POETRY
The Course of Time: A Poem. In Ten Books. By Robert
Pollok, A.M. Twenty-third Edition, Foolscap Octavo, 5s.
“ Of deep and hallowed impress, full of noble thoughts and graphic conceptions—the production
of a mind alive to the great relations of being, and the sublime simplicity of our religion.”
—Blackwood’s Magazine.
An Illustrated Edition of the Course of Time. In Large
Octavo, bound in cloth, richly gilt, 21s.
“ There has been no modem poem in the English language, of the class to which the * Course
of Time’ belongs, since Milton wrote, that can be compared to it. In the present instance the
artistic talents of Messrs Foster, Clayton, Tenniel, Evans, Dalziel, Green, and Woods,
have been employed in giving expression to the sublimity of the language, by equally exquisite
illustrations, all of which are of the highest class.”—Bell’s Messenger.
Poems and Ballads of Schiller. Translated by Sir Edward
Bulwer Lytton, Bart. Second Edition, Octavo, 10s. 6d.
“ The translations are executed with consummate ability. The technical difficulties attending
a task so. great and intricate have been mastered or eluded with a power and patience quite
extraordinary; and the public is put in possession of perhaps the best translation of a foreign
poet which exists in our language. Indeed, we know of none so complete and faithful.”—Morning
Chronicle.
St Stephens; Or, Illustrations of Parliamentary Oratory.
A Poem. Comprising—Pym—Vane—Strafford—Halifax—Shaftesbury—St John
—Sir R. Walpole — Chesterfield — Carteret ^Chatham — P itt—Fox—Burke—
Sheridan—Wilberforce — Wyndham Conway — Castlereagh—William Lamb
(Lord Melbourne)—Tierney—Lord Grey—O’Connell—Plunkett—Shiel—Follett—
Macaulay—Peel. Second Edition. Crown Octavo, 5s.
Illustrations of the Lyric Poetry and Music of Scotland.
By William Stenhouse. Originally compiled to accompany the “ Scots Musical
Museum,” and now published separately, with Additional Notes and Illustrations.
Octavo, 7s. 6d.
The Birthday, and other Poems. By Mrs Southey. Second
Edition, 5s. ,
Professor Wilson’s Poems. Containing the “ Isle of
Palms,” the “ City of the Plague,” “ Unimore,” and other Poems. Complete
Edition, Crown Octavo, 6s.
Poems and Songs. By David Wingate. In Ecap. Octavo.
5s.
“ I t contains genuine poetic ore, poems which win for their author a place among Scotland’s
true sons of song, and such as any man. in any country might rejoice to have written. ”-London
Review.
** We are delighted to welcome into the brotherhood of real poets a countryman of Bums, and
whose verse will go far to render the rougher Border Scottish a classic dialect in our literature.”
—Jolvn Bull.
WORKS 0E FICTION
Tales from “ Blackwood.” Complete in Twelve Yolumes,
Bound in cloth, 18s. The Volumes are sold separately, Is. 6d., and may be had
of most Booksellers, in Six Volumes, handsomely half-bound in red morocco.
CONTENTS.
Vol. I. The Glenmutchkin Railway.—Vanderdecken’s Message Home.—The Floating Beacon.
—Colonna the Painter.—Napoleon.—A Legend of Gibraltar.—The Iron Shroud.
Vol. II. Lazaro’s Legacy.—A Story without a Tail.—Faustus and Queen Elizabeth.—How I
became a Yeoman.—Devereux HalL—The Metempsychosis.—College Theatricals.
Vol. III. A Reading Party in the Long Vacation.—Father Tom and the Pope.—La Petite
Madelaine. — Bob Burke’s Duel with Ensign Brady. —The Headsman: A Tale of Doom.—
The Wearyful Woman.
Vol. IV. How I stood for the Dreepdaily Burghs.—First and Last.—The Duke’s Dilemma: A
Chronicle of Niesenstein.—The Old Gentleman’s Teetotum.—“ Woe to us when we lose the
Watery Wall.”—My College Friends: Charles Russell; the Gentleman Commoner.—The
Magic Lay of the One-Horse Chay.
Vol. V. Adventures in Texas.—How we got possession of the Tuileries.—Captain Paton's
Lament.—The Village Doctor.—A Singular Letter from Southern Africa.
Vol. VI. My Friend the Dutchman.—My College Friends—No. I I . : Horace Leicester.—The
Emerald Studs.—My College Friends—No. I I I .: Mr W. Wellington Hurst.—Christine: A
Dutch Story.—The Man in the Bell.
Vol. VII. My English Acquaintance. — The Murderer’s Last Night.—Narration of Certain
Uncommon Things that did formerly happen to Me, Herbert Willis, B.D.—The Wags.—The
Wet Wooing : A Narrative of ’98.—Ben-na-Groich.
Vol. VIII. The Surveyor’s Talé. By Professor Aytoun.,—The Forrest-Race Romance.—Di
Vasari: A Tale of Florence. —Sigismund Fatello.—The Boxes.
Vol. IX. Rosaura: A Tale of Madrid.—Adventure in the North-West Territory.—Harry Bolton’s
Curacy.—The Florida Pirate.—The Pandour and his Princess.—The Beauty Draught.
Vol. X. Antonio di parara.—The Fatal Repast.—The Vision of Cagliostro.—The First and Last
Kiss.—The Smuggler’s Leap.—The Haunted and the Haunters.—The Duellists.
Vol. XI. The Natolian Story-Teller.—The First and Last Crime.—JohnRintoul.—Major Moss.
—The Premier and his Wife.
Vol. XII. Tickler among the Thieves!—The Bridegroom of Bama.—The Involuntary Experimentalist—
Lebrun’s Lawsuit.—The Snowing-up of Strath Lugas.—A Few Words on Social
Philosophy.
Jessie CameronA Highland Story. By the Lady Rachel
Butler. Second Edition. Small Octavo, with a Frontispiece, 2s. 6d.
The Old Bachelor in the Old Scottish Tillage. By Thomas
Aird. Foolscap Octavo, 4s.
“ I t is. simply a series of village sketches of character, manners, and scenery, but the book is
full of a quiet sustained,humour, genuine pathos, simple unaffected poetry, and displays not ODly
fine imaginative power, but a hearty sympathy with nature in all her aspects, and with the
simple tastes and pleasures of rustic life. A more delightful book we cannot imagine. ”—Manchester
Advertiser.
Tara: A Mahratta Tale. By Captain Meadows Taylor.
8 vols., Post Octavo, £ l, 11s. 6d.
“ A picture of Indian life which it is impossible not to admire. We have no hesitation in
saying, that a more perfect knowledge of India is to be acquired from an attentive perusal and
study of this work, than could be gleaned from a whole library.”—Press.
E D IN B U R G H AND LONDON.