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 Medium 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, with Illustrations, 7s. 6d.

Hall's(Mrs.S C:)Sketches ofIrish Character.

With numerous Illustrations on Steel and Wood by MAcLIsE, GILBERT, HARVEY, and G. CRUIKSHANK. / "The Irish Sketches of this lady resemble Miss Mitford's beautiful English shetches.in * Our Village,' but they are far more vigorous and picturesque-and bright.'—Blackwood's Magazine.

Post 8vo, cloth extra, 45. 6d.; a few large-paper copies, half-Roxb., ros. 6d.

Handwriting, The Philosophy of.

By Don FELIX DE SALAMANCA. With 134 Facsimiles of Signatures. . [Zn the press.

Small 8vo, cloth limp, with numerous Illustrations, ts. 6a.s or illustrated cover, £5.

Haweis's (Mrs.) The Art of Dress.

By Mrs, H. R. HAwEts, Author of "The Art of Beauty," &c. Illustrated by the Author. '.

"A well-considered attempt to apply canons of good taste to the costumes of ~ ladies of our time. . . « Mrs. Hawets writes frankly and to the point, she does not mince matters, 'but baldly remonstrates with her own sex on the follies they indulge in. . . We may recommend the book to the ladies whom it concerns."—ATHENEUM,,

Square 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, gilt edges, with Coloured Frontispiece and numerous Illustrations, ros. 6a.

wed Haweis's (Mrs.) The Art of Beauty: By Mrs. H. R. Hawes, Author of "Chaucer for Children." With nearly One Hundred Illustrations by the Author.

«4 most interesting book, full of valuabie hints and suggestions,. . . . Uf young ladies would but lend their ears for a little ta Mrs, Hazweis, we are quite sure that 71t wold result in their being at once more rasteful, more happy, and more healthy than they now ofter arc, with their false hair, high heels, ti,ht corsets, aud ever so much else of the same sort.'"— NONCONFORMIST.

Fcap. 8vo, picture cover, rs.; cloth extra, 2s. 6d.

Hawthorne. Mrs. Gainsborough's Diamonds: A Romance. By JULIAN HAWTHORNE.

ELEVENTH EoivTion. Vols. I. and II., demy 8vo, x25. each,

History of Our Own Times, from the Accession of Queen Victoria to the Berlin Congress, By Justin MCCARTHY, —

"Criticism is disarmed before a.composition which provokes little but approval. This is a really good book on a really interesting subject, and words piled on words could say no more for it. . . . Such is the effect of its general justice, its breadth of view, and its sparkiing buoyancy, that very few of its readers will close these volumes without looking forward with interest to the two that ave to follow) =m Saturday Review.


 * ,* Vols, III, and IV., completing the work, are now in the press