FAMILY AT THE HALL;
OR, PRIDE AND POVERTY.
* * * * *
READINGS in NATURAL THEOLOGY; Or, the Testimony of Nature to the Being,
Perfections, and Government Of God. By the Rev. H. FERGUS. 4_s._
* * * * *
* READINGS in ENGLISH PROSE LITERATURE; containing choice Specimens OF
the Works of the best English Writers, from LORD BACON to the Present
Time. With Biographical Sketches of the Writers, and ESSAYS on the
PROGRESS of ENGLISH LITERATURE. 4_s._ 6_d._
This volume is intended to furnish the general reader with some valuable
specimens of English prose composition. They are taken from the works
of those writers who have chiefly determined the style of our prose
literature, and are not only in themselves instructive and entertaining,
but are also of sufficient variety, and of ample length, to render the
reader familiar with the beauties and the peculiarities of the various
writers.
* * * * *
* READINGS IN POETRY; a Selection from the Works of the best English
Poets, from Spenser to the present times; with Specimens of the American
Poets; Notices of the Writers; and Explanatory Notes. 4_s._ 6_d._
A MANUAL of Poetry, comprising the gems of the standard English Poets.
Care has been taken to select such pieces and passages as best
illustrate the style of the respective Authors; and it is scarcely
necessary to add, that scrupulous attention has been paid to the moral
character of the extracts.
UNIVERSAL MYTHOLOGY; an Account of the most important Mythological
Systems, their Origin and Connexion. By the Rev HENRY CHRISTMAS, St.
John's Coll., Camb. 7_s._
The Mythology of Greece and Rome has hitherto been studied almost
exclusively, though neither the most important, nor the most
interesting. The systems of the East and of the North, of Egypt and of
China, would have illustrated the Greek and Roman fables, have cleared
up their difficulties, and explained their allegories. * * * * This
object has been attempted in the present work.
THE CAMBRIDGE PORTFOLIO; a Periodical Work comprising Papers
illustrative of the principal features in the Scholastic and Social
System of the University; Notices of the most Eminent Characters it has
produced; Gleanings from the Manuscripts in the several Libraries; and
Contributions in Original Literature by contemporary Members. It also
contains descriptive accounts of the principal Bu
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