Page:Eureka; a prose poem (1848).djvu/154

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New Works published by VII. Study of Modern Lfla n g u a g e s . Part First; French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, and English. By L. F. Klipstein, A A. LL.M. and Ph. D. One Vol. Imperial 8vo.

cents paper; $1 00 cloth. 

This work, which is intended equally for the simultaneous and the separate study of the languages that it sets forth, and which is adapted as well for the native of Germany, France, Italy, Spain, or Portugal, as for him to whom English is vernacular, in the acquire ment of any one of the other tongues besides his own, will be found an acceptable manual not only to the tyro, but to the more advanced scholar. The reading portion of the matter is interesting, and the text in every case remarkably correct, while the Elementary Phrases, forms of Cards, Letters, Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes, Receipts, &c., in the six languages, constitute what has long been a desideratum from the American press. For the comparative study of the Romanic tongues the work affords unusual facilities. VIII. Pedestrian Tour in Europe. Views a-Foot ; or Europe seen with Knapsack and Staff. By J. Bayard Taylor. A new edition with an additional chapter, and a sketch of the author in pedestrian cos tume, from a drawing by T. Buchanan Read. 12mo. Cloth. IX. A New Edition of Clarke's Shakspeare Concordance. A Complete Concordance to Shakspeare : being a Verbal Index to ALL the PASSAGES MI the Dramatic Works of the Poet. By Mrs. Cojvden Clarke. " Order gave each thing view." One large Vol. comprising 2560 closely printed columns, (indicating every word and passage in Shakspeare's Works). Price $6. Cloth. "The result of sixteen years of untiring labor. The different editions of Shakspeare have been carefully collated by the compiler, and every possible means taken to insure t*e crrr^'-tness of the work. As it now stands, a person can find a particular passage in Snakspeure by simply remembering one word of it, and is also referred to the act and scene of the play in which it occurs. As a mere dictionary of Shakspearian language and phrases, it is of great value ; but it is also a dictionary of his thoughts and imaginations. It altogether supersedes the volumes of Twiss and Ayscough, and should be on every student's shelves " Boston Courier.

      • This extraordinary work is printed in London and the price there at present is

%. 5s. Od. or about $12 A large part of the edition having been purchased for this market, it is furnished here for the very low price of $6, bound in cloth. Also By same Author. The Book of Shakspeare Proverbs. mo. 75cts. Dr. Lieber's Poetical Address to the American Republic. I6mo. 25 cents. The West: A Metrical Epistle. By FRANCIS LIBBER. %* Dr. Lieber, the distinguished Professor of Political Economy in South Carolina Col- 1 ege. Author of "Political Ethics," &c.. has just sailed for his native country Germany with the view of aiding in the great cause of Constitutional and Rational Freedom. This little volume proves that he has well studied that subject during his long residence in this his adopted country and his able and valuable opinions on American Society and Progress, carry with them a peculiar interest at this time.