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ROUTLEDGE'S NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS.

THE UNITED STATES, BY CAPT. OLDMIXON.
Price 1s. boards.

TRANSATLANTIC WANDERINGS;

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k 'Captain Oldmixon's volume is as amusing a book of travels as one can desire to pick up. He runs rapidly through the country, tells us in a lively manner what he saw and felt, jots down here and there a racy anecdote or bit of dialogue."-ATLAS.

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"Those to whom Mrs. Beecher Stowe is-and to whom is she not ?-known as an effective romance writer, would hardly give her credit for the quietness of tone and simplicity of style with which in the present volume she narrates what she saw and heard during her sojourn in Europe, and especially in this country."-JOHN BULL.

G. ROUTLEDGE & CO., 2, FARRINGDON STREET.

Price ONE SHILLING, boards, except those specified.

Vol. 103.

THE MISER'S DAUGHTER.
By W. HARRISON AINSWORTH.

LIST OF THE SERIES.

1. Cooper's Pilot, 1s. 6d.

2. Carleton's Jane Sinclair.

60. Dumas's Three Musketeers, 2s. 61. Kingston's Albatross.

3. Cooper's Last of Mohicans, 1s. 6d. 62. Ainsworth's Windsor Castle.
4. Cooper's Pioneers, 1s. 6d.
7. Cooper's Spy, 18. 6d.

8. Austen's (Miss) Sense and Sen-
sibility.

10. Austen's (Miss) Pride & Prejudice.
11. McIntosh's (Miss) Charms and
Counter-Charms.

12. Cooper's Lionel Lincoln, 1s. 6d.
14. Carleton's Clarionet, &c.
16. Gleig's (G. R.) Light Dragoon.
17. Mackay's Longbeard, 1s. 6d.
18. Sedgwick's (Miss) Hope Leslie.
19. Crowe's(Mrs.) Lilly Dawson,1s.6d.
20. James's Dark Scenes of History
1s. 6d.

21, 22. Grant's Romance of War, 2s.
23. De Vigny's Cinq Mars.

24. Grey's (Mrs.) The Little Wife.
25. Dupuy's (Miss) Julie de Bourg.
26, 27. Grant's Aide-de-Camp, 2s.
28, 29. Whitefriars, by the Author of
"Whitehall," 28.

30. Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter.
31. Hawthorne's House of the Seven
Gables.

32. Porter's Knight of St John, 1s. 6d.
33, 34. Ward's (Mrs.) Jasper Lyle, 2s.
35. Adelaide Lindsay, edited by the
Author of "Emilia Wyndham."
36, 37. Grant's Scottish Cavalier, 2s.
38. McIntosh's Grace and Isabel.
39. Porter's Recluse of Norway, 1s.6d.
40. Stewart's (Miss) Lilias Davenant.
41. Goldschmidt's Jew of Denmark.
42. Brunton's (Mrs.) Discipline.
43. Brunton's Self-Control, 1s. 6d.
44, 45. Crowe's (Mrs.) Night Side of
Nature, 28.

46. Maillard's Zingra the Gipsy.
47. Marryat's (Capt.) Valerie.
48. Harris's Martin Beck, 1s. 6d.
49. Curling's Soldier of Fortune.
50. Crowe's Susan Hopley, 2s.
51. Goldsmidt's (Miss) Viola.
52. Ward's (Mrs.) Helen Charteris.
53, 54. Whitehall, by the Author of
"Whitefriars," 28.

55. Reelstab's Polish Lancer, 1s. 6d.
56. Grey's Passion and Principle.
57. Maillard's Compulsory Marriage.
58. Dorsey's Woodreve Manor.
59. Scott's (Lady) The Henpecked
Husband, 1s. 6d.

63. Johnstone's Clan Albyn, 2s.
64. Ainsworth's Rookwood, 1s. 6d.
65. Godwin's Caleb Williams.
66. Ainsworth's St. James's.
67. Cæsar Borgia, by the Author of
"Whitefriars," 2s.

68. Porter's Scottish Chiefs, 28.
69. Rockingham, by the Author of
"Electra."

70. Porter's Thaddeus of Warsaw,
1s. 6d.

71. Bulwer's Pelham, 1s. 6d.
72. Ainsworth's Crichton, 1s. 6d.
73. Bulwer's Paul Clifford, 1s. 6d.
74. Gore's (Mrs.) Money Lender.
75. Bulwer's Eugene Aram, 1s. 6d.
76. Hannay's Singleton Fontenoy,
1s. 6d.

77. Bulwer's Last Days of Pompeii,
1s. 6d.

78. Ainsworth's Lancashire Witches,

2s.

79. Bulwer's Rienzi, 1s. 6d.
80. Mrs. Grey's Young Prima Donna.
81. Bulwer's Pilgrims of the Rhine.
82. Mr. Gore's Pin Money, 1s. 6d.
83. Bulwer's Last of the Barons, 2s.
84. Mrs. Gore's Dowager, 1s. 6d.
85.

Bulwer's Ernest Maltravers,
1s. 6d.

86. Ainsworth's James the Second. 87. Bulwer's Alice; or, The Mysteries, 1s. 6d.

88. Bulwer's Night and Morning,
1s. 6d.

89. Torlogh O Brien, 1s. 6d.
90. Bulwer's Godolphin, ls. 6d.
91. Mrs. Gore's Heir of Selwood,
1s. 6d.

92. Ainsworth's Tower of London, 28.
93. Bulwer's Disowned, 1s. 6d.
94. Electra, by the Author of
"Rockingham," 1s. 6d.

95. Bulwer's Devereux, 1s. 6d.
96. Hour and the Man, by Miss Mar-
tineau, 1s. 6d.

97. Leila, by Bulwer.
98. Bulwer's Caxtons, 28.
99. Ainsworth's Flitch of Bacon,
1s. 6d.

100.My Novel, 2v., 2s. each.
101..

102. Old Commodore, 1s. 6d.

New Books and New Editions.

NEW AND EXTRAORDINARY (Copyright) WORK.
Price 1s. 6d. in fancy boards,

(UNIFORM WITH AND A COMPANION TO "THE LAMPLIGHTER.")

THE

WATCHMAN.

An Enteresting and Moral Tale of Domestic Life.

By J. A. MAITLAND.

From numerous Critiques the following are selected-viz.,

"Is a story of humble life: the Author's aim throughout is to inculcate a love of truth and benevolence, and to make fiction founded on the incidents of real life a vehicle through which lessons of virtue and religion may be conveyed, and instruction blended with amusement."-Statesman, Ohio.

"The Watchman' may be read with advantage by all. The moral it inculcates is that eventual success awaits the efforts of those who earnestly strive to do their duty to God and man. This book will be a fitting companion to "The Lamplighter.'"-Advocate, York.

"It is beautifully written, and for a purpose the highest that can animate a writer. Readers of that intensely-interesting work, 'The Lamplighter,' should not fail to read 'The Watchman."-Daily Times.

"A tale of real life-a plain unvarnished narrative of the humble and unfortunate; one of the short but simple annals of the poor."-Albany Express. "The Watchman,' a companion to 'The Lamplighter. This is a story of humble life, the region of such romance as contributes to the best moral development of man in society."-The Author's Aim.

"Is a book that all persons may read with pleasure and profit; to the aged and the young it possesses an equal interest. It does not contain a single exaggerated character nor a forced incident, yet it abounds in force, and of a powerful effect. It bids fair to attain a greater popularity than any work that has been issued from the press for a long time."-New York Daily Times. »

NOW READY,—THE TWENTY-SECOND THOUSAND,
Price 1s. boards, of

FEMALE LIFE AMONG THE MORMONS.
BY THE WIFE OF A MORMON ELDER.

"This is a reprint from an American book; and we should be well pleased to see it extensively circulated wherever the absurd delusions of Mormonism prevail. It is a relation of facts: the authoress experienced what she relates for the warning of others. We get at the practical every-day life of the Mormons, in all its details; and we think that more astounding revelations were never made. There is a large amount of matter in the volume, for the whole subject is illustrated most extensively; and it will be worth the while of respectable persons to put it in the way of their ignorant neighbours in country places where Mormon agents are at work."-Cambridge Chronicle.

OF

Original Nobels,

In Volumes varying from ONE to TWO SHILLINGS,
Fcap. 8vo, bound in fancy boards.

1, The Curse of Gold. (1s.) By R. W. JAMIESON.

"Is written with considerable skill and graphic power. Many of the incidents are highly dramatic."-Morning Post.

"The chord of interest is early and cleverly struck, and it vibrates unceasingly with more or less intensity, throughout every page of the volume."-Scotsman. 2, The Family Feud. (2s.) By ADAM HORNBOOK, Author of "Alderman Ralph."

"Is for freshness, vigour, and variety, worth any half-dozen novels There are such life-like descriptions, and the incidents are so romantic, that the reader is carried on without delaying to criticise.”—Athenæum.

3, The Serf Sisters; or, the Russia of To-Day. (1s.)

By JOHN HARWOOD, Author of "Stamboul, the City of Gems." "In this work are many scenes of passionate utterance, and Mr. Harwood shows himself a master of situation. This book is interesting for its realities of Russian life at the present time. They are doubtless as real as anything in the pages of the Englishwoman, whose pen has been a most damaging weapon to the holiness of 'holy' Russia."-Douglas Jerrold's Newspaper.

4, The Pride of the Mess; a Naval Novel of the Crimean War. (1s. 6d.) By the Author of "Cavendish."

"The sea tales of the author of 'Cavendish' have all the vivacity and spirit of Marryat's best works, and this new volume, "The Pride of the Mess,' brings prominently to our notice many of the heroes of our country now in the Crimea.'> 5, Frank Hilton; or, the Queen's Own. GRANT, Author of the "Romance of War," &c. &c.

(2s.) By JAMES "Philip Rollo,"

"Mr. Grant has won for himself a name as popular as any author of the day. With the pathos of Maxwell, as shown in his Stories of Waterloo,' he unites the drollery of Lever in his 'Charles O'Malley;' and now that 'Frank Hilton' is for the first time produced for two shillings, we can promise it a most decided success."

6, My Brother's Wife. (1s. 6d.) By AMELIA B. EDWards. "Is an uncommon work, deservedly styled an original novel."-The Globe. 7, Adrien; or, Parent Power. (1s. 6d.) By A. M. MAILLARD, Author of "Zingra, the Gipsy," "Compulsory Marriage,

&c. &c.

In the Press, fcap. 8vo, 2s.

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8, The Yellow Frigate; or, the Three Sisters. By

JAMES GRANT

&c. &c.

LONDON: G. R

Romance of War,'

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GDON STREET.

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