Besides these, there are before us, several pamphlets, reprints, and
serials, which we have already noticed on other occasions, or passed by for sufficient reasons. The most valuable of these are the republication, in the Family Library, of Mr. M'FaetaNx's Lives and E.rploits of Banditti and Robbers in all Parts of the World ; a second edition, corrected and enlarged, of CLoitGit Coarna's Lectures on Popular Education ; a reprint of the late Mr. MILL's Principles if Toleration, as he embodied them in a review of BAILEY'S Eusays on the Formation and Publication of Opinions; and the Fourth Volume of Mr. MexoN's monthly pub- lication of lVordsworth's Poems,—which contains, amon;ot other things, the "White Doe of Rs !stone," the series of Sonnets on the River Dudden, and the Ecclesiastical Sonnets.