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Irving, Washington, 1783-1859 [1835], A tour on the prairies, from The Crayon miscellany, volume 1 (Carey, Lea, & Blanchard, Philadelphia) [word count] [eaf221v1].
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MECHANICS, MANUFACTURES, &c.

[figure description] Advertisement.[end figure description]

A PRACTICAL TREATISE on RAIL-ROADS, and INTERIOR
COMMUNICATION in GENERAL—containing an
account of the performances of the different Locomotive Engines
at, and subsequent to, the Liverpool Contest; upwards of
two hundred and sixty Experiments, with Tables of the comparative
value of Canals and Rail-roads, and the power of the
present Locomotive Engines. By Nicholas Wood, Colliery
Viewer, Member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, &c.
8vo. With plates.

“In this, the able author has brought up his treatise to the date of the latest
improvements in this nationally important plan. We consider the volume to
be one of great general interest.”

Lit. Gaz.

“We must, in justice, refer the reader to the work itself, strongly assuring
him that, whether he be a man of science, or one totally unacquainted with its
technical difficulties, he will here receive instruction and pleasure, in a degree
which we have seldom seen united before.”

Monthly Review.

REPORTS on LOCOMOTIVE and FIXED ENGINES. By
J. Stephenson and J. Walker, Civil Engineers. With an
Account of the Liverpool and Manchester Rail-road, by H.
Booth. In 8vo. With plates.

MILLWRIGHT and MILLER'S GUIDE. By Oliver Evans.
New Edition, with additions and corrections, by the Professor
of Mechanics in the Franklin Institute of Pennsylvania, and a
description of an improved Merchant Flour-Mill, with engravings,
by C. & O. Evans, Engineers.

The NATURE and PROPERTIES of the SUGAR-CANE,
with Practical Directions for its Culture, and the Manufacture
of its various Products; detailing the improved Methods of Extracting,
Boiling, Refining, and Distilling; also descriptions of
the Best Machinery, and useful Directions for the general Management
of Estates. By George Richardson Porter.

“This volume contains a valuable mass of scientific and practical information,
and is, indeed, a compendium of everything interesting relative to colonial
agriculture and Manufacture.”

Intelligence.

“We can altogether recommend this volume as a most valuable addition to
the library of the home West India merchant, as well as that of the resident
planter.”

Lit. Gazette.

ELEMENTS of MECHANICS. By James Renwick, Esq.
Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy, Columbia
College, N. Y. In 8vo. with numerous engravings.

“We think this decidedly the best treatise on Mechanics, which has issued
from the American press, that we have seen; one, too, that is alike creditable
to the writer, and to the state of science in this country.”

Am. Quar. Review.

TREATISE on CLOCK and WATCH-MAKING, Theoretical
and Practical, by Thomas Reid, Edinburgh Honorary Member
of the Worshipful Company of Clock-Makers, London. Royal
8vo. Illustrated by numerous plates.

-- --

Natural History and Philosophy.

[figure description] Advertisement.[end figure description]

GEOLOGICAL MANUAL, by H. T. De la Beche, F. R. S.,
F. G. S., Mem. Geol. Soc. of France. In 8vo. With 104 Wood
Cuts.

“A work of first-rate importance in the science to which it relates, and which
must henceforth take its place in the Library of every student in Geology.”

Phil. Magazine.

ELEMENTS of PHYSICS, or NATURAL PHILOSOPHY,
GENERAL and MEDICAL, explained independently of
TECHNICAL MATHEMATICS, and containing New Disquisitions
and Practical Suggestions. By Neill Arnott, M. D.
Second American from the fourth London edition, with Additions
by Isaac Hays, M. D.

“Dr. Arnott's work has done for Physics as much as Locke's Essay did for
the science of mind.”

London University Magazine.

“We may venture to predict that it will not be surpassed.”

Times.

“Dr. A. has not done less for Physics than Blackstone did for the Law.”

Morning Herald.

“Dr. A. has made Natural Philosophy as attractive as Buffon made Natural
History.”

French Critic.

“A work of the highest class among the productions of mind.”

Courier.

“We regard the style and manner as quite admirable.”

Morning Chronicle

“As interesting as novel-reading.”

Athenæum.

“Never did philosophic hand wield a pen more calculated to win men to be
wise and good.”

Edinburgh Observer.

“Of this valuable, or we might say, invaluable work, a second edition has
been speedily demanded by the public voice.”

Lit. Gaz.

ARNOTT'S ELEMENTS of PHYSICS. Vol. II. Part I.
Containing Light and Heat.

“Dr. Arnott's previous volume has been so well received, that it has almost
banished all the flimsy productions called popular, which falsely pretend to strip
science of its mysterious and repulsive aspect, and to exhibit a holiday apparel.
The success of such a work shows most clearly that it is plain but sound knowledge
which the public want.”

Monthly Review.

AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGY, or NATURAL HISTORY
of BIRDS, inhabiting the UNITED STATES. By Charles
Lucien Bonaparte
; designed as a continuation of Wilson's
Ornithology, Vols. I. II. III. and IV.

* * * Gentlemen who possess Wilson, and are desirous of rendering the
work complete, are informed that the edition of this work is very small,
and that but a very limited number of copies remain unsold.

A DISCOURSE on the REVOLUTIONS of the SURFACE
of the GLOBE and the Changes thereby produced in
the
ANIMAL KINGDOM. By Baron G. Cuvier. Translated
from the French, with Illustrations and a Glossary. In
12mo. With Plates.

“One of the most scientific and important, yet plain and lucid works, which
adorn the age.”—Here is vast aid to the reader interested in the study of
nature, and the lights which reason and investigation have thrown upon the
formation of the universe.”

New Monthly Magazine.

-- --

[figure description] Advertisement.[end figure description]

JUST PUBLISHED BY CAREY, LEA & BLANCHARD,

PRIVATE MEMOIRS of NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, from
the French of M. Fauvelet de Bourrienne, Private Secretary
to the Emperor. Second American Edition, with great
additions; complete in one volume.

“This English translation, which has been very faithfully rendered, is
still more valuable than the original work, as upon all points where any
obliquity from other published recitals occurs, the translator has given several
accounts, and thus, in the form of notes, we are presented with the
statements obtained from Napoleon's own dictation at St. Helena, from the
Memoirs of the Duke of Rovigo, of General Rapp, of Constant, from the
writings of the Marquis of Londonderry, &c.”

U. Ser. Jour.

“The peculiar advantages of position in regard to his present subject,
solely enjoyed by M. de Bourrienne, his literary accomplishments and
moral qualifications, have already obtained for these memoirs the first rank
in contemporary and authentic history. In France, where they had been
for years expected with anxiety, and where, since the revolution, no work
connected with that period or its consequent events has created so great a
sensation, the volumes of Bourrienne have, from the first, been accepted
as the only trustworthy exhibition of the private life and political principles
of Napoleon.

“We know from the best political authority now living in England, that
the writer's accounts are perfectly corroborated by facts.”

Lit. Gaz.

“The only authentic Life of Napoleon extant.”

Courier.

“This splendid publication that literally leaves nothing to be desired.

Atlas.

“These volumes may be read with all the interest of a romance.”

Courier.

“No person who is desirous rightly to appreciate the character of Bonaparte,
will neglect the perusal of this work; whoever wishes to know, not
merely the General or the Emperor, but what the man really was, will
find him well pictured here.”

Times.

“The completest personal recollections of Napoleon that have appeared.”

Morn. Post.

“As a part of the history of the most extraordinary man, and the most
extraordinary times that ever invited elucidation, these memoirs must continue
to the latest ages to be records of invaluable interest.”

Lit. Gaz.

NARRATIVE of a VOYAGE to the PACIFIC and BEHRING'S
STRAIT, to co-operate with the Polar Expeditions:
performed in His Majesty's ship Blossom, under the command of
Capt. F. W. Beechey, R. N. in the years 1825, 26, 27, 28. 8vo.

“The most interesting of the whole series of expeditions to the North
Pole.”

Quarterly Review.

“This expedition will be for ever memorable as one which has added
immensely to our knowledge of this earth that we inhabit.”

Blackwood's
Magazine
.

“Captain Beechey's work is a lasting monument of his own abilities,
and an honor to his country.

Lit. Gaz.

A GENERAL VIEW of the PROGRESS of ETHICAL
PHILOSOPHY, chiefly during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth
centuries. By Sir James Mackintosh, M. P. In 8vo.

“This, in our humble opinion, is the best offspring of the pen of an author
who in philosophical spirit, knowledge and reflection, richness of
moral sentiment, and elegance of style, has altogether no superior—perhaps
no equal—among his contemporaries. Some time ago we made copious
extracts from this beautiful work. We could not recommend the
whole too earnestly.”

National Gazette.

-- --

MISCELLANEOUS.

[figure description] Advertisement.[end figure description]

A MEMOIR OF SEBASTIAN CABOT, with a Review of the
History of Maritime Discovery. Illustrated by Documents
from the Rolls, now first published
.

“Put forth in the most unpretending manner, and without a name, this work
is of paramount importance to the subjects of which it treats.”

Lit. Gazette.

“The author has corrected many grave errors, and in general given us a clearer
insight into transactions of considerable national interest.”—Ib. “Will it not,”
says the author, with just astonishment, “be deemed almost incredible, that the
very instrument in the Records of England, which recites the Great Discovery,
and plainly contemplates a scheme of Colonization, should, up to this moment,
have been treated by her own writers as that which first gave permission to go
forth and explore?”—Ib. “We must return to investigate several collateral
matters which we think deserving of more space than we can this week bestow.
Meanwhile we recommend the work as one of great value and interest.”

Ib.

“The general reader, as well as the navigator and the curious, will derive
pleasure and information from this well-written production.”

Courier.

“A specimen of honest inquiry. It is quite frightful to think of the number of
the inaccuracies it exposes: we shall cease to have confidence in books.” “The
investigation of truth is not the fashion of these times. But every sincere inquirer
after historical accuracy ought to purchase the book as a curiosity: more
false assertions and inaccurate statements were never exposed in the same compass.
It has given us a lesson we shall never forget, and hope to profit by.”

Spect.

HISTORY OF THE NORTHMEN, OR NORMANS AND
DANES; from the earliest times to the Conquest of England
by William of Normandy. By Henry Wheaton, Member
of the Scandinavian and Icelandic Literary Societies
of Copenhagen
.

This work embraces the great leading features of Scandinavian history, commencing
with the heroic age, and advancing from the earliest dawn of civilization
to the introduction of Christianity into the North—its long and bloody
strife with Paganism—the discovery and colonization of Iceland, Greenland,
and North America, by the Norwegian navigators, before the time of Columbus—
the military and maritime expeditions of the Northmen—their early intercourse
of commerce and war with Constantinople and the Eastern empire—the
establishment of a Norman state in France, under Rollo, and the subjugation of
England, first by the Danes, under Canute the Great, and subsequently by the
Normans, under Duke William, the founder of the English monarchy. It also
contains an account of the mythology and literature of the ancient North—the
Icelandic language prevailing all over the Scandinavian countries until the
formation of the present living tongues of Sweden and Denmark—an analysis
of the Eddas, Sagas, and various chronicles and songs relating to the Northern
deities and heroes, constituting the original materials from which the work has
been principally composed. It is intended to illustrate the history of France
and England during the middle ages, and at the same time to serve as an introduction
to the modern history of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.

AN HISTORICAL INQUIRY INTO THE PRODUCTION
AND CONSUMPTION OF THE PRECIOUS METALS,
from the Earliest Ages, and into the Influence of their Increase
or Diminution on the Prices of Commodities. By
William Jacob, Esq. F. R. S. In 8vo
.

“Mr. Jacob's Historical Inquiry into the Production and Consumption of the
Precious Metals is one of the most curious and important works which has
lately issued from the press. The influence of the precious metals on the industry
of mankind is acknowledged to be great; though, perhaps, the notions respecting
the precise mode of its operation were obscure, and undoubtedly the
history of its effects had never been traced with accuracy and ingenuity. Mr.
Huskisson, who had maintained a friendship with Mr. Jacob for more than five-and-twenty
years, first put the author on the investigation; it is one of the minor
obligations which the country owes to that enlightened statesman.”

Spectator.

“It was written at the suggestion of the late Mr. Huskisson, and displays
the fruits of much industry and research, guided by a sound judgment, and embodying
more learning than is usually brought to bear on statistical or economical
subjects. We recommend the book to general attention.”

Times.

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Irving, Washington, 1783-1859 [1835], A tour on the prairies, from The Crayon miscellany, volume 1 (Carey, Lea, & Blanchard, Philadelphia) [word count] [eaf221v1].
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