Page:Pictures of life in Mexico Vol 2.djvu/297

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WOMAN IN FRANCE DURING THE i8th CENTURY. By Julia Kavanagh 2 vols, post 8vo, with Eight Portraits, i/. 4^. cloth. " Miss Kavanagh has undertaken a delicate task, and she has performed it on the whole with discretion and judgment. Her volumes may lie on any drawing-room table without scandal, and may be read by all but her youngest countrywomen without risk." — Quarterly Re'vie%v. " Which among us will be ever tired of reading about the women of France, especially when they are marshalled so agreeably and discreetly as in the pages before us ? " — Athenaum. " The subject is handled with much delicacy and tact, and the book shews often an original tone of remark, and always a graceful and becoming one." — Examiner. " Miss Kavanagh has acquitted herself with artist- like skill ; her picture of the manners of a most remarkable epoch is drawn with boldness, precision, and delicacy." — Globe. " Delightful volumes, not only of immense interest, but of permanent value." — Britannia. ROSE DOUGLAS ; or, Sketches of a Country Parish : being the Autobiography of a Scotch Minister's Daughter. 2 vols, post 8vo, 1/. s. cloth. " Among domestic tales, ' Rose Douglas' may take the place which Words- worth's ' Lucy' occupies among domestic poems. A more attractive book of its placid order we do not often meet j we commend this narrative as one sure to interest, to retain, and to satisfy the heart." — Atbenaum. " 'Rose Douglas' is what it professes to be. In the minute, homely, but delicate painting of the characters of the parish, we are instinctively reminded of the quiet, genuine humour of Gait." — Britan-.ia. " It is an interesting and instructive book, and has a character of truthful- ness and reality about it. The author writes from experience, and produces a picture which is singularly defined and clear." — Guardian. A TRIP TO MEXICO ; or, Recollections of a Ten Months' Ramble in 1849-50. By a Bar- rister. Post 8vo, 95. cloth. " A very pleasant volume, which conveys a vivid impression of Mexican life and manners." — Critic. " An agreeable, amusing, and to some extent instructive volume." — lAte- rary Ga%ette, " We are pleased with the writer's vivacity and candour, and can recom- mend the work as certain to afford instruction and entertainment." — G obe.