CHAP-BOOKS, 1826, &c—(I.) The Haughs of Crumdel; Giving a full account of that Memorable Battle fought by the Great Montrose and the Clans, against Oliver Cromwell; To which are added, The Broom of Cowdenknowes, The Highland Plaid. [cut] Stirling: Printed and Sold, Wholesale and Retail, by W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (II.) The Tragedy of Sir James the Rose. [cut] Stirling: Printed and Sold, . . . by W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (III.) The Blackamoor of the Wood; being a Tragical end of a gallant Lord and virtuous Lady; . . . [cut] Stirling: Printed by W. Macnie. [n. d.] (IV.) The Woodman; To which are added, The Galley Slave, I'm well sair'd wi' spunk, Jock of Hazeldean, William's Farewell, Jenny the Maid of the Moor, Oh! Lady Fair. [cut] Stirling: Printed and Sold, . . . By W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (V.) Hills o' Gallowa; To which are added, Last May a braw wooer, Green grow the rashes, O, Sweet the rose blaws. [cut] Stirling: Printed by W. Macnie. 1826. (VI.) Soldier's Dream; To which are added, Hap me with thy Petticoat, At the Dead of the Night, Bonny Mally Stewart, Lochaber no More, Down the Burn Davie. [cut] Stirling: Printed and Sold, . . . by W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (VII.) Bundle and Go; . . . [cut] Stirling: . . . W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (VIII.) Sair sair was my heart; . . . [cut] Stirling: . . . W. Macnie. 1826. (IX.) The bonny lass of Banaphie; To which is added, The Banks of Clyde. [cut] Stirling Printed by W. Macnie. 1826. (X.) The Duke of Gordon's Daughters; To which is added, The Challenge. [cut] Stirling: . . . W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (XI.) Allan Tine o'Harrow; . . . [cut] Stirling: . . . W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (XII.) Welcome Charlie o'er the Main; To which are added, The day Returns, &c. . . . [cut] Stirling: Printed and Sold, . . . by W. Macnie, . . . 1826. (XIII.) Captain Wedderburn's Courtship. . . . [cut] Stirling: . . . W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (XIV.) The Same as XIII. (XV.) The Bonny Lassie's Plaidy awa, Flora's Lament for Charlie, . . . [cut] Stirling: . . . W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (XVI.) Andrew Lammie, or, Mill of Tiftie's Annie. [cut] Stirling: Printed and Sold, . . . by W. Macnie, . . . [n. d.] (XVII.) A Garland of New Songs. Muirland Willie . . . [cut] Printed by J. Marſhall, . . . [n. d.] (XVIII.) No. 12. Excellent New Songs, viz. The Soldier's Return, &c. . . . [cut] Alnwick: Printed and Sold by W. Davison. . . . [n. d.] 12mo, eighteen works in one volume, half green morocco, uncut edges.

CHAP-BOOKS.—The Haughs of Crumdel &c. The Tragedy of Sir James the Rose. The Blackamoor of the Wood The Woodman &c Hills o' Gallowa; &c Soldier's Dream &c Bundle and Go; &c Sair, sair was my heart The bonny lass of Banaphie &c The Duke of Gordon's Daughters &c Allan Tine O'Harrow &c Welcome Charlie o'er the Main &c and five others Stirling . . . W. Macnie 1826. 12mo, seventeen pieces in one volume, half bound, uncut edges.

CHAP-BOOKS, American.—(I.) An Exact Account of the Trial and Execution of Captain Jeane Who was hang'd in Chains on the 13th of laſt Month, for the moſt vile and unheard of cruel Murder of Richard Peyne, his Cabbin-boy, in his Paſſage homewards from South Carolina, in which is repeated his particular Barbarities all which being ſo inhuman that after the Judge had pronounced Sentence of Death againſt him, he said, A more cruel and horrible Crime he never heard of, and and hoped ſuch another would never come before him again. Licenced and entered according to order (II.) The Great and Wonderful News From America, On the arrival of Captain Williams, Commander of the Ship, called the Dolphin, who was Seven Weeks and three Days in their Paſſage from Hallifax, in North America, being bound for Briſtol, but by contrary Winds was forced to put in at Parkgate: with an account how he brought with him the moſt Wonderful Jew together with his moſt Surprizing Examination before four Reverend Divines, to which is added, a Hymn which he is heard to ſing when he is by himself. [cut] (III.) The Havannah's Garland, Conſiſting of three excellent New Songs. I. On the Siege and Taking of Havannah. II. O to be married if this the Way. III. The Ale-Wife's Supplication. [cut] Licenſed and entered according to order. (IV.) The Poor Unhappy Tranſported Felon's Sorrowful Account of His Fourteen Years Tranſportation at Virginia, in America. In six parts. Being A remarkable and succinct Hiſtory of the Life of James Revel, the unhappy Sufferer. . . . Licenſed and enterter'd according to Order. 12mo, four volumes, citron levant morocco, Janseniste, uncut edges, in a blue levant morocco case, by Rivière.

CHARLES I.—A Catalogue and Description of King Charles the First's capital Collection of

pictures,
limnings,
statues,
bronzes,
medals, and
Other curiosities;

Now firſt publiſhed from an Original Manuscript in the Ashmolean Musæum at Oxford. The whole tranſcribed and prepared for the Press, and a great part of it printed, by the late ingenious Mr. Vertue, and now finiſhed from his Papers. London, Printed for W. Bathoe, . . . M DCC LVII. 4to, red straight-grain morocco, gilt back, gilt edges, by Rivière.

CHARLEY CHALK; or, the career of an artist: being Sketches from Real Life; comprising a narrative of his extraordinary adventures in Great Britain and Ireland, France and Greece. With illustrations by Jacob Parallel. London: G. Berger, . . . [n. d.]. 8vo, citron levant morocco, gilt back, gilt top, uncut edges, by Chambolle-Duru.

Frontispiece, vignette title-page, and eighteen plates.

CHATELAIN, Heli, editor.—Folk-tales of Angola Fifty tales, with Ki-mbundu text literal English translation introduction, and notes collected and edited by Heli Chatelain . . . Boston and New York Published for The American Folk-Lore Society by Houghton, Mifflin and Company . . . 1894. 8vo, cloth, gilt top.

CHATELAIN, Madame de.—The Silver Swan. A Fairy Tale. By Madame de Chatelain London: Grant and Griffith . . . M.DCCC.XLVII. Square post 8vo, brown levant morocco, gilt back, sextuple fillet inside, silk linings, gilt edges, and the original covers bound in, by Rivière.