BOOKBINDING.-Wanted, a per-TO MASTER PRINTERS.- Wanted, Office, by a Single Man, as a GENERAL WORKMAN. He is thoroughly acquainted with every branch.Address T. E. H., care of Mr. Milbourne, Printer, &c., Newport Pagnell, Bucks. TO MASTER BOOKBINDERS. Wanted, by the Advertiser, a situation as FORWARDER or Edge Gilder.-Address H. C., 9 Phoenix Place, Knightsbridge, London. то MASTER PRINTERS.-Wanted, a situation as COMPOSITOR, by one who is perfectly acquainted with News, Jobbing, and Bookwork, and competent to take the management of a small Office. Country preferred. Most satisfactory references as to character and ability.Address E. W., Nall's Library, Great Yarmouth. PRINTERS. TO LETTERPRESS Wanted, by an experienced Printer, who has conducted a London General Printing Business nearly nine years, an engagement as FOREMAN. le well qualified to fill a situation of trust. Security if required. Good references. Country not objected to.-Address Delta, Mr. May's, News Agent, King Street, St. James's. то JOURNEYMAN PRINTERS.Wanted, an experienced workman, of good character and industrious habits, to undertake the Management of a large Jobbing Office. One who can write a good hand will be preferred.Apply to H. W. Walker, Briggate, Leeds. by a respectable, industrious Young Man, a situation as COMPOSITOR, or engagement in any light office. Accustomed to the whole routine of Country News, Jobbing, and Book Offices. Unexceptionable references, &c., on application to W. C., at E. Smith & Son's, Market Place, Bicester, Oxon. TO PRINTERS.-Wanted, by a Young MAN, aged 24, a situation as COMPOSITOR on a Country Newspaper, or to manage a small Jobbing Office. Good reference.-Address W. W., Weybourne Cottage, Weybourne, Farnham, Surrey. TO PRINTERS.-Wanted, by a respectTO PRINTERS.-Wanted, by a respectBook or Jobbing Office. Good references can be had. Address W. C., Mr. J. Fry's, Bookseller, Chelmsford, Essex. TO MASTER PRINTERS.-Wanted, a tomed to Jobbing and News work.—Address D. C., 8 Howard Street, Reading, Berks. PRO experienced Printer (the Manager of a DROVINCIAL PRESS.-Wanted, by Situation at Case and Press. Has been accus News and Jobbing Office for several years) an engagement as FOREMAN. Testimonials, &c.-Address G. T., 20 London Road, Leicester. THE PRESS. A Compositor, who is capable of Reporting, Making Up a Newspaper, &c., desires an immediate Situation in a Country Town. Terms moderate.-Address C. X., Publishers' Circular Office, 47 Ludgate Hill, London. DAY & SON, Lithographers to the Queen, execute in the best style, on the most reasonable terms, and with despatch, every description of Lithography, Chromo-lithography, and Steel and Copperplate Printing, Artistic or Commercial. Applications for Estimates will meet with prompt attention. Gate Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, London. Books Wanted to Purchase. Particulars of price, &c. to be sent direct to the parties whose names and addresses are given. NOTICE. As a reply to any correspondents complaining of the omission of their wants, we beg to draw attention to the following :— N.B. BOOKS IN PRINT NOT ADVERTISED FOR. Allen, W., Belle Sauvage Yard, E.C. Waverley Novels (Cadell's edit.) 1830 Vol. 1 Anderson & Son, Booksellers, Manchester The Second Index to the Edinburgh Review. 1820 Mosheim's Church History, 8vo. (6-vol. edit.) Vol. 1 Memoirs, Affairs of Europe, from the Peace of Utrecht, 4to. Murray. Vol. 2 Booth, L., 207 Regent Street, W. Scott's Novels (original edit., 48 vols.) Vol. 25, containing The Pirate. Part 2 Brown, R. & Co., 10 Cullum Street, E.C. Knight's Pictorial Shakspeare (National edit. Is.) Macbeth; King Henry IV., Part 2 Browne, T. Chapman, Bookseller, Bible and Crown, Leicester April 15, 1862 Books Wanted to Purchase-continued. Connolly, T. J., Bookseller, Galway Blackwood's Magazine, from the commencement, com- Harding's Lessons on Art, complete. London, 1849 Chronicles of Galway Booksellers' Catalogues Croydon, E., Royal Library, Torquay Clytemnestra, by Owen Meredith Dalton, W. H., 28 Cockspur Street Calamy's Nonconformist Memorial, Remodelled by Thomson's Bampton Lectures Smiles' Life of Stephenson, 8vo. Canova's Works, by Moses. Bohn. Vol. 3 Record Newspaper. Sept. 25, 1861 Davies, James, Bookseller, 5 Abbey Church Yard, Bath Evans, J., 4 Symonds' Inn, Chancery Lane Laycock, T., Bookseller, Oxford Smith's Dictionary of Biography. Part 16 to Lockwood & Co., 7 Stationers'-Hall Court The Book of Health, a Compendium of Domestic Medicine. Vizetelly, 1828 Low, Son, & Co., 47 Ludgate Hill Wackenbarth's Translation of Latin Hymns Mann Nephews, Cornhill Trusler's Modern Times, or the Adventures of Gabriel Mansell, A., Bookseller, 7 College Court, Gloucester Rawlinson's (G.) History of Herodotus. Murray. V. 4 Miland, 35 Chapel Street, Belgrave Square Ferguson, A., Bookseller, 89 Bold Street, Liverpool Old England, by Edwin Paxton Hood Fisher, T., 24 Hanway Street, W. Hume's History of England, 2 vols. 8vo. Wilson, 1810 Fox, C., 67 Paternoster Row Hosking's Architecture and Building Construction, 4to. Francis, T., Bookseller, Builth, South Wales Vol. 2 Lodge's Portraits, imperial 8vo. Vol. 1 Moore's Poetical Works, 10 vols. 1841. Vol. 6, green cl. Hankin, J. G., Bookseller, The Pavement, St. Ives, Hunts Henningham & Hollis, 5 Mount Street, Grosvenor Square Lavaller's Military Topography De la Beche's Geological Observer Sandhurst Textbook of Fortification Stocqueler's Catechism of Field Fortification Jackson's Military Geography Hepworth, W., Post Office, Knottingley Newton's Optics Hindley, C., Bookseller, 41 North Street, Brighton Strickland's Letters of Mary Queen of Scots. Vol. 2 Cornelius a Lapide, Commentarii in Sacram Scripturam Edkins's Grammar of the Shanghai Dialect Diary and Letters of Madame D'Arblay. Colburn, 1842. Holdich, C. W., Bookseller, Hull Broom's Legal Maxims, 8vo. Penny Cyclopædia. Vol. 22 Scann's Beveilæ, 2 vols. Hadley's History of Hull, 4to. Grote's History of Greece. Longman, Last 8 vols. Kelly, W. B., 8 Grafton Street, Dublin Skene's Highlanders of Scotland, 2 vols. Creuzer, Les Religiones de l'Antiquité, complet, par Willis's Lives of Irishmen. Part 12 Capefigue, Histoire de la Republique et de l'Empire. Capefigne, L'Europe pendant la Revolution Français, Laxton, W. H., Bookseller, High Street, Dudley Life of Captain Mytton Moore's Pit Machinery The Guardian. Nos. 745 and 766, for March 14 and The Economist, Nos. 932, 398, 421, 432, 351-52, 354-57, Miller, W., 6 Bridge Road, Lambeth Scott's Life of Napoleon (original edit.) Moxon, Edward & Co., 44 Dover Street Talfourd's Speeches on the Copyright Question. Moxon. 1837 Norris, A. & Son, Bookseller, Uttoxeter Ewart on the Psalms, 8vo. 1826. Vol. 2 Plutarch's Lives, 8vo. 1727. Vol. 1 Penny Cyclopædia. Vols. 16-25 Anderson on Commerce, 3 vols. 4to. Vol. 1 Parke, Bookseller, Wolverhampton Amer's Typographical Antiquities, by Dobden, 4to. Ancient Relics, small 8vo. Sherwood & Co. Vol. 1 Goode's Essays on the Titles of Christ, 6 vols. 8vo. Preston, G. J., Bookseller, Cambridge Amy Grant. J. H. Parker Seymour's Sketches Snobson's Seasons, royal 8vo. Nattali Illustrated London News. Nos. 1104, 1105, 1118, 1119 Rapp & Dresser, Booksellers, Darlington Hutt's Solutions of A. Godwin's Problems and Ex- Cassell's Magazine of Art. Parts, Aug. to Dec. 1853 Slater, E., Bookseller, St. Ann's Square, Manchester Smith, W. J., Bookseller, 43 North Street, Brighton Macaulay's England. Vols. 3 and 4 Pope's Works, by Croly. Vol. 2, green cloth Stock, Elliot, 62 Paternoster Row Wall's History of Infant Baptism Bingham's Antiquities of the Christian Church Miall's Nonconformist Sketch Book Hunter's Deanery of Doncaster, large or small paper. Thimm, Franz, 3 Brook Street, Grosvenor Square T. Hill Burton's History of Scotland, 1689-1778 Williams & Norgate, Henrietta Street, Covent Garden The Monthly Repository and Review (new series). CASSELL, PETTER, & GALPIN'S NEW BOOKS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS On May 12, 1862, the FIRST NUMBER of the NEW TESTAMENT portion of CASSELL'S ILLUSTRATED FAMILY BIBLE. With which Number will be issued a beautiful FAMILY REGISTER, printed on finely-tinted Writing Paper, consisting of Eight Pages, embellished with Four superb Engravings, at the nominal charge of One Penny; the price of the Number and Register together being Twopence, but the Register cannot be supplied by itself. A Specimen may now be seen at any Bookseller's in the Kingdom. **The Old Testament portion of "Cassell's Illustrated Family Bible" may now be had, complete in One Volume, price One Guinea in cloth, or Thirty-five Shillings in elegant morocco. Now ready, pp. 544, price 48. 6d. cloth gilt, The First Volume of THE QUIVER. Containing the Complete Tale of "THE CHANNINGS," by the Author of "East Lynne," " Danesbury¡ House," &c. THE QUIVER. One Penny Weekly. On the 14th of April was published the First Number of the Second Volume, containing the commencement of a New Tale, entitled "MRS. HALIBURTON'S TROUBLES," by the Author of "The Channings," "Danesbury House," &c. Monthly Parts, 5d. and 6d. Now ready, price 8s. 6d. cloth gilt, the Third Volume of CASSELL'S POPULAR NATURAL HISTORY. Forming by itself a complete History of Birds. Profusely Illustrated. Ready with the May Magazines, price 6d., Part 38 of CASSELL'S NATURAL HISTORY. With which Number will be issued a beautiful Coloured Engraving in imitation of Water Colour Drawing, at the nominal price of Sixpence. The subject of this Drawing is a fishing scene on the Sea Coast, in which the figures of "The Little Fishers," with their stock of recently-caught fish, are very prettily grouped. It measures 13 inches by 18 inches, and forms, when framed, a very admirable little picture, being quite worthy of a place beside coloured drawings of greater pretensions. The purchase of it with the Part will not be made compulsory; but it is believed that the majority of subscribers will desire to avail themselves of this opportunity of possessing a very attractive picture, which has been greatly admired. As a limited number only can be produced, orders should be given immediately. **Part 38 forms the First Part of the Fourth Volume, which will contain a complete History of Fishes, Reptiles, and Insects of every description. Ready with the May Magazines, price 18. THE HANDBOOK OF GARDENING: A Guide to the Cultivation of Fruits, Vegetables, and Flowers. Especially adapted to Amateurs. By GEORGE GLENNY. On May 12 will be issued, with No. 234 of "Cassell's Paper," the First Number of CASSELL'S ILLUSTRATED FAMILY PAPER EXHIBITOR. As a Record of the Great Exhibition of 1851, "Cassell's Illustrated Exhibitor" acquired an almost incredible circulation. Keeping this success in view, and having regard to the present aspect of the times, Messrs. CASSELL, PETTER, & GALPIN have determined upon this occasion to issue with CASSELL'S ILLUSTRATED FAMILY PAPER an equally valuable Memento of the Exhibition of 1862, upon such terms as will place it within the reach of every family in the Kingdom. CASSELL'S FAMILY PAPER EXHIBITOR, printed on good paper, in a form convenient for binding, will be published weekly during the Exhibition, replete with beautiful Engravings, price ld.; or if purchased with CASSELL'S ILLUSTRATED FAMILY PAPER, the price of the PAPER and EXHIBITOR together will be 1şd. Ready May 5, with No. 233 of "Cassell's Family Paper," A GREAT MAP OF LONDON, Price One Penny to all Purchasers of Numbers 231, 232, and 233 of CASSELL'S FAMILY PAPER. Ready early in May, elegantly bound in cloth gilt, imperial 8vo. price 58. THE TRAVELLER'S ALBUM: Being an ILLUSTRATED GUIDE to the CHIEF TOWNS in the UNITED KINGDOM. Messrs. CASSELL, PETTER, & GALPIN have the pleasure to announce the above Illustrated Work, comprising Historical Accounts of Places of Interest (Illustrated); Descriptive Accounts of some of the Principal Manufactories in the United Kingdom; Biographical Sketches (with Portraits) of Remarkable Men; the whole interspersed with light and sketchy Articles, Poetry, &c. ** In order to place the above most useful work within the reach of all, a Cheap Edition will also be published in a handsome paper Wrapper CASSELL, PETTER, & GALPIN, Ludgate Hill, London, E.C.; and all Booksellers. (293) Printed by GEORGE ANDREW SPOTTISWOODE, of No. 12 James Street, Buckingham Gate, in the Parish of St. Margaret, in the City of Westminster, at No. 5 New-street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the City of London; and Published by SAMPSON Low, of 14 Great James Street, in the Parish of St. Andrew, Holborn, at the Office, 47 Ludgate Hill, in the Parish of St. Bride.- Tuesday, April 15, 1862. General Record of British and Foreign Literature CONTAINING A COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL LIST OF AND EVERY WORK OF INTEREST PUBLISHED ABROAD LITERARY INTELLIGENCE..... CONTENTS Pag ....................................... 197-200 BOOKS PUBLISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN FROM APRIL 15 TO 30 ............. BOOKS NOW FIRST ADVERTISED AS PUBLISHED ............................................ 210-218 BOOKS IN THE PRESS.. NEW EDITIONS AND BOOKS LATELY PUBLISHED. ASSISTANTS WANTED WANT SITUATIONS 215-216 217 213-214 A REMARKABLY fine May-day, conveniently preceded by a shower just sufficient to lay the dust upon the roads, though necessarily not included in the official programme, is not the least important element in the success of the opening of the Great Exhibition. All the world to-day gravitates towards South Kensington, where, if the rumour which reaches us be correct, they find that the chaos of yesterday has fallen, into sufficient order and method to convert the coldest of newspaper critics. The undertaking has not been brought so far without an average perhaps we may say more than an average- amount of objection and foreboding. A hundred thousand interests, more or less conflicting, have had to be reconciled by the Com missioners as best they could; and if all are not satisfied, the abstract philosopher and student of human nature will probably not feel any surprise. Apart from the pervading feeling of great loss of the absence of one who should have been the centre and representative of this great gathering-everything concurs to bring success to the second Great Exhibition. Literature will happily not be altogether omitted from the show. Indeed, considering the necessity of excluding much literary industry from the subjects to be considere decided on by Jurors, visitors will probably be surprised to find how considerable a place boats enjoy in the display. The Commissioners naturally felt indisposed to take upon themselves the task of deciding between the poetical merits of a Browning and a Patmore, of awarding to Mr. Dickens and Mr. Thackeray their exact relative meed of praise, or of deciding upon the respective claims to credibility of the books of Mr. Du Chaillu and Dr. Barth. Under the heads of Plate, Letter-press Printing and Bookbinding, however, scarcely any respectable publishing house will be without a book at the Exhibition bearing their name in its imprint. Among the names of actual exhibitors we find Messrs. Longman & Co.; Smith, Elder & Co.; Mr. John Murray; Blackwood & Sons; Macmillan & Co.; Parker, Son & Bourn; Oliver & Boyd; Simpkin, Marshall & Co.; Bell & Daldy; A. & C. Black; Eyre & Spottiswoode; S. Low, Son & Co.; Cassell, Petter & Galpin ; Day & Son; Griffith & Farren; Trübner & Co.; T. Alman; David Nutt; G. Philip & Son; Walton & Maberly; L. Booth; Darton & Hodge; Dean & Son; J. Gordon; A. Hall, Virtue & Co.; J. Hogg & Sons; Jarrold & Sons; and others. But what publishers' names appear upon the title pages of the magnificent volumes exhibited by the great binders, such as Bedford, Rivière, Leighton, and others, we cannot at present say. It is disappointing not to be able to exhibit as publishers, or rather as publishers of works in the department of belles lettres, not to speak of the chances of medals and honourable mention; but our readers will agree that it is something not to be altogether missing where the whole world have come together to exhibit their productions. The following is our usual summary of the more important publications of the fortnight :— In LITERATURE, Science, and ART, we have Mr. J. Hill Burton's delightful essays, entitled The Book Hunter, already familiar to the readers of Blackwood, from which they are now republished in beautiful typography, &c.. the second part of Sir Benjamin Brodie's curious and interesting Psychological Inquiries, which are intended to illustrate the physical and moral history of man; Mr. Richard Cobden's pamphlet, entitled the Three Panics, an Historical Episode, which has been too generally discussed in the press to require notice here; Sir William Hooker's handsome volume on British Ferns, with coloured figures, the drawings by Walter Fitch; Sir Henry Holland's Essays on Scientific and other Subjects, from the Quarterly and Edinburgh Reviews; another volume of Essays, Historical and Biographical, Political, Social, Scientific, and Literary, by the late Hugh Miller, collected from the Witness newspaper; and The Criminal Prisons of London and Scenes of Prison Life, by Henry Mayhew and J. Binney. In GEOGRAPHY AND TRAVEL we find two additions to those books of mountain scenery which Mr. Longman has rendered so popular-the one A Summer Tour in the Grisons and Italian Valleys of the Bernina, by Mrs. Henry Freshfield; the other entitled Mountaineering in 1861, a Vacation Tour by Mr. J. Tyndall; Vacation Tourists, Notes of Travel in 1861, a Series of Travels by Various Authors, edited by Mr. Francis Galton, with Ten Maps; and Thebes, its Tombs and their Tenants, including a Record of Excavations in the Necropolis, by A. H. Rhind. In HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY Mrs. Oliphant publishes her spirited Memoir of that singular preacher, Edward Irving, illustrated by his Journal and Correspondence, in 2 vols.; a first volume has appeared of Mr. P. M. Irving's Life and Letters of his Uncle, Washington Irving, from materials furnished by Irving himself for the future biography, which will be concluded in 3 vols.; Mr. Hepworth Dixon's Story of Lord Bacon's Life, forms a new work, and, being more picturesque and less critical than his previous book, is likely to enjoy a wider popularity. In THEOLOGY we note The Mission and Extension of the Church at Home, considered in Eight Lectures preached before the University at Oxford, by J. Sandford; another volume, being the second, of Sermons by the Rev. Jabez Bunting; The Divine Footsteps in Human History; and The Foes of Our Faith and How to Treat Them. In FICTION we have Mrs. H. Beecher Stowe's The Pearl of Orr's Island, complete, and Agnes of Sorrento, from the Cornhill Magazine, in 1 vol.; The Channings, by Mrs. Henry Wood, Author of East Lynne, from The Quiver; Owen, a Waif, by the Author of No Church, 3 vols.; Pilgrims of Fashion, a Novel, by K. C., 3 vols.; A Woman's Life, 2 vols.; and Ellice, by L. N. Comyn, 1 vol. Among EDUCATIONAL works we notice A Manual of the English Language from the Norman Conquest, with numerous Specimens, by G. L. Craik; Chambers's Outlines of the Principal Countries and Islands in the World, 4to.; A Dictionary of the English Language, by A. J. Cooley; English Grammar Practice, by G. F. Graham; a Companion to English Grammar, by Jacob Lowres; and Popular and Mathematical Astronomy, by W. T. Read. In MEDICAL LITERATURE we have Consumption, its Early and Remediable Stages, by Edward Smith. In Law, a portly volume of reference entitled The Criminal Law as Amended by the Statutes of 1861, by Humphry W. Woolrych; Chief Points in the Law of War and Neutrality. And in POETRY, Poems and Songs, by David Wingate; and St. Clement's Eve, a Play, by Henry Taylor, Author of Philip van Artevelde. Mr. MURRAY's List of forthcoming Works include Secularia, or Surveys on the Main Stream of History, by Samuel Lucas. Mr. Lucas was the original Editor of the Press Newspaper, and is now known as one of the principal writers of the reviews in the Times. Mr. Murray also announces a work On the Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man, by Sir Charles Lyell, with Illustrations; Five Months on the Yang-Tsze, with a Narrative of the Exploration of its Upper Waters, and Notices of the Present Rebellions in China, by Capt. T. W. Blakiston, R.A., Map and Illustrations; and numerous other works. |