more attention upon the methods devised for its six plates, the work of that French master of - Mr. D. W. Bartlett, a Washington correspondent of long standing, has determined to withdraw from journalism to accept the office of American Secretary to the Chinese Embassy. As "Van" of the Springfield Republican, “Spectator" of the Congregationalist, "D. W. B." of the Independent, and in we know not how many other papers, over we know not what other signatures, his letters on public affairs have won wide attention and exerted a commanding influence. Mr. Bartlett's chirography is a wonder to behold, and the general accuracy with which his letters are put into type is a credit to the compositor's art. He will write Chinese, if need be, with ease. latter city has a few copies on sale at $30 each. A SUMMER IDYL. Christian Reid. Do. Do. $1.00. Tr. from the French of Henry T. B. Peterson & SAVELI'S EXPIATION, A HEART TWICE WON. Elizabeth Van Loon. T. B. Peterson & Brothers. $1.50. THE RECTOR'S WIFE. The author of "Margaret and $1.00. her Bridesmaid." T. B. Peterson & Brothers. SQUIRE PAUL. Hans Warring. Tr. by Mary A. Robinson. Harper & Brothers. Paper. Co. 25C. POETRY. -Hon. Mellen Chamberlain of Chelsea, Mass., DIED. Winkworth. In Savoy, July 1, suddenly, Catherine Winkworth about 53 years; compiler of Lyra Germanica, translator of the German biography of Pastor Fliedner, and author of other works. She combined unusual intellectual gifts with a peculiarly tender and sympathetic naHer residence of late years was at Clifton, England. Aleardi. In Verona, Italy, July 13-20, Signor Aleardo ture. Aleardi, one of the most distinguished of contemporary - Mr. J. W. Bouton, the well-known New York publisher of and dealer in rare and choice books, whose store at 706 Broadway is a crowded museum of literary treasures and curiosities, has been "interviewed" by a metropolitan paper. with interesting results. "I have no hesitation in saying," remarked Mr. Bouton, "that the market for old books, and especially for old books whose age is not their chief merit, is steadily growing in this city, and among Americans generally." Mr. Bouton shows his faith by his works, for in his stock, awaiting purchasers, are the following unique items, a few among the many: a well-conditioned copy of John Eliot's Indian Bible; a Life of Nelson, printed on vellum, enriched with a tender autograph letter from the Admiral to Lady Hamilton, written Benisch. In London, about August 5, Dr. Abraham soon after the Battle of Trafalgar; Walpoliana, Benisch, 67 years; first translator into English of the Hea five-volume collection of portraits, views, auto-brew Scriptures as interpreted by the Orthodox Jews, editor of the Jewish Chronicle, author of a Life of Maimonides graphs, etc., all illustrative of the life of Horace and other works, and one of the principal founders of the Walpole; an album in ten volumes, similarly Society of Hebrew Literature. constructed, devoted to the English stage from 1660 to 1830; a volume of one hundred and twen-Christian Mirror. ty pages of Dr. Isaac Watts's sermon manuscript; etc., etc. 75C. THE POETICAL WORKS OF MATTHEW PRIOR. 2 vols. Houghton, Osgood & Co. $1.75 THE POETICAL WORKS OF MILTON AND MARVEL vols. in 2. Houghton, Osgood & Co. 4 $3.50. THE POETICAL WORKS OF JOHN DRYDEN. 4 vols in 2. Houghton, Osgood & Co. $3.50. POEMS OF PLACES. Ed. by H. W. Longfellow. Asia. 3 vols. Houghton, Osgood & Co. Each. $1.25. LINES IN THE SAND. Richard E. Day. John T. Roberts, Syracuse, N. Y. THE EXILE. Francis Fontaine. A. Williams & Co. HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY. A POPULAR HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES. Wm. Cullen Bryant and Sidney Howard Gay. Vol. II. Illus. Charles Scribner's Sons. THE HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH During the FIRST TEN CENTURIES. Philip Smith. Illus. Harper & Brothers. Richardson. Houghton, Osgood & Co. A PRIMER OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. $1.75 Charles F. 5CC. HOMER. W. E. Gladstone. D. Appleton & Co. 50c. Richardson. In Scotland, July 23, Mrs. Isabella In Jacksonville, Fla., July 31, Mrs. Emma Payson Prentiss, daughter of the late Dr. Edward Payson Duyckinck. In New York City, August 13, Evert Naudet. In France, about August 19, Joseph Naudet, Crocker. In South Boston, Mass., August 22, Samuel R. Crocker, founder, and for nearly seven years editor, of this journal. - Mr. J. F. Loubat is an American gentleman of fortune with two ruling tastes: one for yachting and the other for numismatics. The former he indulges as owner of the "Enchantress," in which one of the largest, swiftest, and most elegant of pleasure craft ever launched, he has cruised in the waters of both hemispheres. The latter he has indulged by the publication, at his own expense, of The Medallic History of the United States, a sumptuous monograph in two quarto volumes, which has been sixteen years in preparation, and the cost of which is variously conjectured at from $15,000 to $25,000. Eightysix medals belong to our national history; seventy-nine of which were struck by act of Congress. Of these eighty-six medals Dr. Loubat gives in his first volume the individual histories, a section for each, printing all accessible documents concerning them, together with concise biographies of the designing artists and the honored recipients. In the second volume the medals themselves are illustrated to the eye in a series of one hundred and seventy etchings, contained in eighty- |ers. NEW PUBLICATIONS. Brothers. Sheets. A HAND-BOOK OF POTTERY PAINTING. John C. L. 20C. PLAYS FOR PRIVATE ACTING. Tr. from the French and Italian by Members of the Bellevue Dramatic Club of New port, R. I. Henry Holt & Co. $1.00. LITTLE FOLKS. Illus. Caswell, Petter & Galpin. $1.50. The sian by Eugene Schuyler. Charles Scribner's Sons. $1.25. St. Louis. Literary World. E. H. HAMES & CO., Boston. P. O. Address, Box 1183. 50c. Composition by Thos. Todd. I'ress work by A. Mudge & Son. Webster's National Pictorial Dictionary. 1040 Pages Octavo. 600 Engravings. Is it not rightly claimed that WEBSTER is THE NATIONAL STANDARD. A "Reverence-Compelling Portrait" Is what one of our exchanges calls the picture of BRYANT which appears as the frontispiece of che Midsummer number of SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY. Other journals speak of it as follows: "A masterly wood engraving."-N. Y. NATION. "A superb Homeric face."-BOSTON TRAVELER. "We must call it a noble portrait."-NEW HAVEN PALLADIUM. "An extraordinary piece of work, both as regards the drawing and wood-cutting."-N. Y. WORLD. "One of the most perfect examples of drawing and engraving on wood that has ever been published."-N. Y. EXPRESS. "As a likeness it is admirable, and as a bit of artistic work, it is worthy of a frame and a place on the wall."-N. Y. EVENING POST. THE MIDSUMMER SCRIBNER. A model of beauty, both in its illustrations and literary features."-N. Y. GRAPHIC. "The Midsummer number of SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY may be set down as the finest example of periodical publication which has ever been put forth by any American or European house."BOSTON TRANSCRIPT. "The August SCRIBNER contains an amazing array of cuts, some of them marvels as works of the artist's and engraver's skill-HARTFORD COURANT. "It is a book that is a treat, both as a series of artistic gems, and as a compilation of exquisite writings in both prose and verse."-PHIA. RECORD. "The August SCRIBNER fairly bears the bell among the magazines, not only for its engravings, which are better than those in any other, but for the various merits of its articles and poems."-Boston Correspondence of SPRINGFIELD REPUBLI CAN. This Magazine is for sale everywhere. Scribner & Co., Publishers, NEW YORK. The Athenæum Bureau of Literature, FOR THREE NEW SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Literary World. A COPY OF THE Dictionary of English Literature. To any person sending us the names of three new subscribers, with the money, $4.50, we will give a copy of the DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE, 708 pages, price $4.00; and will forward the same post-paid. Any present subscriber can obtain it by sending three new names; any person not heretofore a subscriber, by sending two names besides his own; and there must be many a one among the smaller public libraries of the country which could easily obtain the book for its own shelves through the instrumentality of some trio of its friends. E. H. HAMES & CO., P. O. Box 1183, BOSTON, MASS. The DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE came to hand, and pleases me very much. I am very much surprised at your liberal offer. C. W. S. Springfield, Ohio. PROVIDENCE LINE. BETWEEN BOSTON AND NEW YORK. Fare, $3. New York and Return, 85. Trains leave Boston & Providence Railroad Station daily (Sundays excepted) at 6 P.M. Connect at Fox Point Wharf, Providence, with the New and Magnificent Steamer Massachusetts, And the well-known and favorite Steamer Rhode Island, Arriving in New York at 6 A. M. Returning, leave Pier 29, North River, at 5 P. M., arriving in Boston at 7 A. M Ticke's and State Rooms secured at Company's Office, 214 Washington, corner State street, and at Boston & Provinence Railroad Station. A. A. FOLSOM, Supt. B. & P. R. R. J. W. RICHARDSON, Agent, Boston. SUMMER EXCURSIONS VIA Hoosac Tunnel Route. Persons contemplating a trip this season to SARATOGA, LAKE GEORGE, Richfield Springs, Sharon Springs, Watkins Glen, NIAGARA FALLS, Alexandria Bay, Chautauqua Lake, Or any of the well-known Summer Resorts, should not fail to provide themselves with a copy of the SUMMER EXCURSION ROUTE BOOK, issued by the HOOSAC TUNNEL ROUTE, which contains over sixty of the most popular excursions ever offered. Copies of the book together with tickets and further information may be obtained on application to the General Office, 250 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON. Drawing Room Cars are run between Boston and Saratoga, and between Bost n and Rochester, via the Hoosac Tunnel Route, without change. Sleeping cars are also run by this Route between Boston and Chicago and Boston and St. Louis, without change. B. MCCHAN, Gen'l Passenger Agent. D. APPLETON & CO. I. IN PARADISE. A NOVEL. From the German of PAUL HEYSE. (Forming This is the first translation ever published of a novel by Paul Heyse, who ranks as the most famous of the younger German nove lists, and it opens an entire new field to English readers. The "Paradise" of the book is a club of Munich artists and their friends; and the strong unconventional characters, the charming picture of their intellectual Bohema, and the perfect freshness of this new circle to the most hackneyed novel-reader, would of themselves make the story eagerly read, even without the strongly wrought plot. It is, in short, a perfect study of a most dramatic phase of life, which has never been so treated by a novelist before; and "In Paradise" should have in this country the great sucess which has attended its several editions in Germany. It is not HENRY the novel of a day, but a real classic, ranking among the best books of contemporary fiction-writers. II. His (Gladstone's) deep insight into the living significance of the poems, his appreciation of the rich human existence there displayed, his wide and conscientious study of the literature of his topic, his enthusiasm for his author, his power of communicating it to his readers, are incontestable." London Saturday Review. VIII. THE GOLDSMITH'S WIFE. F. MILLER, MANUFACTURER OF Fine Piano-Fortes. Thomas De Quincey (the "English Opium-Eater"). William Cullen Bryant. Nathaniel Hawthorne. Henry W. Longfellow. MENDELSSOHN MUSICAL INSTITUTE. Pursues a system of instruction differing essentially from any other employed in this country. Its course embraces the most important methods of the best European schools, ability to read new music correctly and with rapidity. It is the highest aim of the manufacturer to produce in- insuring rapid progress, a finished style of performance, and struments of the various styles, including GRAND, GRAND UPRIGHT, UPRIGHT SQUARE, SQUARE GRAND, AND PATENT PEDAL UPRIGHT PIANOS, Its system of THEORETICAL STUDY is peculiarly interesting and attractive, and its method of VOCAL CULTURE tends to strengthen and equalize the voice, producing purity of intoration, with the flexibility so desirable in vocalísm. The ORGAN, PIANO, VOCAL CULTURE, HARMONY and MUSICAL COMPOSITION. are its special departments, and the necessities of those who wish to teach, are also carefully considered. For further information apply to EDWARD B. OLIVER, DIRECTOR, 5 COLUMBUS SQUARE, BOSTON, MASS. English, French and Classical Institute. Young Ladies Boarding and Day School, 131 North Pearl Street, Albany, N.Y. Fifth year commences Sept. 11. 1878. Complete course of study in English, French, Latin, German. Music and Art. Superior advantages for French. For circulars address the Principals, MONS. & MME. COMMETTE. References: Rev. R. W. Clark, D.D., Rev. J. McC. Holmes, Boys' English and Classical which shall be acknowledged by the musical profession and ment. The Henry F. Miller Pianos have received the highest encomiums from every source ENVIRONS OF HARTFORD, CONN. For circular, address G. E. ABBOTT, M. D., Principal. Reference to the editor of the Literary World. OREAD INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG WOMEN, WORCESTER, MASS. Founded 1848. Confessedly one of the best female semiinaries in N. E. Most excellent advantages in Music, Elocution, etc. Send for Catalogne to Rev. H. R. GREENE, at Jamestown, R. I., till Sept 10. By Madame CHARLES REYBAUD. Paper cover, 25 cents. The Henry F.Miller Grand Pianos BOYS' CLASSICAL SCHOOL. (Forming Number 11 of Appletons' New Handy- Volume Series.") The beauty of this little work is in its simplicity, and a certain delicacy and coolness of tint which reminds one of a choice picture. It is a high tribute to the genius and skill of the author that, with a few characters and simple surroundings, she has created a most unique and exquisite story." IX. IMPRESSIONS OF AMERICA. ARE FAVORITES IN THE CONCERT HALL, having Thorough Preparation for Harvard College and Scientific Schools. Combines class and personal instruction. Opens Sept. iF. onable rates. Circulars, giving terms, references, etc., sent PRIVATE TUITION, transient or yearly, at reas by nail, or may be procured at A. Williams & Co.'s, and 16 Hawley street. HENRY DAME, A.M. 40 Cortes street (near Berkeley), Boston. fine piano-forte, made from the best materials, and of the Wayside Family School highest grade of workmanship throughout, and having su- By R. W. DALE. Contents: I. Society; II. Politics; III. Pop- great attention, en account of its impartial and discriminat-piano dealers of the country. Any volume mailed, post-paid, to any address within the D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers, 549 & 551 Broadway, New York. The Literary World. Choice Readings from the Best New Books, and Critical Reviews. RECOLLECTIONS OF WRITERS. BY CHARLES AND MARY COWDEN CLARKE, WITH LETTERS OF CHARLES LAMB, LEIGH HUNT, DOUGLAS JERROLD AND CHARLES DICKENS. 1 vol., 12mo, with interesting foc-imile letters. Cloth. $1.50. Mr. and Mrs. Cow den Clarke's recollections of their contemporaries are beyond question the best recent contributions to this eliss of literature. They have to the fullest the charm that lies in all books of personal reminiscence, and makes even their trifles pleasant reading. But the Clarkes' treasury of memories contains much more than trifles; its contents are in every case real contributions to our biographical knowledge. Besides anecdotes which are of a real value, beyond mere gossip, the volume gives us some hitherto unpublished letters of Dickens that are in his very best vein, and much new matter in regard to his famous amateur dramatic company, to which Mrs. Clarke belonged; letter of Leigh Hunt, which give a better picture of the man than any published since the collection of 1862; really valuable additions to our knowledge of Keats; and an especially capital series of reminiscences of Charles and Mary Lamb. The chapter devoted to Douglas Jerrold is another of the fresh things of the book; and all this new material is made of greater interest by the bits of autobiography scattered through it by the Clarkes themselves. When it is remembered that the survivor of the Author Couple is one of the last meinbers left of the only circle that could write such memories, all these pleasant recollections have the worth of literary history. II. The Political Adventures of Lord Reprinted from the Fortnightly Review. 1 vol., sq. 12mo, VIII. BOSTON, OCT. 1, 1878. MACMILLAN & CO.'S NEW PUBLICATIONS. PARIS: Its Parks and Gardens. Considered in Relation to the read a more interesting and instructive book than this." "The volume is a perfect monograph for the fulness and Anatomy for Artists. Ry JOHN MARSHALL, F. R. S., F. R. C. S., Professor of Anat- The London Academy says: Recognizing as we do the extreme importance of thorough anatomical study to the artist, we welcome most heartily Mr. Marshall's Anatomy for Artists,' a book which is evidently the result of years of observation and study of the subject. It is thoughtfully and carefully written and will prove a most valuable addition to the literature of art. We expect to find it take its place side by side with Bell's Anatomy of Expression' in the library of every artist." Round about France. By E. C. GRENVILLE MURRAY. 12mo, $2. "A most amusing series of articles."-Athenæum. Saintly Workers. Five Lenten Lectures. By REV. FREDERIC W. FARRAR, The Family Library of British Poetry. From Chaucer to the Present Time (1350-1878). Edited by JAMES T. FIELDS and EDWIN P. WHIPPLE 1 vol. royal svo, 1.028 pages, with Heliotype Portraits of Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton. Pope, Goldsmith, Burns, Wordsworth, Scott. Byron, Tennyson and Mrs. Browning. Cloth. $5.50; Half Calf, $10.00; Full Morocco or Tree Calf, $14.00. lection of British l'oetry ever published. The remarkable Beyond comparison the fullest and best single-volume colacquaintance with poetry possessed by Mr. FIELDS and Mr. excellent selection, are ample guarantees of the sterling WHIPPLE, and their eminent qualifications for making an value of this work. The Vision of Echard, and other By JOHN G. WHITTIER. 16mo, $1 25. The Bodleys on Wheels. By the author of "The Bodley Family in Town and Country, "The Bodleys Telling Stories." With 77 Beautiful Pictures, many of them full-page, and an ornamental cover. $1.50. and deserves to be as popular as either of the others. This is the third of the "delightful Bodley Books," The Waverley Novels. By Sir WALTER SCOTT. Melrose Edition. In 25 volumes, each containing two Steel Engravings. Sold only in sets. Price, $25. This is one of the handsomest and best cheap editions of the Waverley Novels ever published. A Candid Examination of Theism. By PHYSICS. Vol. XIII. of the English and Foreign Philosophical Library. Crown 8vo, gilt top, $2.50. "I have endeavored to fix the precise standing of the evidence in favor of the theory of Theism, when the latter is viewed in all the flood of light which the progress of modern science-physical and speculative-has shed upon it."-Author's Preface. Emerson's Fortune of the Republic. Free Trade and Protec- Richardson's Primer of American tion. Literature. (50 cents.) "The multum in parvo principle in literary criticism and An Enquiry into the Causes which have Retarded the Gen-biography has rarely been better realized than in this book." -Boston Journal. eral Adoption of Free Trade since its Introduction into England. By HENRY FAWCETT, M. P. 12mo, $1.75. "The book is one that we can heartily recommend to all Life of Madame Rochefoucauld, Duchess of Dondeauville. $1.25. Ihne's "Early Rome," (Epochs of His-persons interested in economical questions, and it will be book. I need be no less welcome and useful to those Prot be placed in the hands of every protectionist."-Chicago George Combe. The Life of George Combe, author of "The Constitution of OREGON: and wholesome reading. thoroughly Catholic estants who are able to honor sincere devoutness and fidelity under all forms."-Christian Register. "A delightful little volume."-The Christian at Work. "Brimful of humor that is at once delicate and keen, and There and Back in 1877. By WALLIS NASH. With Illustra- thoroughly enjoyable."-Louisville Courier-Journal. tions. 12mo, $2. For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, by the publishers, MACMILLAN & CO., HOUGHTON, OSGOOD & CO., SERMONS BY THE REV. PHILLIPS BROOKS. sermon. It 20 Sermons. 1 vol., 12mo, $1.75. "Evidently the day of preaching has not gone by. The sermon has as many hearers as in any previous age. has passed its proper domain of speech, and invaded the realm of print. The novel has no surer audience than the Mr. Brooks is, beyond question, one of the most effective of living preachers."-The Literary World. "Unlike Robertson. Phillips Brooks continually reminds us of him. He has the same analytical power; the same broad human sympathy; the same keen knowledge of human nature toned and tempered and made the more true by his sympathies; the same mysterious and indefinable element of divine life, so that his message comes with a quasi author ity, wholly unecclesiastical, purely personal; and the same undertone of sadness, the same touch of pathos, speaking low as a man who is saddened by his own seeming successa success which is to his hought, and in comparison with his ideals, a failure."-Harper's Magazine. "No one in our country has had more continnons or more conspicuous success in preaching than Mr. Brooks."-Scribner's Monthly. "Long may he live to preach, and long may these sermons be read in regions where he cannot be heard, carrying lite and joy and peace and i escue to many."-Boston Transcript. BY THE LATE CANON MOZLEY. HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL. [OCTOBER, 1878. ROBERTS BROTHERS D. APPLETON & CO. Will Publish during October: I. A New Book by Louisa M. Alcott. Under the Lilacs. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT, author of "Little Women." With illustrations, uniform with Miss Alcott's other famous books. 16mo. Price, $1.5), Miss Alcott's friends think "Under the Lilacs" is the happiest effort of her genius since she wrote her famous "Little Women." II. A New Book by H. H. Nelly's Silver Mine. A Story of Colorado Life. By H. H., author of "Bits of This is the first attempt of this fascinating author to enter the field as a writer of story-books for the home circle, and it will be admitted that she has made a signal success. A New Book by Philip Gilbert Hamerton. Modern Frenchmen. HAVE RECENTLY PUBLISHED: I. New Volume of the "International Scientific Series." A HISTORY OF THE GROWTH OF THE STEAM-ENGINE. By ROBERT H. THURSTON, A. M., C. E., Professor of Mechanical Engineering in the Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N. J. With 163 Illustrations, including 15 Portraits. 1 vol., 12mo. Price $2.50. CONTENTS.-I. The Steam-Engine as a Simple Machine. II. The Steam-Engine as a Train of Mechanism. III. The Development of the Modern Steam-Engine. IV. and V. The Modern Steam-Engine. VI. The Steam-Engine of Today. VII. and VIII. The Philosophy of the Steam-Engine. II. New Volume in the " Experimental Science Series." SOUND. A Series of Simple, Entertaining, and Inexpensive Experiments in the Phenomena of Sound, for the Use of Students of Every Age. By ALFRED MARSHALL MAYER, Professor of Physics in the Stevens Institute of Technology. Uniform with "LIGHT," first volume of the series. "The books of the Experimental Science Series for BeFive Biographies: Victor Jacquemont, Traveller and Natuginners' originated in the earnest and honest desire to extend a knowledge of the art of experimenting, and to create ralist; Henri Perreyve, Ecclesiastic and Orator; François our generation. The object of this second book of the sea love of that noble art, which has worked so much good in Rude, Sculptor; Jean Jacques Ampère, Historian, Archæ-ries is to show how to make a connected series of experiologist, and Traveller; Henri Regnault, Painter and Patriot. By PHILIP GILBERT HAMERTON. Square 12mo. Uniform with "The Intellectual Life," etc. Price, $2. IV. A New Book by Robert Lowell. A Story or Two from an old Dutch Town. 1. Abram Van Zandt, the Man in the Picture; Mr. Schermerhorn's Marriage and Widowhood; 3. Master Vorhagen's Wife. By ROBERT LOWELL, author of "The New Priest in Conception Bay," "Anthony Brade," etc. 16mo. Price, $1.25. V. A New Book by Jonquin Miller. Songs of Italy. ments in sound. These experiments are to be made with the cheap st and simplest apparatus that the author has been able to devise. Each experiment has been made by me over and over again, and the series has been performed before me by beginne.s in the art."-Extract from the Preface. 12mo. Cloth. Fully illustrated. Price, $1.00. III. Lessons in Cookery. Hand-book of the National Training-School for Cookery, South Kensington, London. To which is added an Essay on "The Principles of Diet in Health and Disease," by THOMAS K. CHAMBERS. M. D. Edited by ELIZA A. YouMANS. In one vol., 12mo, 382 pages. Cloth. Price, $1.50. "Everything is told in the mo`t lucid and succinct manner, and the receipts are invaluable. For simplicity and directness we have seen no cookery-book to compare with it. and we hope it will become universally known."-London Uniform with the previous volumes. 16mo. Price, 50 cents place in analogous situations personages thoroughly French, each. and to see what transformations the differences of race, of manners, and of surroundings, would require in the prog Sold everywhere by all booksellers. Mailed postpaid by ress of the action.”—Author's Preface. the publishers, ROBERTS BROS., |