a Domestic in Search of a Good Mistress. By a Servant of Servants. Irish Popular Superstitions. By W. R. Wilde, Author of "The Boyne and Blackwater."

ILLUSTRATED WORKS AND PRINTS.

Baxter's Gems of the Great Exhibition. Nos. L and II. I-Examples of Mr. Barter's process of oil-colour printing : of which the second—from the Belgian departments—is the beat yet published, possessing more shade, depth, and gradation, than usual. Mr. Baxter should keep these qualities constantly in view, and improve the design—especially of his figures.] The Pilgrim's Progress. With forty Illustrations by David Scott,

R.S.A., &c. Parts IX. to XIV.

PAMEHLEIS.

A Letter of Example, Exhortation, and 1?eproof to the Seceders from his Church; together with some Passages in the Ministerial Life of his late Curate Mr. Richard Jones Temple alias Richard Jones, &c. By Robert L. Hill, M.A., Incumbent of St. Barnabas, King's Square, London.

Report of the Case of Miller versus Salomon:, M.P. ; with a Summary of the Preliminary Proceedings in the House of Commons. Edited by Augustus Goldsmid, Esq. National Defences. Speech of Arthur Anderson, Esq., M.P., in the House of Commons, on Tuesday, 30th March 18.52.

The First Principle of Labour, Property, and Money, demand primary consideration for Home Agriculture. By IL Gale.

Australia and her Treasures. By Nugget.

The Introduction of Mesmerism as an Ancesthetic and Curative Agent into the Hospitals of India. By James Esdaile, M.D., late Presi- dency Surgeon, Calcutta, &c.