10 MARCH 1849, Page 19

PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.

BOOKS.

An Outline of the Necessary Laws of Thought; a Treatise on Pare and Applied Logic. By William Thomson, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of Queen's College, Oxford. Second edition, much enlarged.

An Examination of the Charter and Proceedings of the Hudson's Bay Company, with reference to the Grant of Vancouver's Island. By James Edward Fitzgerald. An Inquiry into the Proper Mode of rendering the Worn'" God" in Trans- lating the Sacred Scriptures into the Chinese Language, &c. By Sir George Thomas Staunton, Bart., M.P. An Autobiography. By Francis-Rene Viscount De Chateanbriand. Vo- lume I. (The Parlour Library of Instruction.) Georgiana Hammond; a Novel. By Mrs. Mackenzie Daniel, Author of "The Poor Cousin," &c. In three volumes.

Use and Abuse; a Tale. By the Author of "Wayfaring Sketches amongst the Greeks and Tusks, and on the Shore of the Danube, by a Seven-Years Resident in Greece."

The Strayed Reveller and other Poems. By A. Frontenac; a Poem. By Alfred B. Street.

Handbook of Ancient Geography and History. By Wilhelm Pitt; Princi- pal Tutor at the Gymnasium of Duren. Translated from the German by the Reverend R. B. Paul, M.A., Vicar of St. Augustine's, Bristol, &c.; and

edited by the Reverend Thomas Kerchever Arnold, MA., Rector of Lyndon. [A very valuable book; containing a complete and compact digest of the facts of ancient geography and history, including arcbmology, well arranged and clearly presented. Tne closeness of some parts of the original required more attention than youthful students might always give; but this is remedied in the translation by the questions which the editor bats composed for each section. He has also rewritten the history of the Jews, and added occasional notes.] A History of France, from the Earliest Period to the Revelation of 1848. For the Use of Young Persons and Schools. Edited by the Reverend John Sedgwick, NA., Demy of Magdalen College, Oxford, and one of the Masters in the Ordnance School, Carshalton.

[A good abridgment of the history of France; and more readable than such cotn- pilations often are, the author directing his attention to leading circumstances.] The London University Calendar. 1849.

[Contains a list of Graduates and Students who have attained honours, with the examination papers for 1848, the Charter, and the Regulations of the Univer- sity.] The Mendip Hills; a Descriptive Poem. By the Reverend E. B. Burrow, Curate of Chelwood.

[Descriptive sketches of the scenery of the Mendip Hills, varied by such occur- rences as that of a farmer lost in the snow.] The Royal Nursery A B C Book. Edited and Illustrated by A. Whitetail. English Grammar Simplified. By Harriet Smith.

[Two children's first books.] Morning and Evening Family Prayers, suitable for those who every day in

the week are engaged in business. By a Layman. The second edition. Lectures addressed chiefly to the Working Classes. By W. J. Fox, M2.

Published from the Reporter's Notes. Volume IV.

PAMPHLETS.

Free Trade and the Naviyation.laws Practically Considered. By George Frederick Young, Esq.

Emigration for the Million, ri-c. By Gersbom. The Question Propounded, or Bow Will Great Britain Ameliorate and Remedy the Distresses of its Workmen and Others Out of Employment? By Thomas Henry Sterling, Esq.

Evils of the Policy pursued towards the Church; in Four Letters to the Right Honourable Lord Juhn Russell. By a Country Pastor. The Russians in Motdavia and Wallachia.