Page images
PDF
EPUB

For my part, I think, that where a character is renovated by the genuine influence of Christianity, and where the effects of such a change are conspicuous in the life; where confirmed evil habits are eradicated, and those of a directly contrary nature implanted in their stead ; —I say, I think a narrative so concluded, does end happily, be the outward circumstances of the individual what they may; and, I confess, I perceive nothing in the declining days of Miss Burrows to excite regret."

"There is so much death death death!" said Miss Susan, "that it makes one quite low-spirited!”

"And who," replied her father, “that has arrived at an advanced age, has not to record the devastating inroads of death-death-death! According to the usual course of nature, Susan, your parents must depart before you;"—(Susan sighed);—" and some one of you must be the lonely survivor of this social group, and have many an affecting tale to tell of the

departure of dear relatives." (Here they all looked tenderly at each other). "But, I trust," resumed the good man," that there are none here present, who will not meet in the world above, where they shall know no more painful separations, and where death-death-death, shall be swallowed up in victory!"

The old man, mentioned in the commencement of the volume, expired before the narrative was concluded, at the Parsonage. Whether Mr. Drummond pronounced it to be worth any thing to his widow, history does not record;although it is ascertained, that young master Henry gave it as his decided opinion, that it deserved to be printed."

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

THE END.

London:

PRINTED BY J. MOYES, GREVILLE street.

BY

TAYLOR & HESSEY, FLEET STREET.

THE FAMILY MANSION: a TALE. By Mrs.
TAYLOR, of ONGAR. Third Edition. In foolscap 8vo.
With a beautiful frontispiece. Price 5s. 6d. boards.

"If we had had the least reason for suspecting that the opinion
we have on former occasions expressed, was too partial or too
complimentary, the present work would have satisfied us, and we
think it will satisfy our readers, that we have not over estimated
Mrs. Taylor's literary pretensions. We are not told whether the
'Family Mansion' is a fiction or no fiction: but whether the story
be real or not, it is all true-true in the most important sense; it
has the truth of painting, and the truth of sentiment."
Eclectic Review, April, 1820.

RECIPROCAL

DUTIES of PARENTS and CHILDREN. By Mrs. TAYLOR, of ONGAR. Third Edition. Price 5s. boards.

"The same soundness of understanding, the same simplicity of mind and correct feeling, as obtained for Mrs. Taylor's first unostentatious volume an instant yet permanent popularity, have been displayed throughout the series to which this may be considered as belonging; and it is no small merit to have fairly won that popularity by means so free from stratagem.-Mrs. Taylor writes with the air of a person who thoroughly knows what she undertakes to impart, and who has but one object in view in writing it, namely, to make others the wiser and better for her experience and reflection." Eclectic Review, April, 1819.

PRACTICAL HINTS to YOUNG FEMALES, on the Duties of a Wife, a Mother, and a Mistress of a Family. By Mrs. TAYLOR, of ONGAR. Ninth Edition. 5s.

"The duties of a wife, a mother, and a mistress of a family, are admirably pourtrayed and most successfully urged in this little volume. It is a book that will be placed in the hands of those who are to fill those enviable situations, with the utmost advantage. The short religious portion at the conclusion is warm, affectionate, and just, but not tinged with the slightest spirit of fanaticism." British Critic, May, 1815.

MATERNAL SOLICITUDE for a DAUGHTER'S BEST INTERESTS. By Mrs. TAYLOR, of ONGAR. Ninth Edition. 5s.

"The subjects of these Essays are well chosen, and ingeriously diversified: and the fair writer displays a degree of piety, with a knowledge and application of the Scriptures, which inIcreases the value of her work." Monthly Rev. 1814.. CORRESPONDENCE between a MOTHER and her DAUGHTER at SCHOOL. By Mrs. TAYLOR, of ONGAR, and Miss TAYLOR. Fifth Edition. 5s.

"This is an inestimable little volume, and will prove of eminent service in conveying right sentiments with much amusement, and at the same time serve as a model for epistolary composition. It abounds with the best inaxims for the improvement of the mind and the regulation of the conduct, without didactic formality, or the tediousness of moral disquisition."

New Monthly Mag. Aug. 1817.

DISPLAY: a TALE. BY JANE TAYLOR, one of the Authors of Original Poems for Infant Minds.' Eighth Edition. With a beautiful Frontispiece. Price 6s. boards.

"The Anthor of Display comes the nearest to Miss Edgeworth in point of style, and skill in developing characters, of any writer that has yet appeared, but her production is distinguished by features of its own. We never met with any composition so completely and beautifully simple both in sentiment and style, which at the same time interested us so strongly by the naïveté of its descriptions, sometimes heightened by the most delicate touches of humour and pathos; by the heart that pervades the narrative, and the air of reality which is thrown over the characters." Eclectic Rev. Aug. 1815. ESSAYS IN RHYME, on Morals and Manners. By JANE TAYLOR, Author of Display,' &c. In foolscap 8vo. Price 6s. boards. Fourth Edition.

"Usefulness has evidently been the author's principal design in these Essays, and their excellent tendency will ensure her an ample reward. We have seldom met with a volume of poetry that bore more strikingly the impress of native thought, or that supplied the mind more richly with materials for deep reflection." Eclectic Review, Sept. 1816. THE PRESENT of a MISTRESS to a YOUNG SERVANT, consisting of friendly Advice and real Histories. By Mrs. TAYLOR, of ONGAR. Sixth Edition. 3s. 6d.

"We are happy to announce another publication of this judicious and useful writer, particularly as we think that the present will be found among the most valuable of Mrs. Taylor's produc tions. The size of the volume is attractive: and the style, though correct, is so unaffected and simple, that every word will be understood by the class of readers for which it is designed." Monthly Rev. March, 1816.

THE VILLAGE MINSTREL, and other POEMS. By JOHN CLARE, the Northamptonshire Peasant. 2 vols. foolscap 8vo. with a fine portrait from a painting by W. HILTON, R.A. Price 12s. in boards.

POEMS Descriptive of RURAL LIFE and SCE-
NERY. By JOHN CLARE, a Northamptonshire Peasant.
Fourth Edition. Foolscap 8vo. Price 5s. 6d. boards.

"Examples of minds highly gifted by nature, struggling with,
and breaking through the bondage of adversity, are not rare in
this country; but privation is not destitution; and the instance
before us is, perhaps, one of the most striking, of patient and per-
severing talent existing and enduring in the most forlorn and
seemingly hopeless condition, that literature has at any time
exhibited."
Quarterly Review, May, 1820.

THE VISION, or HELL, PURGATORY, and
PARADISE, of DANTE ALIGHIERI. Translated by the
Rev. H. F. CARY, A.M. With additional Notes, a Life of
Dante, and an Index. Handsomely printed in 3 vols. 8vo.
Price 11. 16s. in boards. Second Edition.

"Of all the translators of Dante with whom we are acquainted, Mr. Cary is the most successful; and we cannot but consider his work as a great acquisition to the English reader. It is executed with a fidelity almost without example; and though the measure he has adopted conveys no idea of the original stanza, it is perhaps the best for his purpose, and what Dante himself would have chosen if he had written in English, and in a later day.” Edinburgh Review, No. 58.

LAMIA, ISABELLA, THE EVE OF ST. AGNES, and other POEMS. By JOHN KEATS, Author of Endymion.' Foolscap 8vo. Price 7s. 6d. boards.

ENDYMION: a POETIC ROMANCE. BY JOHN KEATS. Handsomely printed in 8vo.

Price 9s. boards.

A GUIDE to the STARS, being an easy Method of knowing the relative Position of all the fixed Stars from the First to the Third Magnitude in EITHER HEMISPHERE, particularly those that are useful for finding the Longitude and Latitude at Sea. With Twelve Planispheres, on a new Construction, in which the Stars are exhibited as they actually appear in the Heavens with relation to each other. By HENRY BROOKE, Teacher of the Mathematics, Geography, Astronomy, &c. and formerly a Senior Officer in the Naval Service of the Honourable East India Company. Royal 4to. Price 15s. boards, or 18s. 6d. half bound.

« PreviousContinue »