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 NEW WORK by the AUTHOR OF "PRIMITIVE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS."—Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s.

Crimes and Punishments.

Including a New Translation of Beccaria's "Dei Delitti e delle Pene." By JAMES ANSON FARRER.

Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, Two very thick Volumes, 7s. 6d. each.

Cruikshank's Comic Almanack.

Complete in Two SERIES; The First from 1835 to 1843; the SECOND from 1844 to 1853. A Gathering of the Best Humour of THACKERAY, Hoop, MAYHEW, ALBERT SMITH, A'BECKETT, ROBERT BROUGH, &c. With 2,000 Woodcuts and Steel Engravings by CRUIKSHANK, HINE, LANDELLS, &c.

Parts I. to XIV. now ready, 215. each.

Cussans' History of Hertfordshire. By JoHN E. Cussans. Illustrated with full-page Plates on Copper and Stone, and a profusion of small Woodcuts.
 * ,* Parts XV. and XVI, completing the work, are nearly ready.

" Mr. Cussans has, from sources not accessible to Clutterbuck, madé most valuable additions to the manorial history of the county from the earliest period dowxwards, cleared up many doubtful points, and yiven original detatls con» canine. various subjects untouched or imperfectly treated by that writer."—

CADEMY.

Two Vols., demy 4to, handsomely bound in half-morocco, gilt, profusely Illustrated with Coloured and Plain Plates and Woodcuts, price £7 75.

Cyclopeedia of Costume; or, A Dictionary of Dress—Regal, Ecclesiastical, Civil, and Military— from the Earliest Period in England to the reign of George the Third. Including Notices of Contemporaneous Fashions on the Continent, and a General History of the Costumes of the Principal Countries of Europe. By J. R. PLANCHE, Somerset Herald.

The Volumes may also be had separately (each Complete in itself) at £3 135.6d. each: Vol. I. THE DICTIONARY. Vol. I. A GENERAL HISTORY OF COSTUME IN EUROPE. Also in 25 Parts, at 5s. each. Cases for binding, 5s. each.


 * A comprehensive and highly valuable book of reference. . . . We have varely failed to find in this book an account of an article of dress, while in most of the entries curious and instructive details are given. . . . Mr. Planché's enormous labour of love, the production of a text which, whether in its dictionary form or in that of the 'General History,' ts within itsintended scopeimmeasurabl: the best and richest worh on Costume tn English, . . . This book is not aah one of the most readable works of the kind, but intrinsically attractive and amusing,' —ATHENAUM.

"A most readable and interesting work—and it can scarcely be consulted in wain, whether the reader is in search for information as to military, court, ecclesiastical, legal, or professional costume. . . . All the chromo-iitiographs, and most of the woodcut tllustrations—the latter amounting to several thousands —avre very elaborately executed; and thework forms a livre de luxe which renders 81 equally suited to the library and the ladies' drawing-room." —Timxs,