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A new and magnificent edition of this world-renowned work, printed from new stereotype plates, on the fittest laid paper, and bound in the best manner. The plates are printed from the original plates of Wilson and Bonaparte, engraved by Lawson, "the finest ornithological engraver of our age," and are carefully colored, after the author's own copies. The superiority of this work for accuracy of description and naturalness of drawing, has long been acknowledged. Daniel Webster speaks of it in the highest terms, saying that of the salt water birds, mentioned in Wilson, "he had shot every one, and compared them with his delineations and descriptions, and found them ." And the London Quarterly Review characterized it as "an admirable work, unequaled by any publication in the old world, for accurate delineation and just description." A moment's comparison of this work with any other on the same subject, will convince the most skeptical of its great superiority. As a specimen of American book making, it has never been surpassed, and, at the low price it is now offered, should be in any public and private library of any pretensions.

The poems of Mrs. Browning have received the encomiums of the ablest authors and critics, and have assumed their place among the "few immortal names that are not soon to die." Few poets, surely no other woman ever wrote with the same vigor of thought, united with such delicacy of sentiment of feeling. With many she is decidedly preferred to Tennyson; for while she has the same happy turns of expression, and pretty conceits of language, she unites more strength and character.