ROBERT SOUTHEY’S COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS: Containing all the Author’s last Introductions and Notes. Complete in One Volume, with Portrait and View of the Poet’s Residence at Keswick; uniform with Lord Byron’s and Moore’s Poetical Works. Medium 8vo. 21s. cloth; 42s. bound in morocco, by Hayday.—Or in 10 vols. foolscap 8vo. with Portrait and 19 Plates, 2l. 10s.; morocco, 4l. 10s.
SOUTHEY’S SELECT WORKS OF THE BRITISH POETS, From Chaucer to Lovelace inclusive. With Biographical Sketches by the late Robert Southey. Medium 8vo. 30s. cloth.
STEEL’S SHIPMASTER’S ASSISTANT, For the use of Merchants, Owners and Masters of Ships, Officers of Customs, and all Persons connected with Shipping or Commerce; containing the Law and Local Regulations affecting the Ownership, Charge, and Management of Ships and their Cargoes; together with Notices of other Matters, and all necessary Information for Mariners. New Edition, rewritten throughout; and containing the New Passengers Act passed during the last Session of Parliament. Edited by Graham Willmore, Esq., M.A., Barrister-at-Law; George Clements, of the Customs, London; and William Tate, author of The Modern Cambist. 8vo. 28s. cloth.
STEPHEN.—LECTURES ON THE HISTORY OF FRANCE. By the Right Honourable Sir James Stephen, K.C.B., LL.D., Professor of Modern History in the University of Cambridge. Second Edition. 2 vols. 8vo. 24s. cloth.
“These masterly Lectures by Sir James Stephen, successor to the lamented Professor Smythe in the University of Cambridge, although they take rather new ground, will be found to cast a flood of light on the external and internal histories of the French people, discussing as they do fully and with consummate ability, as was to be expected from the author of Ecclesiastical Biography, the monarchical, judicial, and economical institutions of the Great Nation.... The present Lectures are at once profound [and] discriminative. They are written in a style of singular fascination, and even to the general reader they present historical truth in the attractiveness of romance. We indulge the hope that they will attain a large circulation, especially among those classes who are so latetudinarian as to ignore the painful but palpable facts of ecclesiastical history.”
Electic Review.
STEPHEN—ESSAYS IN ECCLESIASTICAL BIOGRAPHY. From The Edinburgh Review. By the Right Honourable Sir James Stephen, K.B., LL.D. Second Edition. 2 vols. 8vo. 24s. cloth.
STOW.—THE TRAINING SYSTEM, THE MORAL TRAINING SCHOOL, AND THE NORMAL SEMINARY. By David Stow, Esq., Honorary Secretary to the Glasgow Normal Free Seminary. 8th Edition; with Plates and Woodcuts. Post 8vo. 6s. cloth.
SUTHERLAND.—JOURNAL OF A VOYAGE IN BAFFIN’S BAY AND BARROW STRAITS, in the Years 1850 and 1851, Performed by H. M. Ships Lady Franklin and Sophia, under the command of Mr. William Penny, in search of the missing Crews of Her Majesty’s Ships Erebus and Terror: with a Narrative of Sledge Excursions on the Ice of Wellington Channel; and Observations on the Natural History and Physical Features of the Countries and Frozen Seas visited. By Peter C. Sutherland, M.D., M.R.C.S.E., Surgeon to the Expedition. With Two coloured Charts by A. Petermann, Six Plates (four coloured), and numerous Wood Engravings. 2 vols. post 8vo. price 27s. cloth.
SWAIN.—ENGLISH MELODIES. By Charles Swain. Fcap. 8vo. 6s. cloth; or bound in morocco, 12s.