"It should find a place in the kitchen or servants' hall of those who desire to blend comfort with elegance, and prudence with luxury."—New Monthly Magazine, Feb. 1831.

"This book contains a mass of information that cannot fail to be useful in the conduct of household affairs."—Atlas, May 22.

"No servant should he without it."—Morning Advertiser, April 27.

Printed for JOHN LIMBIRD, 143. Strand.


Footnote 1:[ (return) ]

Ballot Newspaper.

Footnote 2:[ (return) ]

It must not be supposed that the opinion on the immortality of the soul was confined either to Christians or Jews; according to Herodotus, (lib. 2) the Massagetae believed in the immortality of the soul; the most eminent of the ancient philosophers invariably advocated that doctrine, one of the most important in the Christian's Creed.

Footnote 3:[ (return) ]

Felibien, Histoire de Paris, tome i.

Footnote 4:[ (return) ]

The observations of Nathaniel Bacon, or rather of Selden from whose MS. notes he is said to have written his book, deserve serious consideration. Bacon on the Laws and Government of England, chap. 27.

Footnote 5:[ (return) ]

Glamorgan, Carmarthen, Pembroke, Cardigan, Flint, Carnarvon, Anglesea and Merioneth.