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 MEYRICH'S PAINTED ILLUSTRATIONS OF ANCIENT ARMS AND ARMOUR: A Critical Inquiry into Ancient Armour as it existed in but particularly in England, from the Norman Conquest to the Reign of Charles IT,; with a Glossary, by Sir 5. R. Maverick. New and greatly improved Edition, corrected is es hy the Author, with the assistance of ALBERT Way and others, Illustrated by more than roo Plates, splendidly Lluminated in gold and silver; also an additional Plate of the Tournament of Locks and Keys. 'Three Vals., imperial 4to, half-morocco extra, gilt edges, £10 ros.

"'While the splendour of the decorations of thie work is well calculated to excite furiosity, the novel character of its contents, the.very curious ¢xtracts from the rare MSS. in which it abounds, and the pleasing manner in which the author's antiquarian researches are prosecuted, will tempt many who take up the book in idleness, to peruse it with care. No previous work can be compared, in point of extent, arrangement, science, or utility, with the one now in question. 1st, It for the first time supplies to our Schools of art, correct and ascertained data for costume, in its noblest and most io eden byanch—historical painting. end. It affords a simple, clear, and most conclusive elucidation of a great number of passages in cur great dramatic poets—ay, and in the works of those of Greece and Rome—against which commentators and scholiaats have been trying their wits for centuries. 3rd. It throws a fload of light upon the manners, usages, and sports of our ancestors, from the time of the Anglo-Saxons down to the reign of Charles the Second. And lastly, it at once removes a vast number of idle traditions and ingenious fables, which one compiler of history, copying from another, has succeeded in transmitting through the lapse of four or five hundred years.

"It is not often the fortune of a painful student of antiquity to conduct his readers. through so splendid a succession of scenes and events as those to which Dr. Meyrick here successively introduces us. But he does it with all the ease and gracefulness of an accomplished cfcerone. We see the haughty nobles and the impetuous knights —we ore nt at their arming—asaist them ta their shields—enter the wellinted Lists with them—and partake the hopes and fears, the perils, honours, and successes of the manly tournaments, Then we are presented to the Jorious damsels, all superb aad lovely, in ' yelours and clothe of golde and dayntie devyces, bothe in pearls and emerawds, sawphires and dymondes,'— and the banquet, with the serving men and bucklers, servitors aud trenchers—kings and queens—pageants, &c., &c, 'We feel as if the age of chivalry had returned in ail its glory." —Edinburgh Review.

MILLINGEN'S ANCIENT INEDITED MONUMENTS; comprising Painted Greek Vases, Statues, Busts, Bas-Reliefs, and other Remains of Grecian Art. 62 beautiful Engravings, mostly Coloured, with letterpress descriptions. Imperial gto, half-morocce, £4 148. 6d.

MILTON'S COMPLETE WORKS, Prose and Poetical, With an Introductory Essay dy Robert Fletcher. Imperial 8vo, with Portraits, cloth extra, 15s.

"It is to be regretted that the prose writings of Milton should, in our time, be so little read, As compositions, ther deserve the attention of every man who wishes to become acquainted with the full power of the English language. They abound with passages compared with which the finest de tions of Burke sink into insigniicance, They are a perfect field of cloth of gold. The style is stiff with gorgeous embroidery. Not even in the earlier books of the ' Paradise Last' has the pres' joet ever risen higher than in those parts of bis controversial works in which feelings, excited by conflict, find a vent in bursts of devotional and tyrie rapture, It is, to borrow his own majestic language, 'a sevenfold chorus of hallelujahs and symphonies,' "—Macaulay.

MONTAGU'S (Lady Mary Wortley) LETTERS AND WORES. Edited by Lord Wearxciirrs. With important Additions and Corrections, derived fram the Onginal Manuscripts, and a New Memoir. Two ¥ols., 8vo, with fine Steel Portraits, cloth extra, 18.

"I have heard Dr. Johnson say that he never read but one book through from choice in his whole life, and that bock was Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's Letters."—Boswell.