From the Press.—“We have to thank Mr. Metcalfe for a couple of very amusing volumes. He has made several trips to Norway, and has here given to the public the fruits of his experience. He is a keen angler, and at the same time an intelligent observer—gifted with excellent powers of description and a quick perception of humour. Hence his notices of Norwegian scenery and of the manners and social state of the people are of a kind to attract all classes of readers.”
HURST & BLACKETT, PUBLISHERS, SUCCESSORS TO HENRY COLBURN,
13, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET.
Under the Especial Patronage of
HER MAJESTY & H.R.H. THE PRINCE CONSORT.
NOW READY, IN ONE VOLUME, ROYAL 8vo.,
WITH THE ARMS BEAUTIFULLY ENGRAVED,
Handsomely Bound, with Gilt Edges,
LODGE’S PEERAGE
AND
BARONETAGE,
For 1858.
ARRANGED AND PRINTED FROM
THE PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS OF THE NOBILITY,
AND CORRECTED THROUGHOUT TO THE PRESENT TIME.
Lodge’s Peerage and Baronetage is acknowledged to be the most complete, as well as the most elegant, work of the kind that has ever appeared. As an established and authentic authority on all questions respecting the family histories, honours, and connexions of the titled aristocracy, no work has ever stood so high. It is published under the especial patronage of Her Majesty, and His Royal Highness the Prince Consort, and is annually corrected throughout, from the personal communications of the Nobility. It is the only work of its class in which, the type being kept constantly standing, every correction is made in its proper place to the date of publication, an advantage which gives it supremacy over all its competitors. Independently of its full and authentic information respecting the existing Peers and Baronets of the realm, the most sedulous attention is given in its pages to the collateral branches of the various noble families, and the names of many thousand individuals are introduced, which do not appear in other records of the titled classes. Nothing can exceed the facility of its arrangements, or the beauty of its typography and binding, and for its authority, correctness and embellishments, the work is justly entitled to the high place it occupies on the tables of Her Majesty and the Nobility.
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