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IV.

LANDSCAPE ILLUSTRATIONS

OF

THE BIBLE,

MADE FROM ORIGINAL SKETCHES TAKEN ON THE SPOT. Engraved in the best style by W. and E. FINDEN. Accompanied by Descriptions, drawn up from Original and other Sources.

By the REV. THOMAS HARTWELL HORNE, B.D., Author of "An Introduction to the Study of the Holy Scriptures," &c.

In Monthly Parts, price 2s. 6d. each.

The peculiar value of Mr. MURRAY's Illustrations of the Bible consists in their being matter-of-fact views of places, as they now exist, taken on the spot; and NOT fictitious pictures, made up from prints in books of travels, nor imaginary repre

sentations.

LIST OF VIEWS PUBLISHED IN THE FIRST SEVEN PARTS,
With the Names of the Gentlemen from whose Sketches they are taken.

MOUNT ARARAT; GEN. viii. 18. J. Mo-
RIER, Esq.

VALLEY OF BROOK KEDRON; JOHN Xviii.
1. C. BARRY, Esq.

THE DEAD SEA AND THE JORDAN;
JOSH. XV. 5. Rev. R. MASTER.
TADMOR IN THE DESERT; 1 KINGS ix. 18.
G. R. WOOD.

SIDON THE GREAT; ACTS xii. 20.

NAZARETH;

LUKE iv. 2.

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Sketched by C. BARRY, Esq.

Distant View of ARIMATHEA; LUKE Xxiii. 50, 51. HON. W. E. FITZMAURICE. BABYLON; JEREMIAH li. 37, " Babylon

shall become a heap, without an inhabitant." Sir ROBERT KER PORTER. THE RIVER JORDAN; JUDGES iii. 28. Rev. R. MASTER.

VIEW FROM MOUNT CARMEL; 1 KINGS
xix. 9. Rev. R. MASTER.
BETHLEHEM; MATT. ii. 1. C. BARRY,
Esq.

THE WILDERNESS OF MOUNT SINAI;
DEUT. viii. 15. MAJOR FELIX.
LEBANON from the Sea; 2 KINGS XIX. 23.
HON. W. E. FITZMAURICE.
EGYPT. The ruined Temples at Philæ;
ISAIAH xix. 1. C. BARRY, Esq.
BROOK KISHON and MOUNT CARMEL;
JUDGES V. 20; 1 KINGS Xviii. 40. HON.
W. E. FITZMAURICE.

No, AMMON-THEBES; JEREMIAH xlvi.
25. MAJOR FELIX.

PETRA-Temple cut in the Rock; 2
KINGS XIV. 7. M. LOUIS DE LABORDE.
WILDERNESS OF ENGEDDI; 1 Sam. xxiv.
1-10. C. BARRY, Esq.

ASCALON; ZEPHANIAH ii. 4. Rev. R.
MASTER.

BAALBECK AND LEBANON; JEREMIAH
xviii. 14. C. BARRY, Esq.
ETHIOPIAN TEMPLE IN RUINS. C.
BARRY, Esq.

LEBANON AND THE NAHR EL KELB;
SOLOMON'S SONG iv. 15. ALBERT
WAY, Esq.

For the convenience of persons who may desire to bind up these Illustrations with any of the established and Annotated Editions of the Bible, the Plates are printed in the following different sizes:—

I. Super-royal 8vo., 2s. 6d.—II. Imperial Svo., 3s. 6d.-III. Royal 4to., 4s.— IV. Royal 4to., India proofs, 5s.-V. Imperial 4to. proofs, 7s. 6d.

V.

UNIVERSAL HISTORY.

By the late

ALEXANDER FRASER TYTLER, LORD WOODHOUSELEE. Complete in 6 pocket vols. 30s.

As there is no Universal History now in the hands of the English reader, except an enormous collection occupying nearly thirty large octavo volumes, the production of a compact and elegant Epitome-not prepared, hastily, to meet the demand of the hour, but the result of the lifelong thought and exertion of a most accomplished man of letters-can hardly, it is presumed, fail to be considered as filling up an important blank in the popular literature of the day.

"The author seems to us to avoid all the inconveniences of his predecessors' plans, and to have united their advantages.”—Leeds Mercury.

"It has afforded us much amusement and instruction, and to its pages we may again resort to pass away our unemployed hours."-Macclesfield Journal.

"Not a dry, unadorned abstract of naked facts, but a well-condensed digest, with acute and philosophical remarks on laws, manners, institutions, &c. To ordinary readers who have no leisure to consult original authorities, such a popular view of history must be extremely convenient and instructive."-Edinburgh Courant. "Whether as a work of authority and reference, or as a careful and philosophical compilation of facts, it may be advantageously consulted and quoted on all occasions. We have long desiderated a book of this kind—concise and correct, yet not destitute of the results of a reflective judgment, and in Lord Woodhouselee's volumes the reader will find these properties admirably combined. This praise, though high, is merely just."--Edinburgh Saturday Post.

VI.

TRANSACTIONS of the ROYAL SOCIETY of LITERATURE, Vol. II., Part II. 4to. 21. 2s.

CONTENTS:

I. GRANVILLE PENN on an Ode of Horace.

II. Dr. NOLAN on the Music of the Greeks.

III. ARCHDEACON TODD on the Services rendered to Literature by Archbishop Laud.

IV. Dr. JAMIESON on the Vitrified Forts of Scotland.

V. SHARON TURNER on the Asiatic Origin of the Anglo-Saxons.

VI. SIR THOMAS PHILLIPS on Monastic Libraries and Archives in French Flanders.

VII. Rev. T. D. FOSBROKE on Parliaments before the time of Edward I.
VIII. PRINCE HOARE on the Moral Character of Shakspeare's Dramas, &c.
IX. Dr. JAMIESON on the Antiquity of the earliest Scottish Coins extant.

X. W. R. HAMILTON on the Descent of Apollo in the First Book of the Iliad.
XI. Rev. F. NOLAN on the Grecian Rose.

XII. Mr. ROSCOE on the MS. Library at Holkham.

XIII. COLONEL LEAKE on an Inscription found at Ægina.

XIV. S. T. COLERIDGE on the Prometheus of Eschylus, and the Mysteries of Antient Greece.

XV. A. W. SCHLEGEL de l'Origine des Hindoos.

XVI. C. WORDSWORTH on an Inscription found at Athens in 1833.

XVII. J. G. WILKINSON on the Vocal Powers of the Statue of Memnon.

XVIII. Mr. TOMLINSON on the Sarcophagus in the British Museum, called the Tomb of Alexander.

XIX. Mr. ARUNDELL'S Discoveries in Asia Minor; the Sites of Colossæ, and Antioch of Pisidia.

XX. and XXI. Mr. CULLIMORE'S Plates, entitled "Chronologia Hieroglyphica," and "Geographia Hieroglyphica ;" his Memoirs on which are to appear in a Supplement.

XXIII.

The PRINCIPLES of GEOLOGY; with a GLOSSARY, containing an Explanation of Scientific Terms, and a copious INDEX. By CHARLES LYELL, F.R.S.,

Foreign Secretary of the Geological Society.

A New and Cheap Edition, being the THIRD, 4 vols. 12mo. 28s. Illustrated with 147 Woodcuts, 37 Plates and Maps.

Since the publication of the former editions of this work, the Author has travelled over a large part of the Continent of Europe for the purpose of verifying facts, and collecting new materials. In the present edition he has embodied all his own

observations, together with a vast quantity of new facts brought to light since the first appearance of the work, which has been most materially improved by these corrections and additions, and yet the price has been reduced nearly one half. Several new Illustrations have been added, and the Glossary at the end of the fourth volume will considerably assist those readers who are unacquainted with the Elements of Geology.

XXIV.

INTRODUCTIONS to the STUDY of the GREEK CLASSIC POETS, for the Use of Young Persons at School or College. By HENRY NELSON COLERIDGE.

A New Edition, much improved and augmented. Foolscap 8vo. 7s. 6d.

XXV.

The DIARY of an INVALID in PURSUIT of HEALTH; being the Journal of a Tour in Portugal, Italy, Switzerland, and France.

By the late HENRY MATHEWS, A.M.

A New Edition, being the Fifth. Compressed in one volume, small 8vo.

XXVI.

ANTIQUITIES, ARTS, and LITERATURE of

ITALY.

By JOSEPH FORSYTH, Esq.

Fourth Edition. In one vol., small 18mo.

XXVII.

DR. JOHNSON'S and JAMES BOSWELL'S TOURS in the HEBRIDES. A New Edition.

With Notes by Sir WALTER SCOTT, J. G. LOCKHART, Esq., and the Right Hon. J. W. CROKER.

Printed uniformly with THE HIGHLAND GUIDE. One pocket volume.

NEW WORKS.

JUST PUBLISHED,

I.

GUIDE TO THE

HIGHLANDS and ISLANDS of SCOTLAND,

Including ORKNEY and ZETLAND; descriptive of their Scenery, Statistics, Antiquities, and Natural History, with numerous Historical Notices.

By GEORGE ANDERSON, General Secretary to the Northern Institution for the Promotion of Science and Literature; and

PETER ANDERSON, Secretary to the Inverness Society for the Education of the Poor in the Highlands.

One Pocket Volume, Post 8vo., accompanied by a most elaborate and complete Travelling Map of Scotland, engraved by Mr. J. Arrowsmith, and con

taining the most recent information respecting Roads, &c. 16s.

"The Authors of this work take leave to state, that they have been, in a great measure, led to obtrude themselves upon public attention by a sense of the inconvenience felt by travellers from the want of such a guide-book as this is designed to form; and from a belief that, as they have possessed unusual opportunities of acquiring an extensive acquaintance with the mountainous districts of their native land, they may with some confidence submit these pages to public notice. In the performance of the task they have imposed upon themselves, they venture to assure their readers that they have spared no trouble in procuring minute and accurate information. They have purposely and personally visited almost all the scenes described by them; and not satisfied with their own, or the observations of other writers, their MS. has, in general, been revised by friends intimately acquainted with the various districts of which it treats."-Authors' Preface.

Section I.-General observations on the Highlands and Islands of Scotland.

II.-Highland roads, coaches, inns, steam-navigation, outline of the most interesting routes, expense of travelling, &c. III.-Town of Inverness.

IV.-Route 1. Inverness, by the Highland road across the Grampians to Perth. Branch a. Inverness to Fort George, Moor of Culloden, Cawdor Castle, &c. b. Strathnairn and Stratherrick.

c. Strathdearn and the river Findhorn.

d. Strathspey, with Fochabers, Elgin, and Burg-head.

e. Routes across the Grampians to Braemar and Athole, with Loch-aneilan, Cairn-Gorm, &c.

f. Blair Athol to Grantown in Strathspey, by Glentilt and Braemar. APPENDIX to ROUTE 1.

Geology of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland-Localities of the different formations and rocks.

V.-Route 2. The Great Glen of Scotland, and voyage from Inverness by Fort William to Glasgow.

Branch a. Invermoriston to Kyle Rhea and Kyleakin.

b. Corryarock and Loch Laggan roads with Glenroy.

c. Glengarry road to Loch Hournhead and Cluany.

d. Loch Arekaig-passage to the west coast by Glen Dessary.

e. Fort William to Arisaig and Moidart.

f. Oban to Staffa, Iona, &c.

g. Oban to Dunbarton, by Dalmally, Inverary and Loch Lomond.

h. Islands of Islay, Jura, Colonsay and Oronsay, and Inch Cormac with Loch Swin.

i. Kintyre, Ailsa, and Arran.

APPENDIX to ROUTE 2.
Botany of the Highlands and Islands.
Sketch of the distribution of British,
and especially Scottish plants.

VI.-Route 3. Stirling to Fort William, by Callendar and Glencoe.

Branch a. Callendar to Loch Catrine, Lochs Lomond, Chon, Ard, and Monteith.

b. Lochernhead to Crief, and thence to Straths Tay and Tummel.

c. Lochernhead to Dunkeld by Killin and Kenmore.

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A b. Skye, Strathaird's Cave, Coruisk, and Glen Sligachan.

B. Broadford to Brochel Castle in Rasay, &c.

C. The Outer Hebrides, or Long Island, and St. Kilda.

APPENDIX to ROUTE 4. Round Towers, Duns or Burghs, and sculptured stones.

VIII.-Route 5. Inverness to Wick, John O'Groat's House, and Thurso.

Branch a. Inverness to Beauly, Falls of Kilmorack, Glenstrathfarar, and Strath Glass.

b. Inverness to Avoch, Fortrose and Cromarty.

c. Dingwall to the western coasts of Ross-shire.

d. Bonar Bridge to Tongue, Durness, and Cape Wrath.

e. Bonar Bridge to Loch Inver; and from Assynt to Durness.

f. Tongue to Thurso.

APPENDIX to ROUTE 5.
Vitrified Forts.

IX.-Route 6. The Orkney and Zetland Islands.

Table of Distances.

List of Books relating to the Highlands and Islands.

Index.

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AND NARRATIVE OF A

VOYAGE UP THE INDUS;

Performed under the Orders of the Supreme Government of India, in the Years 1831-2 and 3.

Three Vols. 8vo.; with Illustrative Engravings. 21. 28.

"From these volumes the statesman will best learn the policy of those countries that border upon our dominions in India, and see whether they can be established as bulwarks against aggressive ambition, or whether they are to be dreaded as future agents in our expulsion from Hindostan.

"The merchant will consult the work to learn by what means the new commercial route here developed may be turned to advantage; the general reader will delight in the novelty of countries previously unexplored, and races hitherto unknown; while the philosopher will delight in witnessing the devotion of great energies to a great purpose. It is impossible, we think, for any reader to rise from the perusal of Mr. Burnes's interesting volumes, without the strongest impression of his accuracy of observation, patient inquiry, close adherence to truth, and abstinence from mere speculation.”—Foreign Quarterly Review, No. 27.

"Lient. Burnes's Reise von Indien nach Bochara ist eine der merwürdigsten Reise

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