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Dennis, George
The cities and cemeteries of Etruria: in two volumes (Band 2) — London, 1848

DOI Seite / Zitierlink:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.786#0577

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Mr. Murray's List of

2.

MEMOIES OF

THE COURT OP GEORGE THE SECOND,
By Lord Hervey.

Now first published from the Family Archives at Ickworth.

Edited by the Eight Hon. John Wilson Croker.

Portrait. 2 Vols. 8vo. 36».

" I know of no such near and intimate picture of the interior of a court. No other
Memoirs that I have ever read bring us so immediately, so actually into not merely the
presence, but the company of the personages of the royal circle.

" Lord Hervey is, I may venture to say, almost the Boswell of George II. and Queen
Caroline." Editor's Preface.

3.

THE LIVES OP THE LORD CHANCELLORS.

FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE DEATH OF LORD ELDON IN 1838.

By the Bight Honhle. Lord Campbell.

7 Vols. 8vo. 102».

" A work of sterling merit—one of very great labour, of richly diversified interest, and,
we are satisfied, of lasting value and estimation. We doubt if there be half-a-dozen living
men who could produce a Biographical Series on such a scale, at all likely to command so
much applause from the candid among the learned, as well as from the curious of the
laity." Quarterly Review

4.

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY.

By Mary Somerville.

Author of the " Mechanism of the Heavens," " Connexion of the Physical Sciences," &c.
With a Portrait, by James Swinton, Esq. 2 Vols. Fcap. 8vo. 12*.

5.
PORTUGAL AND GALICIA.

A NARRATIVE OF A JOURNEY THROUGH THOSE COUNTRIES.

By Lord Carnarvon.

A New Edition, Bevised. One Volume. Post8vo. 6s.
Forming a Volume of Mtirray's " Some and Colonial Library"
" This is a very remarkable work. It is not only a graphic description of the face of the
country, and an impartial and sagacious account of the moral and political condition of Spain
and Portugal; but it relates also a series of personal adventures and perils, very unusual in
modern Europe ; and which, while they do honour to the spirit of him who sought
information at such risks, exhibit more of the real state of the Iberian Peninsula than
could have been obtained by a less ardent and less intrepid inquirer. The author is the
Earl of Carnarvon, who seems to have combined the modern thirst for information with
the adventurous spirit of the ancient Herberts, and who has the additional quality of being
a very elegant and amusing writer." Quarterly Review-
 
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