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Show LEA & BLANCHARD'S NEW PUBLICATIONS. HERSCHEL'S OUTLINES OF ASTRONOltiY.-Now Beady, OUTLINES OF ASTRONOMY. BY SIR JOHN F. W. HERSCHEL, F. R. S., &c. In one neat volume, crown octavo, with six plates aad numerous wood-cuts. With this, we take leave ofthis remarkable work, which we hold to be, beyond a doubt, the greatest and most remarkable of the works in which the Jaws of astronomy and the appearance of the ))eavens are described to those who are not mathematicians nor obse rvers, and recalled to those who are. It is the reward of men who can descend from the advancement of knowledge to care for its diffusion, that their works are essential to all, that they become the manuals of the proficient as well as the text-books of the learner .-Athenmum. Probably no book ever written upon any sciencP has !Jeen found to embTace within so small a compass an e ntire epitome of everything known witl>in all its various departments, practical, theoretical, and physical.-Examiner. A text-book of astronomy, from one of the highest names in the science.-Silliman's Journal. BARON HUMBOLDT'S N.BW WOBK.-Now Beady, ASPECTS OF NATURE, IN DIFFERENT LANDS AND DIFFERENT CLIMATES. WITH SCIENTIFIC ELUCIDATIONS. BY ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT. TRANSLATED BY MRS. SABINE. In one very neat volura•~ royal 12mo., extra cloth. It is not without diffidence that I present to the public a series of papers which took theirorigiu in the presence ofuaturaJ scenes of grandeur or beallty, on the ocean, in the forests of the Orinoco, in the Steppes of Venezuela, and in the mountain wildernesses of Peru and 1\Iexico. Detached fragments were written Uown on the spot, and at the moment. and afterwards moulded into a whole. The view of nature on an en- 13,rged scale, the display of the concurrent action of various forces or powers. and the renewal of the enjoyment which the immediate prospect of tropical scenery affc>rds to sensitive minds-are the objects which 1 have proposed to myself.-AUT>toa's PREFACE. ZOOLOGICAL RECREATIONS.-Just Issued. BY W . .J. BRODERIP, EsQ., F. R. S. In one neat volume of 376 pages, royal 12mo., extra cloth . .BOW".J1I.IlN'S PR.8CTIC.8L CH.B.ni.ISTBYI".-Just IBBt<ed. INTRODUCTION TO PRAUTICAL CHEMISTRY. INCLUDING ANALYSIS. By JOHN E. BOWMAN, Demonstrator of Chemistry, King's College. In one handsome volume, royal 12mo., of over 300 pages. WITH NEARLY ONE HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS ON WOOD. STEINMETZ'S HISTORY OF THE JESUITS. HISTORY OF THE .JESIJITS, FROl\ot TilE FOUNDATlON OF 'fJIEIR SOCIETY TO ITS SUPPRESSION BY POPE CLEMENT XIV. Their 11-Iissions tltro"ghout the World; their Educational System and Literature; with their Bevival and Present State. BY ANDREW STEINMETZ, Author of"The Novitiate," and "The Jesuit in the Family." In two handsome crown Svo. vols. of about four hundred pages each, extra cloth. |