In addition to all these, we have several books before
us which must wait for a further examination, or which do not require it. Amongst the latter is a volume of the Library of Entertaining Knowledge, which commences a cheap reprint of Mr. LANE'S Ac- count of the Manner* and Customs of Modern Egyptians. Amongst the reserved ones, is the Second Volume of Dr. Sotrrx- WOOD SMITH'S Philosophy of Health ; and, if not too purely scien- tific, Mr. GR AI NGER'S Observations on the Structure and Func- tions of the Spinal Cord, together with the Elements of Physics, by THOMAS WEBSTER, M.A. We have also two Second Volumes of the Earldom Restored; but, though we can sometimes give a shrewd guess from the beginning, we cannot manage so well with the end.