Hottentot Fables
Hottentot Fables
Hottentot Fables
Rhoda Barry
REYNARD THE FOX I~ SOUTH AFRIC
OR,
SOUTH ~AFRICA·
OR
IX THE
LIBRARY
OF
BY
W. H. I. BLEEK, PH.D.
LONDON:
TRUBNER AND CO., 60, PATERNOSTER ROW.
1864.
TEMPToll EAll.
THIS BOOK BELONGS TO
I. JACKAL FABLES.
P.\GE
V. VARIOUS FABLES.
I'.\GE
·7c 7
1
(incl.) Salce lee lca~wulf.'e
mascu1.
(exc1.) SL e tee lcauauke ~
(incl.) Sase lee lcautase 1 f
(excl.) Sise lee lcautase 5 em.
(incl.) Sada lee tana-lclwida} nom.
.
(excl.) Szda lee tana-lclwid a
(incl.) Salclwm l.. e hmauklwma} dU al . "'=' ·ul .
. ill<ouC
1
(exc .) Szlclwm lee k:auaulclwma
..
PREFACE. X ll
10. The Girls who Escaped from the Hill Damaras, pp.
24, 26.
11. The Elephant and the Tortoise, pp. 27, 29.
12. The Two Wives, pp, 29, 33.
13. The Lion who took different Shapes, pp. 34, 35.
14. The Little Girl left in the Well by her wicked Com-
panions, pp. 35, 38.
15. The Um·easonable Child to whom the Dog gave its
Deserts, pp. 39, 43.
16. Rutanga, p. 44.
17. The Ghost of the Man who was Killed by a Rhinoceros
in consequence of his Father's Curse, pp. 45, 47.
18. The Trials of Hambeka, a Spirit risen from the Dead,
pp. 47, 50.
19. The Little Girl who was teased by an Insect, p. 51.
20. The same as 16 (Rutanga) p. 52.
21. Conjugal Love after Death, p. 53.
22. The Bad Katjungu and the Good Kahavundye, pp.
54, 57.
23. The Wife who went after her Husband, pp. 57, 59.
24. The Little Girl Murdered by the Hill Damara, pp.
59, 61.
xx:vm PREFACE.
Believe me,
My dear Sir George,
Yours most faithfully,
W. H. I. BLEEK.
" lVfy boy, thou son of the lean ~VIrs. Fox, thou wilt ~
never be caught."
.
11
7. CLOUD-EATING.
(The original, in the Hottent ot language, is m Sir G. G1·ey's
Library, G. Kronlein 's Manuscript, pp. 30, 31.)
THJ:!] HYEN A.
Thou who :makest thy escape from the tumult !
Thou wide, roomy tree !
Thou who gettest thy spaTe (though with trouble !)
Thou cow who art strained at the hocks ! *
Thou who hast a plump l'Ound knee!
Thou the nape of whose neck is clothed with hui:t·!
Thou with the skin drippin g as if half-tan ned !
ThuG >Vho hast a round, distend ed neck !'
Thou eater of the N amaqua ,
Thou big-too thed one !
8. FISH-STEALING.
THE HYENA.
(Addressing her young ones. on her return from a
marauding expedition, with regard to the perils she had
encountered).
The fire threatens,
The stone threatens,
The assegais threaten,
The guns threaten,
Yet you seek food from me.
My children,
Do I get anything easily?
c
18
THE Lion, it is said, was ill, and they all went to see
him in his suffering. But the Jackal did not go,
because the traces of the people who went to sec him
did not turn back. Thereupon, he was accused by
the Hyena , who said, "Thou gh I go to look, yet the
Jackal does not want to come and look at the man's
sufferings."
Then the Lion let the Hyena go, in order that she
might catch the Jackal ; and she did so, and brough t
him.
The Lion asked the Jackal : "Why did you not
come here to see me?" The Jackal said, " Oh no !
when I heard that my uncle was so very ill, I went
to the witch (doctor), to consult him, whethe r and
what medicine would be good for my uncle agains t
the pain. The doctor said to me, ' Go and tell your
uncle to take hold of the Hyena and draw off her
skin, and put it on while it is still warm. Then he
c 2
20 JACKAL FABLES.
rain for me ?" The Vulture said, " I will not cast
lots."
Then the Elephant said to the Crow, "Cast lots!"
who answered, "Give the things with which I may
cast lots." The Crow cast lots and rain fell. It
rained at the lagoons, but they dried up, and only
one lagoon remained.
The Elephant went a-hunting. There was, however,
the Tortoise, to whom the Elephant said, " Tortoise,
remain at the water !" Thus the Tortoise was left
behind when the Elephant went a-hunting.
There came the Giraffe, and said to the Tortoise,
"Give me water!" The Tortoise answered, "The
water belongs to the Elephant."
There came the Zebra, who said to the Tortoise,
" Give me water !" The Tortoise answered, " The
water belongs to the Elephant."
There came the Gemsbok, and said to the Tortoise,
"Give me water!" The Tortoise answered, "The
water belongs to the Elephant."
There came the Wildebeest, and aid, "Give me
water!" The Tortoise said, "The water belong to
the Elephant."
There came the Roodebok, and said to the Tortoi e,
"Give me water!" The Tortoi e answered, "The
water belongs to the Elephant."
THE ELEPHA NT AND THE TORTOISE . 29
There came the Springbok, and said to the Tortoise,
"Give me water!" The Tortoise said, "The water
belongs to the Elephant ."
There came the Jackal, and said to the Tortoi e,
"Give me water!" The Tortoise said, "The water
belongs to the Elephant ."
There came the Lion, and said, "Little Tortoise,
give me water!" When the little Tortoise was about
to say something, the Lion got hold of it and beat it;
the Lion drank of the water, and since then the ani-
mals drink water.
When the Elephant came back from .the hunting,
he said, " Little Tortoise, is there water ?" The Tor-
toise answered ," The animals have drunk the water."
The Elephant asked, " Little Tortoise, shall I chew
you or swallow you down ?" The little Tortoise said,
"Swallow me, if you please;" and the Elephant
swallowed it whole .
.After the Elephant had swallowed the little Tor-
toise, and it had entered his body, it tore off his liver,
heart, and kidneys. The Elephant said, "Little Tor-
toise, you kill me."
So the Elephant died; but the little Tortoise came
out of his dead body, and went wherever it liked.
30
THE Giraffe and the Tortoise, they say, met one day.
The Giraffe said to the Tortoise, "At once I could
trample you to death." The Tortoise, being afraid,
remained silent. Then the Giraffe said, "At once I
could swallow you." The Tortoise said, in answer to
this, "Well , I just belong to the family of those whom
it has always been customary to swallow." Then the
Giraffe swallowed the Tortoise ; but when the latter
was being gulped down, it stuck in the Giraffe's throat,
* " Becaus e the Giraffe is said to give blue ashes when
burnt." -KRoN LEIN.
THE GIRAFFE AND THE TORTOISE. 1
and as the latter could not get it down, he was choked
to death.
When the Giraffe was dead, the Tortoise crawled
out and went to the Crab (who is considered as tho
mother of the Tortoise), and told her what had hap-
pened. Then the Crab said-
BABOON FABLES .
Heretse!
Heretse!
Thou thin-armed one,
Who hast thin hands !
Thou smooth buhush mat,
Thou whose neck is bent.
Thou who art made so as to be lifted up (upon a tree),
Wb.o liftest thyself up.
Thou who wilt not die even behind t!wt hill
Which is yet beyond those hills,
That lie on the other side of this far-distant hill.*
THE BABOON.
Thou hollow-cheeked son
Of a hollow -cheeked one,
My hollow-cheeked one!
Who hast two hip-bones,
High hip-bones,
-with which thou sittest on the edge of the rock,
Thou whose face appears like the edge of a rock.
- -----
THE ZEBRA.
THE ZEBRA.
LION FABLES.
E
50
I may drink." But the Hare made the arne repl '·
Then she snatched the cup from him and drank, but
he ran home to tell his uncle of the outrage which
had been committed.
The Woman meanwhile replaced the cup and went
away. Mter she had departed the Lion came down,
and, seeing her in the distance, pursued her on the
road. When she turned round and saw him coming,
she sang in the following manner:-
She then rose from him, and they hunted again after
each other round the shrub, till the Woman fell down,
E 2
52 LION FABLE S.
do you two stan d before the cow." Her husb and said
,
"W hat has come over her that the cows refuse her
?
These are the same cows she always milk s." The
Mot her (of the kraa l) said, "W hat has happ ened
this
even ing? These are cows whic h she always milk
s
with out assistance. Wh at can have affected her that
she comes home as a woman with a lion 's natu re?"
The elde r dau ghte r then said to her Mother, "
I
shall not milk the cows." Wit h those words she
sat
down. The Mot her said therefore to the Har
e,
"Br ing me the bamboos, that I may milk . I do
not
know wha t has come over the girl ."
So the J\1other hers elf milk ed the cows, and whe
n
she had done so, the Har e brou ght the bamboos to
the
you ng wife's house, where her husb and was, but
she
(the wife) did not give him (her husband) any thin
g
to eat. But whe n at nigh t time she fell asleep, they
saw some of the Lion 's hair , which was han ging
out
where he had s1ipped on the woman's skin, ancl they
cried, "Ve rily ! this is quit e anot her being. It is
for
this reason that the cows refused to be millmd."
The n the people of the kraa l bega n to brea k up
the hut in whi ch the Lion lay asleep. Wh
en
they took off the mat , they said (conjm'ing them
),
" If thou art favourably incl ined to me, 0 mat , give
_the sound 'saw a'" (meaning, mak ing no noi e).
THE LION WHO TOO K A WOM AN'S SHA.J?E.
55
* The stag e is tha t app arat us in the bac kgr oun d of the
hut (bu ilt of mat s) opp osit e the doo
r, upo n whi ch the
H otte nto ts han g thei r bam boo s, bag s
of skins, and oth er
thin gs, and und er whi ch the wom en gen
eral ly kee p the ir
mat s.
57
when they slept thus, sui sui, she rose and said to her
two brothers, " The sleep of death is over thorn, lot
us make ready." They rose and went out, ancl she
broke up the hut* (to carry away all that she coulcl),
and took the necessary things, and said, " That thing
which makes any noise wills my death." So they
kept altogether quiet.
When her two brothers had packed up, she went
with them between the cattle, but she left at home
one cow, one ewe, and one goat, and directed them,
saying to the cow, "You must not low as if you were
by yourself alone, if you do not wish for my death ;''
and she taught the ewe and the goat the same.
Then they departed with all the other cattle, and
those who were left behind lowed during the night as
if they were many, and as they lowed as if they were
still all there, the Elephant thought, "They are all
there." But when he rose in the morning, he saw
that his wife and all the cattle were gone. Taking
his stick into his hands, he said to his mother, "If I
fall the earth will tremble." With these words he
followed them. When they saw him approaching,
they ran fast to the side, against a piece of rock (at a
F 2
68
* " We are now angry with the Hare," say the old
N amaqua, "because he brought such a bad message, and
therefore we dislike to eat his fiesh."-KN UDSEN.
.72
was not the p1rson meant in this tale. It looks very much
like the end of our 27th Fable, ofthe Woman who outwitte d
the Elephan ts.
* Sir J ames E. Alexander, in his" Expediti on of Discovery
into the Interior of Africa," vol. i. p. 166, speaking of the
people at W a::_.m Bath, or Nisbett Bath, says :-"Thes e
N amaquas thought that they came from the East. In the
country there is occasion ally found (besides the common
graves covered with a heap of stones) large heaps of stones,
on which had been thrown a few bushes; and if the Nama-
quas are asked what these are, they say that Heije Eibib,
their Great Father, is below the heap; they do not know
what he is like, or what he does; they only imagine that he
also came from the East, and hacl plenty of sheep and goats ;
and when they add a stone or branch to the heap, they
mutter, ' Give us plenty of cattle.' "
77
back and demanded her food again, they said, " \\Te
have eaten the food." She asked, "How is it that
you eat my food, which I had received from a little
old woman who had eaten up my honey, that I had.
got from the lads of our cattle who hacl broken my
axe, which had been given me by my Father who
had broken my needle, which was a presen t from my
lVIother who had eaten my ei'ngi, which I had pluclyed.
from our tree?" The pheasants, flying up, pulled out
each one a feather and threw them down to the little
girl.
She then, walkin g along, met the childre n who
watched the sheep. They were plucki ng out hali·s
from the sheep-skins. So she asked them, "How is
it that you pull at these skins ? \Vhy do not you
say, 'First- born, give us the feather s?' Do I refuse,
or what do I P" They said, "First- born, give us the
feather s." She gave them and went away, but all
the feathers broke. When she returne d and said,
"Give me my feather s," they answered, "The
feathers are broken ." Then she complained, "Do
you break my feathers which I receive.d from the
pheasa nts who had eaten my food, which had been
given me by a little old woman ?" They gave her
some milk.
She went again on her way, and found their own
94 HOUS EHOL D TALES .
KAFIR ESSAYS,
And other Pieces; with an English Translation. Edited by
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a tone of gentle kindliness, may let his heart Parker. BREAD CAsT uPoN THE
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Manly Life. Theological Institute). SACRED RHETO-
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III. Of J ustice and the Couscience.
I V. Of Love and the Affections. Sermons. To which are added, HINTS
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"We feel that in borrowing largely from his THE GOSPEL OF ST. MAT1HEW, AND OF
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earning the reader' s gratitude."-Leader.
JUDE, Written on Papyrus in tile First
THEISM, ATHEISM, AND THE Century, and preserved in the Egyptian
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Christian gospel, we emphatically say-Read
Puritanism, and Free Inquiry. By
J. J. TAYLER, B.A. -ew Revised Edi-
I
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"Tbe method of these discourses is practical, modesty which usually characterises true merit."
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from the better conception of divine things, of our religious literature.''- Westwir!Ster· Review.
which the writer is the chief apostle, there is "It is not often our goo<l fortune to meet with
shown to arise, in natural development, the tran- a book so we llCOIICeived, so well written and so
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l instructive as this. Th e vnrio•Js phases of tbe
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14 Catalogue of Important Works.
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FROUDE, M.A., late fellow of Exeter compass, nnd who habitunlly endeavour, on the
College. Oxford. Reprinted from "The wings of Imnginati011, to soar into regions 'vhich
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Fulton. THE FACTS AND FALLACIES OF Leader.
THE SABBATH QUESTION CONSIDERED aspiration, "The 'Religion of the Heart' is a manual of
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MAN CATHOLICS . By G. G. GERVINUS, the time has not yet arrived for the matured
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Testament . By the Rev. DR. GILES, of a pure morality a true sense of the beneficence
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Revebtion. Includin g an investigation o.;er d.iver&ities of opinion, expressed always in
16 Catalogue of Important Works.
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and to live beautifully oy it; and all this be- ' · · ·
cause he feels the unknown and terrible forces - - - - · THE POSITIVE PrriLOSOPHV
which are busy at the warp and woof of the OF AUGUSTE CoM'rE. Translated and
m~rvellous existence."-F>·Cfsf>·'s .!Jfagazine.. Condensed by ilARRIE1' M A RTJ~EAO .
A ~ook, from the reasonmgs and conclusH~ns 2 vols. Large post 8 .-o cloth His
of wluch, we are bound to express our er.tJre .• , .' _ · .
dissent, but to which it is impossible to deny the A work of !Jro.ound. scJence, mnr.ked w1th
rare merit of strictest hone ty of purpose, n.a an great !l-Cuteness ofreason~nf!, and conop•cnousr,or
investigation into a subject of the highest im- tQe h1ghest att.~Jbutes of Intellectual power. -
portance, upon which the wisest of us is almost l!..clmburoh lte-,;zew.
entirely ignorant, begun with a sincere de ire to "The 'Cotus de Philosophic Positive' is at
penetrate the mystery and ascertain the truth, once a compendiou cyclopredia of>cienee and an
pui"Sued with a brave resol ve to shrink from no exhibition of scientific method. It defines ri .!!O·
results to which that inqttiry might lead, and to rously the characteristics of the seventl orders of
state them, whatever receptiOn they might have phenomena with which the particular sciences
b·om the worlcl."-Critic. are concerned, arranges them in an ascending
"A curious and valuable contribution to scale of com].Jlexity and spccialit~T' beginniug
psychological scieuce, and we regard it " "ith with mathematics and ending with social phv -
interest, as c .. ntainiug the best and fullest deve-
sics or sociolo::;y. and assi!!Tls to each science it~
lopment of the new theories of mesmerism, proper mcthou in accordance with the nature of
clairvoyance, and the kindred hypotheses. The the phenomena to be investigated . . . . Because
book is replete with profound reflections thrown it is not merely a cyclopredia of scientific facts,
out incidentally, is <listingui hed by a peculiar but an exhibition of the methods of human
e~e!lance of styJe,and, in the hands of a calm and kr.owledge and of the relations between its dif-
pllllosophical theologian may serve as a useful ferent branr:heo, :'of. Comte calls hi,; work philo-
precis of the most formidable dilficulties he has
to contend against in the present day."-IVeekly
Nev·s.
I
sophy: and because it limit itself to what can
be proved, he terms it positive philosophy."-
Sp ectotor.
"The letters are remarkable for the analytical "The world at large has reason to be grateful
powers which characterise them, and "ill be to all concerned in this publication of tl1e op11s
eagerly read by all those who appreciate the maonum of our century . . . • )ji · ;\(artineau
I
value of the assertion, that 'the proper study of has confined heroelf rigorou sly to the task of
mankind is man.' The range of rea<lin" which translating freely and condensing the work,
the_y embody is no less extensive than the sin - 1 addin,g nothing of illustration or criticism, so
eeriLy as well as depth of thought and earnest- 1 that tne reader has Comte's views presented as
Triibne,· .1: Co., 60, Paterno.·ter Rmt'. 17
Comte p o•nukn ed them ... In the whole brethren? or if w~ ay to I he •uli,.:htcucrl. the
11
range of philo<ophy we know· of no such ·ucce,,. thou~htful, the -eriotl-. Tid- - it you he true
rulabridgment."- Lecu/er. schola.r~-is 11011r Yocntion! \\\: k nnw 11ot n.
hi~her tnora ·ity thnn tlli .... (_Jr nt •l n nob\: princi-
"A \\'Ouclerful monument of ratiocinatiYe p e< than thl•c: they are full uftruth. · -llriti~h
sk.ill."-Scllt.Sman . rcud FurCI[JII JJ, di,.u-Ciururui•·ul J:e • e1c.
''Miss Martinenu's book, ns we expected it
would be, is an eloquent expositiou of ~I . Comtc·,; Fichte. TnE CnAR.\CTr:ni;;'li ··oF THE
doctrines, n_Ec,Jnomis t.
PHE-.L. "T :\Gt:. lh• .) 1111.\ ·.; GoTTLH:B
I Cousin (YrcTOR). ELEYE~Ts OF PsY- FJCHTL. 'J"rn.nsbtetl frorn the Gcrru:m
UHOJ.OGY : included in a Critical Ex:tmi· by WILLJ.nr .'\liTH. I'o:st ·,·o. l'p. XI.
II ll<ttiou of Lo<!ke's Es. avon the IInmn.n and ~11, duth, Gs. I -!i.
Understanding. and in additionn.lpieccs. ".\. noble an<! moot notnhle (\P(jlli<itinn to the
Translated from the French, with au literature of Enf.(lund."- }JoJuul•c Jtrrolct~
)
In trodnction and Xotes, by CALEB .'. IJ'n·kl!l p,,,~,·.
· l d. · •· 1\'e ucc~pt thtse lectures ns a. true nne! mo. t
jl H EXRY, D · D · F our th llltprover e·ltwn, ndmirnille delincntion uf the prc-l·nt ngc : nntl
revised according to the Au1hor's h t on thi> ,.rrunnd alone we. h >nlcl he-tow on them
correctious. Crown Svo. Pp. 508 . 1861. our ht"1lrtic. t'recnrnmcndttliiJn; but it io l>ccnu>c
cloth, 7s. thev teach us how we mal' rioe rtiluvc tile a.g-e,
that we beotow on them· our mu•t emphatic
- - - - - THE PHILOSOPHY OF KANT. ]Jrai<e.
Lectures by VICTOR CoUSIN. Translatnd "lie makes us think, ancl pcrh:t[" more sub-
fl·om the French To which is added, a limely than we hn,·c ever f,mnerly thou:!ht, but
it i ·only in orucr that we m11y the murc nobly
Bingraphical and Critic:tl , 'ketch of act.
Kant's Life and Writiugs. By A. G. "As a maje. tic ond most stirrin~ utterance
HE.mERSO;,<. Large post Svo, cloth. 9s. from the lips of the )!rCctteot Ccrmun prophet,
we tru,t thut the hook will fin<! u respolbO lll
Duncan son. THE PR(JYIDE.-cE OF many an ~~"f?lbh soul, und p tenth· help tore-
Gan MANIFESTED IN 1\ATURAL LAW. gener:tte Engtbhsociety."-Tite Critic.
1
By Jom< DUNCAc.-.soN. :i\I.D. Post ~vo.
Pp . v. and3fii,cloth. 1 ~6 1. 7s. - - - - THE YoCATIO::S OF A SvnoLAR.
Emerson. EssAYs BY RALPH WALDo By JoiLo~.::O."N GuT'l'LIEl3 FccrrrF.. Trans-
EMERSON. First Series, embodying the lated from the German by WILLIAM
Corrections and Editions of the last 1 SMITH. Post 8vo. Pp. 78, sewed, l s. Gd.,
American edition; with an Iutrodnc- cloth, 2s. 1847.
tory Preface by THO:IlAS CARLYLE, re- " ·The VfJcation of a Scholar . . . . is
printed , by permission, from the first distinguished. by the same high moral tone, and
English Edition. Pust 8vo. 2s. manly, ,~igorous expres~ion' , ..·hich characterize
all Flchte'• works ill the German, and is nothing
- - - - -- ESSAYS BY RALPII WALDO to t in :\Lr Smith's clear, nncmlnnrn"ed, and
EMERSON. Second Series, with Pr~faee lhor mghly English translation."-lJuuylas Jer-
by TH0!>1AS CARLYLE . Post 8vo. cloth. rold's Nerospaper .
3s. 6d. "\Ve are 11lad to •ee this excellent trnnslalion
of on of the best of Fichte'H worh pte.;cnted to
Feuerbach. THE EssENCE oF Cnms- the public in a very neat form. . . . No class
TIANI1'Y. By LUD wro FEUERBACH. needs an earnest and sincere spirit more than
Translated f1·om the Sece>uri German the the literary class: and therefore the 'Vocation of
Scholar' the 'Guide uf the Human Race,•
Edition, by MARIAN EVANS. Tr·anslator written in 'Ficltte•s most earnest, most com-
of Strauss's "Life of Jesus. " Large manding temper, will be welcomed in its
post 8vo. lOs. fid . Eng lish dress by puiJiic writers, and be bene-
ficin! to the cau e of tmth."-Econumist.
F ichtc. THE POPULAR WORKS OF J. G.
FrcH'I!E. Two vols. Post 8vo. , cloth, £ 1. THE VOCATTON OF MAN. lly
- - - - ON THE NATURE OF ·rHE ScnOLAR, JoHANN GoTTLIF.B FIOHTE. Translated
AJ.'ID ITS ll'i:ANIFESTATIONS. By JOIIANN fron.1 the German by WILLIAM SMITH.
GOTTLIEB FICHTE. Translated from the Post 8vo. Pp. xii. nnd 198, cloth, 4s .
German by WILLIAM SMITH. Second 1848.
Edition . Post 8vo . Pp. vii. and 131, "In the progress of my present work, I have
cloth, 3s . 1843. taken a de pe•· glance into religion than ever I
did before. In me the emotions of the heart
" W'ith great satisfaction we welcome this first proceed only from perfect intell ect uttl clearness;
English translation of an author who occupies 1t canm.t be but the clearness I 'have now at-
the most exalted position as a profvund and tained on this subject shall also take possession
original thinker; as an irresistible ora,tor in the of my heart."-F,cllte's Uorre.,po>,clence .
cause of what he believed to be the truth; as a "'The Voca~ion nf Man' is. ns Fichte tru ly
thoroughly honest and heroic man . . . The says, intellip-ible to all readers who are I"eally
appearance of any of his works in our lan~uage ab le to unacrsta.nrl a hook at all; and as the
is, we believe, a perfect novelty. . . . ·.1.'hese history of the miud in its various phases of
orations are admirably fitted fur their purpose; doubt, knowledge, and faith, it is of interest to
so grand is the position taken by the lecturer, all. A book of thi• stamp is sure to teach you
and so irresistible their eloquence."-Ea:wnine1·. much, became it excites thought. If it rouses
·• This work mu t inevitably arrest the atten- you to combat hi~ conclusions, it has done a
tion of the scientific physiclan, IJy the grand good work; for in that very effort you are stirred.
spirituality of its doctrines, a.n<l the pure mflra- to a consideration of points which have hitherto
lity'it teaches . . Shall we I elpresumptuuiJS escaped your indolent acqulescence."-Fureign
if we recommend these view• to our professional Qua1· te1·ly .
1~ Catalogue of Important Works.
"This is Fichte's most popular work, and is Hall. THE L AW OF IMPERSONATION AS
every way remarkable."- .Atlas. APPLIED TO ABSTRACT IDEAS AND RELI-
"It appears to us the boldest and most em-
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plain to man his restless and unconquerable de - cond Edition, enlarged. Crown 8vo.
sire to win the True and the Eternal."- Sentinel. Pp. 120. Bound in cloth, 4s. 6d.
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and 221, cloth, 5s. 1849. of " Rational Psychology." Royal 8vo.
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as a thinker can be slightly valued only by such SIONS. .A Series of Lectures. 8vo. Pp.
as know it ill; and as a man, approved by action viii. and 382. lOs. 6d .
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Critio.
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in a small compa s be presents a mo5t lucid ex- Progress of the Intellect, as Exem-
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supported by arguments which cannot fail to of the Greeks and llebrew ." By R. W.
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is on every account worth~· IJfspecial and atten- Jlfe of Christinnity than half the hooks thut are
tive ptrnsal . . . ;\[r '1ackay writes modcrale!y coldly elaiJUratcd in its defe11ce. The churm of
a well asfearlessly , "'ith the spirit of a philusri- the \'UIIllllC is the tone offllit '·lfllillC"A lliHI. Rin-
pher and the caudour of an honest mun."- ccrity which it hrcatlle~-thc evi leii<"Cs which it
Leruler affords in every page. of l>oing <lmwn clirer·t
.i'Yiann (HoRACE). A FEw Trrouc:nTs FOR front the fuuutnins of convicLiOlL"-J '?·o,.;Jiectivo
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A YouNG l'IIA~. A Lectnre delivered •· Uu the great ability of the author we need
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ohviQUS 011 e\'Cry puge."-Lit,·~.~ry Guzetl,..
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11 Au~tin . CE~mNTS AND TIIEIR CoM- 0 'N Cill. CHEMISTRY Ol,. CALICO PRINT-
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26 Catalogue of Important Wo1·ks.
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Frequently as we read of the works of Cax- and general Title, 2 leuves; Dr. Lude-
ton. and the early English Printers, and of their wig's Preface, pp. v.-viii; EdiLor's
black letter books, very few persons have ever Preface, pp. iv-xii; Biographical Me-
had the opportunity of seeing any of these pro- moir of Dr. Ludewig, pp. xiii,xiv; and
ductions, and forml.np; a proper estimate of the Introducto•·y Biblio'{raphical Kotices,
ingenuity and skill of those who first practised
the" Noble Art of Printing ." -pp. xiv-xxiv, followed by List of Con -
tents. Tbeu follow Dr. Ludewig's Bib-
This reproduction of the first work printed by
Caxton at Westminster, containing 23 woodcuts, ! iotheca Glottica, alphabetically ar-
is intended, in some measure, to supply this ranged, with A.dditious by the Editor,
deficiency, and bring the present age into some- pp. l-209; Professor Turner's .-\ddi- ,
what greater intimacy with the Fathe1· of En- tions, with those of the Editor to the
glish P1·inters.
same, also alphabetically arranged , pp.
. The type has been carefully imitated, and 2 10-246; Index, pp. 247-256; and li st
the cuts traced from the copy in the British of Errata, pp. 257, 258 . One vol. hand-
Museum . The paper has also been made ex-
pressly, as near as possible like the original. somely bound in cloth, price 1Os. 6d.
This work is intended to supply a great want,
Dele}lierre. ANALYSE DES TRAVAUX now that the study of EthnolOf.'Y has proved that
DE LA Socn3:TE DES PHILOBIBLON DE exotic languages are not mere curiosities, but es-
LONDRES. Par OCTAVE DELEPIERRE. sential and interesting parts of the natural history
Small 4to., laid paper, bound in the of man, forming one of the most curious links in
the great chain of national affinities, defining as
Roxburgh style. [In the Press .. they do the reciprocity existiug between man and
(Only 250 copies will be printed). the soil be lives upon. No one can venture to
---- HISTOIRE LITTERATRE write the history of America without a knowledge
DES Fous. 12mo, cloth. 5s. of her aboriginal languages ; and unimportant as
such researches may seem to men engaged in the
Edwards (EDWARD). MEMOIRS OF Lr- mere bustling occupations of life, they will at
least acknowledge that these records of the pa.t,
BRAR!ES, together with a PRACTICAL like the sten1 -lights of a de,larting ship, are the
HANDBOOK OF LTBRARY ECONOMY. Two last glimmers of savage life, as it becomes ab-
vols. royal8vo. Numerous Illustrations. sorbed or r~cedes before the tide of civilizatiOJ?--
Dr. Ludew1g and Prof.Turuerhavemade mostdt-
cl ot h · £ 2 8S. . .
- - - - - - DITTO, large paper, 1m penal
Svo. £4 4s.
I ligent use of the public and private collections in
America, access to nll of which was most liberally
grunted to them. This has placed at their dispo. al
the labours of the American M.Lssionaries, so little
Gutenber~ (JOHN). FIRS'£ MASTER known on this side of tlle A.!la~tic that they may
·. k be looked upon almost m the ll~rht of untrodden
PRINT~R, H1s Acts, an_d most remar - ground . But English and Continental libraries
able DISCourses, and h1s Death. From 1 have also been ransacked ; and
Dr. Ludewig kept
the German. By C. W. Svo, pp. 141. up a constant tmd active correspondence with
1 Os 6d scholars of" the Fatherland," as well as with men
' · of similar tastes and pursuits in France, Spain, and
Le Bibliomane. No. I., Svo, pp. 20; Holland, determined to leave no stone unturned to
render hiB labours as complete as po-sible. The
No. II., pp. 20. 2s. each.. volume, perfect in itself, is the first of an enlarged
' edition of Vater's "Lingua rum totiu.~ 01·1Jis In-
Nouvelles Plaisantes Recber- clex." The work has been noticed Ly the press of
ches D'UK HOMMEGRA VE SUR QUELQUES botll Continents, and we may be permitted to refer
particularly to the following
FARCEURS. Svo. Pp. 53. lOs. 6d.
0PJXIOXS OF TilE PRESS,
Uricoechea (EZEQUIEL, Dr., de Bogota, "This work, mainly the production of rhe late
Nueva Granaia). MA.POTECA. COLOM- IIerr Ludewig, a German, naturalized in America,
BIA.NA; CATA.LOGO DE TODOS LOS }1A.PAS, is devoted to an account of the literature of the
aboriginal languages of that country. It gives an
PLANOS, VISTAS, ETC., REL.A.TIVOS A LA alphabetical list of the various tribes of whose lan-
A.!IIERIOA-ESPANOLA. BRA.~IL, E ISLAS guages any record rdnl1lins, and refers to the works,
A.DYACENTES. A.rreglada cronologica- papers, or mnnuscripts, in which su~h information
mente i precedida de una introduccion may be found. The work J:as ev1Clently been a
. l . .·
S? b re a h1stona cat. togwfica
. labour of love; and as no pums seem to have Leen
de Arne-
nca. One vol. Svo, of 232 pages. 6s. I spured by the editors, Prof. Turner and ::11r. TrUb-
n r, in rendering the work as accurate and com-
plete a possible, those who are most intere;ted in
Van de Weyer.
-...- S V
LES OPDSCULES DE
~•.L. YLVAI~ AN ~E WEYER de 1_823
I its cont~nt: will be best able t?judge of the l~bour
and a stdUtty bestowed upc-u 1t by author, editors,
and publisher."-Athenwum, bth April, 18[)8.
1861. Prem1ere Sene. Small 4to.,pnnted " This is the fu.t instalmeut of a work wh.ich
with old face type, on laid paper, ex:- will be of t~e greote•t value_ to philolo;:rbts ; and is
pressly made for the purpose. Suit- a con?pendiun: of the abor,::<:nal langurt)(es of the
· h R b h l
a bl y b oun d 1n t e o:x: urg sty e.
[In the Pnss.,
Amencan contUteut•, aml a thgcst of all the known
literature bearing UJ>Oll thoae languages. Mr.
TrUbner's hand bll3 been engaged passt>n, and in
I
(The Edition will consist of 300 copies only). lili preface he lays clllim to about one-sixth of the j
Triibner &; Co., 60, Puternostl't' Row.
whole: and we have no doui.Jt thot the encourag-e- ecut!!<l, hoth b_,. th author, . lr. Lud ·wig-. n11Ll tho
ment with which thi-; portion of the work will he nb14' writ~r~ litcd tlw work inc~ hi
wl10 hnvl·
received by :--cholurs, will he !-.tlt·h ns to inspirP ~lr.
TrUbner with gutficient t'Onfitll·1lrL· to lH'r!'J~..:\'crtl in
I death, b .. pOkt·n of in
tlPnwn wo.. t twt
th~~
hi::hf• .. t term' by J..'"ell-
'\ ith thl' !"ttl~ ct." -
t'Oll\'t·r
his anluou, an<l mo-t houourablc la>k." - 1'/te .Amcri('{l/1. llillloncu/ Jlayuzine, \"vi. 11., ... ro. 5,
Critic, loth Dec., 18:.7. l>lny, !·~·" ·
"Few would btlieve that a good octnvo volume '"JE.> tcnuincrol en nn11011t'nnt lt• premi~r volume
would be nece>':U: tO exltau.-t t 11<' >ubjcct ; yt•t so d'uuc pulJlicatiou flJIJ,cl.Sc ;\ reudro tit~ ,:r.tnd .. ~t·r
and this haud.... onn~. U:-t:ful, and curiou~
it is, vice ... n In philolo,..de C0111par't• et a. In Hn,..ui ... liquo
volume, carefully compiletl by ~tr. Ludewig. U:,- g~ner:•le. Jc Ycu J>• rl••r <I•· Ill lllhlioth ca Glut-
si ted by Profe«-orTurm·r, ami c<litt>d by the care- ticn. ouvrttge dt.:vunt n·uf,·Tlllt>T lo. Ji to dt• tous lc
ful band of ~lr. TrUI.Jucr, the well-knowu pub- d.ietiounuire~ t:L dv tuutc., }c ... 1-!rnuuunirt -4 tl~-.
lisher, ";u be !'ure to tin(1 u. j1lnn! in n1nuy li lan~ue;o, conuu .... tttnt i111prirn•~"' quo Jlltuu-..,·rit .
braries."-B•·nf~ .Ad.:erti.<tr, St 1 ~-ov., 18.">7. l/t:ditl"ur dtl c tto pr~t·i u .. ._. hiblio,.:r:lJ,hi l. t ~I.
B The lover,:; of American liut,ruktic:-o "-ill fincl in
.... -ir·olm; TrllLtlt·r, dout 1•· norn c.. t hu110rubleuu\nt
the work of :O.tr. Trllhtwr scnrcely any point connu tluns Jc tuondt orl•ut ll. Le )1rcmier voluHJ•'
omitted calculated t•) nid the comparative phi- e"'t cOn"'~ncr~ nux i•lioruP:i ~\mfrk.rti.uc .. ; )p .. , ('Owl
lologer in tracing the various lang-ut~g-l·s of the doit trnit;·r de~ Jlln~o.:·w·~ (h.• l'lnde. Le travuil ·~t
g r eat \ Vestcrn Continent." - Gulu;uy Mercury, f1tit avec },. '-f•in lc plu"~ coue;.ci~:n,•i,·tt"l, ct ft·ru
30th Jan., 1808. houneu 1il :If Nicolth Trllhn•·r, Mttrrout ,·u pour-
suit son ccuvro avec lu 1n;':lll\:' urtil·ur r1u'il nmi ... t· i\
" Only those deeply verserl in pltilological studies le commellcl'r.•• - /.,. Leull, lie ltUI:iiiiJ· l~e1..·ue
can appreciate this book at ils fuJI vuluc. It ~hows de l'Orient, Fcvrier, 1~5 •
that there are UJHnlrds of •evcu huntlre<l ••nd fifty
ahorif..>ina1 A1nerican language~." - GeJLtlc;.Jnan's "Mr. TrUbner'8 mo't importnnt work on the
.Magazine, Feb. 1851'!. bibliography of'thH nburiginul languagt•:1-> of .A!Ilfl-
rica i:i Ucst·rviug of u11 prui:oe, Uf= cminrutly us ful
" T he work contains an account of no fewer than to tho•e who 'twly thut brunch oflit•·ratun·. Tho
seven hundred cliJferent ahori:rinnl tliulect .. of ..:\Jne- vu.lue, too, of the~book, and of the pain~ wllic hits
rica, with an introductory clutpt~->r ofhihliQgraphical COIIIJlilntiOn untst have co .. t, will not b" lt.· .. s~·nt.•d hy
infonnation ; and u_ndPr ench dialect is an a.ccnm1t the C0n,i•lenlliun thilt it i~ fifjo;L iu this fi ·l1l Of lin-
of any ~rtln1mars or otbtr 'vorks illu ·rrative of it." g'UL tic litt•rature . " -l~l'irrmtll 1 tt's Gcoyraphische
- The Bookseller, Jan. 18:.8. .Jltttheilung•n, p. 79, Feu. , 1858.
"\Ve baveberethe list of monuments still exist-
Ing, of an almo t innumerehle 'eries of languages "Undon!Jtcdly thi• volume of TrUhnPr'" Bib-
and dialects of the American Continent. The liothcca Glotti<-urauk• amon~-o.-.t the mo<~t vulunble
greater part of Indian gramtnars and vocabularies additions which of lute ycur• have enriche<l our
exist ouly in l\LS .. and wc·rc ~ompiled chiefly by biiJliogruphicu.l lih·rntun~. rro u~ Gcntulns it i~
most gratit)-ing-, that the initiutivu has h~Pn tokt•n
lllissionories of the Chrbtian Chur<-11; one! to Dr.
Ludewig and l\Ir. Trl\IJUc-r, we urP, therefore, the I.Jy '' Gcrmun book•••ller hilnsclf, one of the mORt
more indebted for the grcnt care with which they intelligent and ttCtiv~ of our countrymen abrOtvl,
have pointed out w!JPre such are to be foun<l, as to produce a work which h.nR Wghcr aims tlum
well as for enun1erating- thos~ ·which huve lJeP.u 1ncrc pecuniary profit, untl thnt he too, has la-
p1·inted, either iu a SC}Jal·ate shnpP, in collections, boured at its production with hL' own hands ;
bccuu.~e daily it is bc"oming a circwnsttmco of
ur in vovages and t-ravels, aud clse,vhere. 11-
rn.rer occurrence that, 0.8 in this case, it is n hook-
Leadtr, 1I th Sept. 18[}8. seller's primary object to serve the ca.use of lite-
"I have not time, nor is it my purpose, to go rature ruther than to enrir:h hi.tllBelf."- P. Tromel,
into a review of this udmiruble work, or to Borsenblatt, 4th Jan., 18.">8.
attempt to indicate the extent and value of its
contents. It is. perhups, enough to say, that apart "In the compilation of the work the editors
fro1u a concise but clear enumeration and notice of have avuilc<l themselves not only of the labou r s
the variou.~ general philologi•·nl works which trent of Vater, Burton, Duponcenu, Gallatin, De Souza,
With g-reater or lt!. s fulness uf Anu~r icanlang;uages, and others, but also of the MS. sources left by the
or which incidentally touch upon their hiulio- missionarie•, and of many books of which even tho
graphy, it contains not less thun 256 cJo,.cJy- lilm1ry ofthe British M:useUJn is deficient, and fw·-
printed octavo pa1;es of bil,liOf,'Taphical notice" of nish the fullest account of the literature of no less
gr~nnmars, vocabularies, etc., of the aboriginAl than 52b lim,;uugcs. The val ue of the work, so ne-
Iaw;uages of America. It is a. peculiar and valuable cessary to the 'tucly of ethnology, is greatly en -
featur e of' tbe work tba.t uot only the titles of huncecl by tho oclclition of a good Inclex ."- Be?"liner
printed orpuhlL,l•ed grnmmars or vocabularies are National-Zeitung, 22ncl N ov. , 1857.
given, but a.lso tht1t UllJJDIJli,hcd or MS. works of' " T he name of the nuthor, to all those who are
these kinds are uoticerl, in all cuBes ·where they are acquuintcd with his former work•, ami who kno w
known to exit, but which hnve clihuppeared among the thoroughness nne! p1·ofound chunlcter of bis in-
the deb1·is <-f the suppressed convents t.mrl religious vesti?{ntions. is a sWlicicnt guara.ntee that this work
c.tai.Jlishmeuts of Spanish America."- £. G Sqwer, will be one ofstamlard authority, and one that will
in a_yape1· nad before the .Ame1·ican Etf!rv;lo- fully answer the demands of the present ti.tne."-
g~calSociety, 12th Jan., 1858 . Petzholdt's .Anzeiger, J an., 1858 .
"In consequence of the death of the author be- " The chief merit of the editor anc1 publisher is
fore he bud finhhecl the revisal of the work, it to huve tenninated the v. ork carefully a11d l uciclly
has been carefully examined by competent scho- in contents and form, and thus to have establish ed
lars, who have also made many valuable addi - a new nncl Jorg~ly augmeutetl edition of ' Vate1·'s
tions." - .American Publishers' CtTcular , 30th Linguarwn rotius 01·bis Index,' after Professor
Jan., 18.">8. J Ulg's revision of 18 17. In order to continue and
" It contains 256 closely-printed pnges of titles complete this work th e editor requires the assist-
of printed books and manuscripts, and notices of ance of all those who arc acqtta.intecl with this new
Amer ican aboriginal languages, and embraces re - branch of science, nnd we sincerely hope it mny he
ferences to nearly all1hat has been written or pub- accorded to him."- Magazinfur aie L i te1·atu1· des
lished respecting them, whether i n special works .Auslandes, No. 38, 18f)8.
or incidentally in books of travel, periodicals, or "As the general title of tbe book indicates , it
proceecline:s of learned societies." - ~Yew Y01·lc will be extended to the languages of the oth er
llemld, 26th J an. , 1858. continents, in case it meet with a favourable recep-
" The manner in which thls contribution to the tion, which wemostcorcliallywishit." .A.F.Pott,
bibliogr aph y of Amer ican languages has been ex- Preussische J ah1·buche1·, V ol. II. , part I,
28 Catalogue of I mportant Works.
" Cette compilation savaute est san• contredit, le the work be of less intere t to the man of letters
travail bib!iographique le pins important que notre inasmuch as it comprises complete Tables of Cou -
epoque nit vu ~ urgir sur les nations indigene<; de tents to all the more prominent Collections of the
l'A.merique."- Nouvelles Anncr.les des Voyages, An1ericans, to the J ournals, i\Iemoirs, Proceedings,
Avril, 1859 . and Transactions of their leamed Societies - and
"La Bibliotheca Glottica, dont M . Nicolas thus furnishes an intellig-ible key to a department
Trlilmer, a commence ln publication, est un des of A.medcan scientific activity hitherto bu.t imper-
livTes les plus uhles qm aient jamais He rediges fectly known and understood in Europe.
po ur faciliter l'etude de In philologie comparee,
Le premier tome de cette gTand bibliographie lin- 0PI:'>"10YS OF TITE PRIJ:SS .
guistique comprend la liste textuelle de toutes les " It has been reser,,ed for a foreigner to have
grammaires, de tous les dictionnaires et des voca- compiled, f01· the benefit of Etuopean readers, a
bulaires m@me les moins etendus qui out ere im- really trustworthy guide to Anglo-American
prim~s dans les differents diaiectes des deux Ame-
literature . This honourable distinction has been
riques; en outre, il fait connaltre les ouvrages fairly won ty ~lr. Nicholas TrUbner, the intelli -
manuscrits de Ia ml'me nature renfermes dans les gent and well-known publisher in Paternoster-
principales bibliotheques publiques et particulieres. row. That gentleman has succeeded in mrtkiug
a very valurtble additon to bibliographical
Ce travail a dO. necessiter ue longues et patientes knowledge
recherches; nussi merite-t-i! d'attirer tout particu- wanted."- , in a quarter where it was much
lieremeut !'attention des ph.ilolO:f1eS. Puissent les Unive1·sal Review, J rtn ., 1859.
autres volumes de cette bibliotneque @tre rediges "' Trubner's Bibliographical Guide to A meri-
avec le m~me soin et se trOttver bientot entre l es can L iterature' deserves praise for the great care
mains de tons les savant :tlL'<quels ils peuvent with which it is prepared, and the wonderful
rendre des services inappreciables."- Revue Ame- amount of information contained in its pages.
?'icaine et Orientale, No. I. , Uct . 1858. It is compiled and edited by l\[r. Nicholas
Trilbner, the publi her, of Paternoster Row. It
" T o every fresh ad clition to the bibliography of comp_rises
l anguage, of which we haven most admirable spe- the Uniteda classified list of books published in
States during the last forty years,
cimen in this work, the thoughtful linguist will with Biblio:vaphical
ever, as the gTeat problem of the unitv of human AlphabeticaL Inclex. The I ntroduction, Notes, and
speech approaches towards its full solution, turn elaborate introduction is very
with increasing satisfaction and hope. and ftlll of facts, and must be the work
of a gentleman who has
"But ~1r. N icolas '£rtibner, however, has per- making himself master of spared no pains in
haps, on the whole, clone the highest service of all in connection all th:Lt is important
to the ph.ilologer, by the publication of " The Li- tainly supplieswith much
American literature. It cer-
information
terature of A1uericnn Aboriginal Languages,n IIe known in Europe."- not generally
has, with the aiel of Professor Turner, greatly en- 1859 . Jloi·J?.ing Suu·, January 31st,
larged, and at the same time most skilfully edited, "l\Ir.
the valuable materials acquired by !lis deceased the first Trlibuer de erves much credit for being
to arrange bibliography according to the
friend II. Ludewig. \Ve do not, indeed, at this received rules of the
moment, know any similar work deserving of full in 1855, and the firstart. lie began the labour
volume was published in
comparison with it. In its ample enumeration of that year; constitutin~, in fact, the earliest
important works of reference, and careful record attempt, on this side of the Atlantic, to cata-
of the most recent facts iu the literature of its sub- logue American books. The present volume, of
ject, it, as might have been expected, gTeatly sur- course, is enlarged, and is more perfect
passes J CLlg's ' V ater.' valuable and trustworthy respect. The method of classification isin every
exceed-
though that learnct1 German's work tmdoubtrdly in"lY clear and useful.
is."- Yorth British Review, No . 59, February, .
R In •hort, it presents the actual state of!Itera-
1 8~9 . ture, as well as the course of its development.
The E<titor has also received most kinrl and en- from the beginning. Into the subject-matter ot
cow·aging letters reSJJCcting the work, from Sir this section we •hall have to lnok hcTeafter; we
George Grey, the Chevaiier Bunsen, Dr. Th. are now simply explainin? the compositiou of
Goldstticker, Mr . \Vutts (of the l\Iuseum), Pro- Mr. Trlibner's inost valuable and useful book."
(of Dresden), IIofruth Dr. Grasse (of Dresden), M.
I
fessor A.. Fr. Pott (of Ifalle), Dr. Julius Pct?.bolt - Spectator, Fehrunry .5, l ;;9.
" i\fr . Trtlbner·s book is by far the most com-
F . F. de Ia Fi~·anierc (of Lisbon), E. Edwards (of plete American bibliography that has yet ap- 11
i\Ianche ter), Dr. l\lax MUller (of Oxford), Dr. peared, and wsplavs an amount of patieuce and
Bu•d•mann (of Berlin), Dr. JU!g (of Cracow), and research that does 'him infinite credtt. \ ·e hrtYe
other lingu.istic scholars. tested the accuracy of the work upon several
points demanding much care and inquiry, :md
the result has always been sati. factory. Our
TJ•iibner (NrcoLA.S). TRti.B}."ER's BIB- A.mericn.n hretluen cannot fail to feel compli-
LIOGRAPHICAL GUIDE TO A>IERIGAN LI- mented by the production of thi; volu111e. which
TERATURE: a Classed List of Books in <JUantit~' almost equals our own Lon1lun cata-
published in the United State of Ame- logue." - The B •O'.seller, February 21, 1e;,q.
ric:a, from 1817 to 1857. With Bibliogra- "To so.v of thi volume that it entirely fulfil•
the pro1iuse of its title-/Ju"e, b Jl<»>i'bly the
phical Introduction, Notes, and Alpha- highest ana mo>t trut!Jfu commewhlion that
betical Index. Compiled and Edited by can be awarded to it. Mr. Trlibner 1lcscrvcs,
NrcOLA.S TRLiBNER . In One vol. Svo, of however, something beyoud general praise for
750 pages, half-l.Jouud, price 18s. the patient and intellil!ent labour with whi h he
has ehtboruted the earlier forms of the wurk into
This work, it is beli ~Yed, is the first atte >~pt that which it "'"" b ·ars. "'hut wa once but
to" arshnl the Literature of the United States scanty vol u1nel ha now o.
becotne Jtwgni tied, un(ler
of America during the last forty years ac- hi; cure, to one of considerul.le ize : and what
cording to the generally recci veu bibliograpb.icttl wus once little better thun a Ury Clltlll:J~ue, may
canons. The l.ibranan will welcon·,e it, no nvw tuke rauk '"' u biographicul work of first-
doubt, as a co•npan;on Yolume to Brunet, rate importance. His l>'"itiou u · an American
II Low .. de , and Ebert: whilst, to the honk- literary a)!ent ha•, <lonbtle", been very favour-
seller, it will be a fa.i thfu l guiue to the Ameri- able to ~[r. Trli1Jne1·, lJ.v throwing ma•ter in hi"
can branch of English Literature- a branch wav: and he confes;es, in his preface. that it is
I which. on account of its rapid increase nud to this source that he id mainh· indebted for the ,
rising importance, be~i.us to force it ·elf daily materirtl3 wh;ch have cnnhlecf him to construct
II more and more upon n.is atteution. Nor will the work before us. ~I r. TrUbner'o object in com-
2!)
1
piling thls book i , he states, two-fold: 'On the fL' n ~vhole. t!llw a morl.'lh ely Ill HI n <I cpcr i1HC·
one hand 1 to :;u[T•Te ·t the nece~sin· of n nHnc 11cr- rc:"'!lln .\tucrwuu utTn.~r th n unr fJlht.:r tUltJUit.
feet w·ork of its kind by an An1cTican. :-ourround- ~ow, I utn ruinJ! to )H.:uk f1f n. 1uHJk j u.,t read\ tu
ed ns he nece sariJy would uc, with the needful leave the pre - of n. L•>n lou publi-hcr. "'""''·
ll.Pl>linnces: and, 'on the other. to '"I'Pl~· to whilcit i' 11 •r•nark·•lolt· in•t ""'C of th · tn th of
.Europeans a au.ide to A.Jv:r}o .:\.tneric.nn literature lll,.Y 1\ ..... ertion in fl•f\ fCIH"C to tl \~ (:l:rll1U1t llHI~t
- a branch wfllch. hY it ~a11id rbc and increa~- he cnrhidt:rctl 11 ..... n in r tl e iute_rc t ol the
ing importance, he.!in> to furce it-elf more >tnd United ::-t ttc-. ll\ prutnutiu th· <Hod reputation
n1ore on our attenticJn.' It j..; Yery nluth::->t in ~lr. uf Atnericnn lth~ 111 nn Ulll' JlltllliJll de ~ret'.
Trlibner thus to treat hi. work"' a mere ,ug- •· The L<>n<lun bo"k trade hn a firm, Tr!ll_.ner
!le?tion for others. It is much more thull thi-: ~Co., of who c l>t ittL"'' llHIINtCt,on ~lltCrt<'llll
It IS an example which tho,e who attetnpt to do hterr~turc. "'well t Itt rt!tnr<·on \mrnn1. l"rtll
an:rthingmore complete cannot do better thttn to a pnuctpal. I.mtwh. J •: the tinu "It" I~""'
follow 11. modeL which the~· will do well to lat~ly JHtloh-ltcd thl' lo;I.Ito~rn(lh), <,f \lltHII'Ull
copy if theY would combine tulne;s of material lnu;.rnn"'c'. \1 r .. ·;..uln Tr!ll•n r '' ·' ( •Crtnau.
\\ith' that 'admirable order and arrnn~ement wh•J hu- lll'H'r iuh thitt <I the lluitcd ,..,tales, nud
which so facilitate reference nnd without which ~·ct he ri-k In tlllll', lalHiltr, :uHltuonc,·. in litl'-
a work uf thi sort is all l:Jut t;seles . rnry Jllthlil'utiota-... fiH '' hkh c\· 11 vai11 l'Htll-u' our
".All hononr then to the literature ofYouna ,~·•mid huve t,ecn tlla<lc to lim! u11 ,\tnl'ricuu pub-
America-fur 'young she still i~, and let hcr h~l,>;t·. • . .. . , , .
thank her stars fi.Jr 1t-nud ull ho 11 uur, also to . :rhe IIC\1 puhhc.tlton of \lr. ftllbucr, to
1\rr. Trilbner, for taking so much pains to 1n:lke whtch I hu.'·e t·~l.l·rn•tl,, ~A .a lJ\rJ.!;. ~·o,: ~·olt!t.ne
us acquainted with it."- The Cntic ~lurch 19 of _oo paves, u_n<•cr t_hc title of Ltl•l."!~r·•P!>Hal
1859 ' ' Gut<leto.\llll'l'll'!lll Lttcratm ·.. \<·lu.s,,ltcd L• t of
· BotJks pui,Ji..,hl'd in tilt· nitccl."'tntl':"!Uf \lul.'ril':tt
"This is not only a Yery useful, because well from 181 ito a!.,;. \Yith BiJ,)io;!rnphic:tl Jnlru-
executed, bibliographical work-It i> also a work duction, :'\olt· ·, :tn<l .\lphabcticul Iu<ll'x. Cunl-
ofmuch interest to all who are connected with piled atHl edit d by • 'iculas Trlll>ncr .
literatw·e. The bulk of it consists ofn cJa,·iiied •· Tlds 111 -t rclllark hu, bllt too tllll<·h truth 111
list, \Vith date of publication, ,ize, nnd price, of it. The l"llitcd Stntcs, in the npiuion of' the
nil the works, original or tr11nslated, which hn.ve great m:t's of' C\'CIJ the wcll-c<lncalcd pcopll- of
appeared in the United States durin<! the hL't Europe, is u country inhabited by a natioll loot
forty Years: and an alphabetical index facili- iu the pur. uit of ntutcrinl illtcrc't. n couutry in
tates reference to any particul!n work or n.uthor. which tile lcchnicully npplicablc brullchcs of
Ou the merits of this portion oft he work we can- some cicnce< mav loc <·ttltivntc<l to a ccnuin
not, of course, be expected to form a judgment. degree, hut a country c'sclllilll_h· without litera-
It would require something of the speciul erudi- ture aiHl art, a ,.., 111 ur.r not wtllwul uc\\·spapcrs
tion of Mr. Trlihner himself, to say bow far he -so much the \\'or.,c liu· it-but almost without
hassucceededorfullen short ofhis unrlertaking hooks. !ow here, Mr. 'l'rllhner. a Gennnn,
-ho\vfew, or how mnny, have l.!een his omis- comes out with n. liot of Americnn books, filling
sions. There is one indication, howeYer, of his a thick l'olume, though eontaini11g .\mc1·icnn
careful rn.inuteness, which suggests the amount publicntions '""-"· upward from the ycnr 1817,
of labour that mu t. have been be: to we~ on the from \\·h ich time he dates the period of n more
work- namely, the full enumeratwn of all the decided literary in<lCJlCndcnce of the United
contents of the various Transactions and Scien- States •
tificJournals. Thus, the 'Transattions of the 1 "Si~ce no native-horn and even no ncloptecl
American Philo~ophlcn.l Society,' from the yeur .Americnn, has taken the tr:mblc of cornj>iling, :tr~
~769 to I~:J7- no 1~dex ~o whJCh has yet appeared ranging. rljgc~tin.~, cditiu;t, a1Hl puhlis )ing 1-'Uch
111 Amenctt -are 111 thts work made easy of re- n. work who else hut" German could undertake
f~rence, ev.er~· paper of everyv?lume bein_g men- it 'I wJu) else nmong the Enropenn nution~ would
t10ned senatml. The naturalu;t, who wJshe; to have thmwht Amcricnn litcntlure worth the
know what papers hn.ve appeared in the Bo·ton labour thd' time anrl the money'? ancl, let me
Jow·nal of i'\atural Historv during the la t n.dd tl;at a sntn.ll'er work of a ,imilnr character
twenty yen.rs. tlHtt is, from lts c01nmencement, : Tl;e Literntnre of Amerirnn Local History,' by
hns onl:.; to. gla~ce,l)\'er ~he five clo~ely-prin~~d the late Dr. 1 fcrmnnn Ludewig, was the w•!rk of
pages of tlus guide _to sn.ttsf,Y: lumself at once. - a German 1ikewbc. ]\[ny he that the maJOnty
1 he Satll?·day Revu,w, April2, 1859. of the Ar~crienn public will tt,cribc but mt in-
" \Ve have never seen a work on the national terior de'lree of intere t to works of this kind.
literature of a people more carefully compiled Tile majority of: the puhiic of other n~tions. wi~l
than the present, and the blbliOf!raphical {>role- do the same, as 1 t cannot be every)Jo~ly ~ uus11 .1ess
to unrlerstnnd the u~cfulness. of bibliography,
gomena deserves attenti 1•e perusal by al who
would study either the political or the literary
history of the greatest republic of the West."-
I and o~ books cont•:m~ng notlung but the C!Hl-
mer at >On and descnpt10n of books. OnE; tl11ng,
The Leader March 26 18o9. ho\\•ever, must !>e !'!'Parent: the deep mtercst
' ' tn.ken l>y some tureu!llers 111 some of the more
"~he subjec~ of my letter to-day mn.y sc~m ~o ideal spheres of A11teric1tn life; nnd if it is trne,
be of apu~ely literary chara~ter, but I fe_elJ,ustl- tlHtt the clear historical insight into its OW'l1 de-
fied. to c_lam1 a more gE!neralmterest for 1t.. :ritA t velopment, idenl as well as material, is one of the
subJect ~s connected wnh the go'!d r_eput~tJOn of most valmthle acquisitions of a nation, future
the Ulllt.ed States abroad,. It ts likewise con- .American genern.tsons will acknowledge the good
nected With the general toptc. C?f my two former services ofthoseforeigners, who, by their literary
letter~. Il~avespol.<enofthetnendsan~then.n- application, contributed to avert the national
tag~nllSts of the Umted S~ates amo11g European calfunity of'the origin of the litern.ry independ-
natwns, and among thecltlferent clnsses of Eu_ro- ence of Americn. becoming veiled in darkness."-
pean soctety. I hn.ve stated that the >tntagomsts New y 0 ,·7cDaily Tribtme December 1858.
are chiefly to be found amon" the nristocracy, ' '
not ouly oflJirth, but' of mintl'-as it h11s been "It is remarlmble and notew?rthy _thn.t the
called-likewise; not only amon" the privi legecl most valuable. manual of .Amen can l~terature
classes and those connected wit11 the Govern- should >tppear m London, and be .PL~bltshcd. by
ment interests but n.mon" those who live in the an E11glish house. Trllbner's Bibliograplu cul
sphere of literntw-e and a~t, and look down with Guide to Amer~can Literattu·e is a woTk_ of ex-
contempt upon a society in which utilitarian ~raordimtry sktll anrl _per~evern.>;tce, gn7 111f\ n.n
motives are believed to b~ paramou_nt. And ,I mclex to all the puh~I~atiOr.s of ,~he A_me~tc~~~
hn.ve asserted that, these dtfferences tn the op1- press for the lttst f01 ty years. - H arpe1 s
nions ofceqn.in classes left aside, the Germans, IT'eelcly, ,\fttrch 2uth, 1859.
Catalogue of Important Works .
"\fr. Trllbner deserves all praise for having and makin" a personal investigution into the
produced a work every way satiofactory. No one condition of' literature in the 1'\ew W orld l\Jr.
who takes an interest in the subject of which it Nicholas Trllbner-the gentleman to whom we
treats can dispense with it; and we huve no have made reference- although by birth a Ger-
doubt thut booksellers in this conn try will learn man, and by education and profession a London
to consider it necessury to them as a shop manual, b0okseller, could hardly be called a' stranger in
and only second in importance, for the purposes America,' for he had sent before him a most
of their trade, to the London Catalogue itself. valuable 'letter of introduction,' in the shape of
That a forei 0 '1ler, and a London bookseller, a carefully compiled register of American books
should have accomplished what Americans them- and authors, entitled • Bibliographical Guide
selves have failed to do, is most creditable to the to American Literature,' &c., pp. x:'<xii., 108.
compiler. The volume contains 149 pages of in - This manual was the germ of the important
troductory matter, containing by far the best publication, the title of which the reader \vill
record of American literary history yet pub- find at the commencement of this article.
lisl~ed; and 5~1 pag-es of classed lists of~ooks, to Now, in consequence of M:r. Trlihner's admi -
wlllch an alphabetiCal mdexof33 pages1s added. rable classificat10n and minute iudex, the in-
This alphabetical index alone may claim to be quirer afrer knowledge has notll.ing to do but
one of the most valuable aids for enabl.iJJg the copy from the Bibliographical Guide the titles of
student of litenu-y history to form a just and the American books wh1ch he wishes to consult
perfect estimate of the great and rising im- despatch them to his library by a messenger, ana1
portance of Anglo-American literature, the in a few minutes he has before him the coveted
youngest and most untrammelled of all which volumes, through whose means he hopes to
illustrnte the grndual development of the human enlarge his acqmsitions. Undoubtedl;r it would
mind."-The Press, Philadelphia , Oct. II. 1858. be a cause ofwell-fotmded reproach, of deep mor-
" We do not so much express the wish by this tification to every intelligent American, if the
notice, that ::l!r. Trlibner may not find a public arduous labours of the learned editor and com-
ungrateful for his labour, as congratulate, espe- piler of this volume (whom we almost hesitate to
cially American Bibliophiles. upon the advan - call a foreigner), should fail to be appreciated in
tage within their reach, by the acquisition and a country to which he has, by the preparation of
use of what Mr. T l"Ubner has so opportunely this valuable wol"k, proved him elf so eminent a
supplied."- Wnshington National Int elligencer, benefactor" - Pennsylvania Enquirer, March
26th.1859.
March 22nd, 1859. The editor of th.is volume has acquired a
"This volume contains a well-clrtssified list of knowled!le of the productions of the American
books published in the United States of America press wlllch is rarely exhibited on the other side
during thu last forty years, preceded by a tole- of the Atlantic, and which must command the
rably full survey of American literary enter- admiration of the best informed students of the
prise during the first half of the nineteenth subject in this country. Hi s former work on
century. Th e value of such a guide, in itself .American bibliography, though making no pJ·e-
tolerably evident, becomes more so upon glanc- t ensions to completeness, was a valuable index
ing OYer the five hundJ·ed and forty pages of to various branches of leaming that had been
close print which display the literary activity successfully cultivated by our scholars ; but,
pervading the country of Prescott and l\Iottley, n either in comprehensiveness of plan nor tho-
of Irving and Hawthorne,ofPoeand Longfellow1 roughness of execution, can it be compared to the
of Story and Wheaton, of Moses Stua1·t ana elaborate and minute record of American lite-
Channing. T his volume will be useful to the rature contained in this volume The duty of
scholar, but to the librarian it is indispensable." the editor required extensive research, vigihtnt
-Daily .\'ews, March 24, 1859. discrimination, and nntiring diligence ; and in
" There are hundJ·eds of men of moderate the performance of his task we are no less struck
scholarship who would gladly stand on some with the accuracy of detail than with the extent
higher and more assured point. They feel that of ll.is information. The period to which the
they have acquired much information, hut they YOlume is devoted, compri ·es only the last
also feel the need of that subtle discipline. lite- forty years; but within that time the litera-
rary education, without which all mere learning ture of this country has received its most elfi-
is the rudis indigesta moles, as much of a stum- cient impulses, aDU been widely unfolded in the
bling-block as an aid. To those in snch a con- vnrions departments of intellectual activity-
clition, works on bibliography are invaluable. If we were permitted to speak in behalf of
For direction in classifying all reading, whether American scholars, we should not fail to congra-
English or American, Allibone's Di ctionary is tulate Mr. Trllbner on the eminent success with
adri:!irable ; but, for particular informution as to which he has nccomrli heel his plan, and the
the American side of the hou e, the recently ample and impartia justice with which he J1as
published Bibliographical Guide to American re!!Jstered the productions of our native at• thor-
Literature, by Nicolas Trlibner, of London, may ship. After a careful exanl.ination of his volume,
be conscientiously commended. A carefu 1 pe- we are bound to express our high appreciation of
rusal of this truly remarkable work cannot tail the intelligence, fmrness,and industry which are
to give any intelligent person a clear and com- conspicuous in its page ; for exactness and pre-
plete idea of the whole state of American book- cision it is no less remarkable, than for extent of
making, not only in its literary aspect. but in its research; few, if anyj important publications
historical, and, added to tll.is, m its most mecha- are omitted on its cata O"ue, and although, as is
n.ical detail s."-Philadelpha Evening Bulletin inevitable in a work of d~.is nature. an erroneoll8
JI.Jarch 5th, 1859. letter has sometimes crept into a name, or an
erroneous figure in to a date, no one can consult
''But the best work on American bibliography it habitually without learning to rely on its
yet publi hed bas come to us from LOndon, trustworthiness, as well as it~ completcness."-
where it has been compiled by the well-known llm·per'.< JJlauazine, A!'ril, 18~9.
bibliopll.ile, Trubner. '.rhe work ls remarkable "~or is the book a. dry catalogue only of the
for condensution and accuracy, tho•.1gb we have name and contents of the publications of Ame-
noted a few error. and omissions, upon which v.ye rica. P refixed to it are valuable bibliographical
should like to comment, had we now space to do prolegomena, instructive to the antiquary, as
so."-New Yorlc Times, March 26th, 1859. well as usetul to the philolo(;ist. In this portion
"Some of our readers, whose attention has of the work, :\fr. Trliuner nad the assistance ot
been particularly called to scientific and Jitcrnry the late Dr. Ludewig, wh<J>e early death was a.
matters, may remember meetin!l, some years great los to philological science. ~lr. Moran-
since, in tb1s country, a most mtelligent fo - the assistant-secretary to the A merican Lega-
reigner, who visited the United tatcs for the tion, has added to the volume a historical sum,
purpose of extending his business connections, mary of the literature of .America.; and Mr.
TTiibner & Co., 60, Paternoster How. 31
Edward Edwards is responsible for nn interestin~ wards a hi torv of American litt'rature : III
account of the public libraries of the United Notices of Public Lihmrib oft he uitcd. tttlc
States. To Mr. Triibner's own careful superin- Thc,c three hcncl~ form the iutrodnl'tion, tmd
tendence and hard work, however. the student occupy one hundred and Tif'n· pa.!~s. IV. In s ·d
must ever remain indebted for oue of the mo•t li,;t uf t>uoks; Y .•\lphnhctlcul li t of author,.
useflll and well-arranged books on Liblio~'l'a Thi• plan is omc"·hnt n!t~r thnt adopted in
plticallore ever pub!Lshed. In addition to this, \\'uth' celebrated 'llibliothccn Britannica,' a
it is right to congratulate Mr. Trtibncr on the work of irnrncn:-c 'Mn1Ul' who .. c cutnpilntiun oc-
1
fnct, that ltis present work confirms the opinion cupied s<nnc torly vcu • The cln.-ilicd portion
pa sed on his · BilJliotheca Glottica,' thnt among of the prc-cnt wo'rk cnnhks th • nuder to find
the booksellers themselves honourable literary readil.'· the nu1nes of all boob on any one uh-
eminence may exist, without Chi'hing with bus1 ject, The nlphnloetical indc.· of ttuthors cnnhlcs
ness arrangements. The bookseller:; of old were the reader tun ·<•crtnin in tuntiY the name of ull
authors, and Mr 'I'rtibner emulates their exam- authors and nf ull tla ir work , i~ocludinl! the
ple.''- Morning Chronicle, March 22, 1"59. numeron. periodical publicnlinns of the last
fori\' \'Cur•. \lr TrU!Jncrdescncs the thnnka of
"Mr ..Tr:libner, who i.s no~ only a bihliC!pole the 1iicrary '' ,,r)d fi.>r his plan. and its nhlc cxe-
but a btbhoplule, has, m tlus work, matenally cution."- Xcw York Courier and Enquirer,
increased the claim which he had already upon A.!Jril 11th, 1 :,n .
the r~spec~ of all [?ook-lovers ever~'wher.,, but "L'nuteur. dans unc pr'fucc de dix pa~rcs, ex-
especially m the Umted i?tates, to "hose litera- pose lc,; id•'c' qui lui out fit it cnlrepr udrc oH
ture ~e lu~s now made so Jmportant and useful n livre, ct le plan (Jll'il a cru dc,'oir adopter. Daus
contnbutton. .so, mu'Oh large~ t!1nu a fo_rmer unc snvalltC introclu!'tion, iJ fnit une revue
!Jook, .~der a snmlar tJtle, which. he P.ubltshcd critique <les dill'' rent ouHng-cs rclatifs 11 t' A nl~
m 18~~. and so much. more amp!~ m every rique: il si;malc ccu:•criui ont lc plu · contrilm~ 1\
respect, !he p~esent conshmtes a new Implement l l'etabli s<·mcnt d'unc lltl•'rnturc sp-<cialc Am~ri
foz: our !1branes, as well as the most)rnluable ex- caine. ct il c 11 fttit l'hi,;toire, cettc partie de son
l~tiD(l' a1dfor.those s~udents.~vho, \\l.thout libra~ travnil c,t dcslin•'c a lui tilirc honueur, clle est
nes, n~vea.n mtere~t m koo\\ mg .the~r contents. 1 Dlcthodiq uemcnt divisle en peri ode coloninle et
-Balt~mO? e An.ertean, 2nd Apnl, 1859. / en l"'ri<Jde A m•'ricaine ct rcnfcnrlc, sur lea
"I,astly, published only the other day, is pror;;rea del' imprimerie en Amerique, •ur !e
Trtibner's Bibliographlcnl Guide to American sal~1~e des aule':'rs,. sur lc, ~OTl!lllCrcc de Ju It-
Literature whicfi_gives a classed list of books brn~r~c, les publiCatiOns penodHJIICs. des ren-
published ln the United States during the last seig-nemcnts tr~" intl-r~soulltr;, que l'on est.
forty years, with bibliographical introduction, hourct!X de tr01~ver reu!1is pour la Jlr.cmi~re fois
notes, and alphabeticaf index. This octavo Cettc mtroduc~1on, qu1 n a pus mo1~s. de 150
volume has beeu compiled and edited by .Mr. pages, sc tern.nne par une t.nblc st>Ltlsl.lfl~le de
Nicholas Triibner. the well-known bead of one toutcs lcs lnhl10th~ques pubhques des di1lcrcnts
of the great foreign publishing and importing Etats de !'Union.
houses ofLond~n, who is also editor ofLu~e.'vig "Lc catalogue m~thodique ct raisonne d~
and Turner's L1te:atureof 4-n:encan Abon~mal ouvrugcs n'occupe pus 1~01n R de 521 pngcs, Jl
Languages. Bes1des contammg a classed list of forme :J2 sections consacrd!S chacune 11 l'unc des
books, with an alphabetical index, J\Ir. TrUb- branches des sciences humainca· cclle q•Ji donne
ner's book has an introduction, in which, at con- ]a 1iste des ouvrurresqui intercsscnt lagf.ographie
sidera.!Jle fulness, be. treats. of the history of et leo voyages (scctiun xvi.) comprend J~r~s. de
4-m~ncan ltteratur.e, l!lCltl(png n e~vspr;tpers, pe- 600 articles, ct parmi cux on trouvc I'm 1ca~wn
nodicals, and public !Joranes. It Js fi:ur to state de plusicurs ouvrages dontuous ne soup~onn10ns
that Mr. Trlilmer's Bibliographlcal Guide wns memc pas !'existence en Europe. Un index
publis~1ed subsequent to AllibC!ne's Dictionary, general alphab~tique par noms d' auteurs qui
but pnnted off about the same tune."-Phtlaael- termine cc livre, r.ennet d'abreger des recherches
phia Press, April 4th, 1859. souvent bien pen1bles. Le guide bibliographique
"Thls is a valuable work for book buyers. cJ,e .1t~. T:Uin:~r est un !nonu.ment e le~e ~ l'ac-
For its compilation we are indebted to a foreirrn t1v1te scJentJilque et llttha1re Amer1cnme et
bibliomaniac, but one who has made hims~lf com me tel, it est digne de prcnclr~ place a cOte
familiar with American li1erature, ar,d has pos- des ouvrages du m~me genre publl ~s cnl~urope
sessed himself of the most ample sources of in- par les Brunet, les Lowndes, et les Ebert. (V. A .
formation. The volume contains :-I. Biblio- Malte-Bnm)."-Nou vellesAnnales des Voyages,
graphical Prolegomena; II. Contributions to- April, 18b!J.
Addenda.
Cob be. AN EssAY oN INTUITIVE MoRALs. ScJater. CATALOGUE OF A COLLECTION
Being an attempt to popularize Ethical OF AMERH~AN BIRDS belonging to Mr.
Science. By FRANCIS TowER CoBBE PHILIP LINSLEY SO LATER, M.A., Th. Doc.,
Part I. THEORY OF MORALS. Second F.R.S. Fellow of Corpus Christi College,
Edition. Crown 8vo, Pp 296, cloth. Oxford; Secretary to the Zoological So-
Part II. PRACTICE oF MoRALS. Book ciety of London; Editor of" The Ibis."
I. RELIGious DuTY. Secoad Edition. 8vo. Pp. 354, and 20 coloured Plates of
Crown 8vo., cloth, in the Pre13s. Birds, cloth, 30s.
32 Catalogue qf Import ant Wo1·ks.
Rowan . 1\IEDITATI••NS UN DEATH AND
ETERX!TY. fm.usbte •l from tho German
I dresses , and Literary niiscellau ies. Iu
Twelve Volumes . Crown 8vo., cloth .
(by comman d) by FREDERICA i{OWAN. Renan . A.N ESSAY 0)[ TIIE A.GE AND
Publi.;;he d by Her Majesty' s Gracious ANTIQUITY OF THE BooK OF NABATHLEAN
permissi on . In one volume, crown Svo., AGRICULTURE . To which is added an
cloth. 1 Inaugura l Lecture ou the position of
Com:,t e Rendu du Congr es the Shemitic Nations in the History of '
Intern atimt; ;lnebie nfaisa nce
de Lond.r es . Tmisiem e Session. 2
I Civilizat ion. By M. ER)[EST RENAN,
Membre de l'Iustit;u t . In one Volume.
volumes . Svo . (one French, one English) Crown 8vo., clot h.
I n the Pre.os.
Paton. A_ HISTORY OF THE EGYPTIAN
I Bleek. A COMP.\RATIVE GRAMMAR oF
SoUTH AFRICAN LANGUAGES.
REVOLUTION, from the Period of the By Dr .
W. H . I. BLEEK . Iu one Volnme, Crown
~f·1.melukes to the Death of :Mohamm ed 8vo ., cloth .
.Ali; !rom Arab and Europea n Memoirs , "Wilso n. Ess -I.YS A'!D
Oral Trn.ditio n, and Local Research , LECTURES
CHIEFLY ON THE RELIGION OF THE
By A.. A. PATON, F .R.G.fl., Author of HINDU> . By H. H. WILSO'\, M.A. ,
"Resear ches Oil the Danube aurl. the F.R.S ., late Boden Professo r of Sail-
Adriatic ." Two volumes , 8vo. cloth. skrit iu the Univers ity of Oxford.
Tickno r. 'A HISTORY oF SPANISH Collecte d and Edited by Dr. REr:-.-HOLD
LITF-RATURE. Entirely rewritten . By RosT. Vol. II.
GEoRGE TICKNOJ{. Three volumes , We(ln·w ood . A DIOTIOl'ARY oF
Crown tlv-o., cloth. ENGLISH ETYMOLOGY . By HENSLEIG.Il
Parke r. THE COLLECTED WORKS OF WEDGWOOD, M.A. ,late Fellow of Christ
TH~:oDORE PARKER ; containi ng his College, C•l.!fibridge. (Volume II . -E .
Theologi cal, P•>lemic al, and Critioa1 to P .) 8vo .
Writiilgs , Sermons , Speeches , and A.d.
1