THE WORKS OF JOHN C. CALHOUN. HANDSOMELY PRINTED IN FOUR OCTAVO VOLUMES. Price $8 00. Contents of the several Volumes. I. ON THE CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES. II. SPEECHES IN CONGRESS. III. SPEECHES. IV. CALHOUN, CLAY and WEBSTER are three names which will long be venerated by American Citizens. Of the three, Calhoun, during the early part of his life, was perhaps the greatest favorite with the people. His highly cultivated mind, profound views of government, and his pure character, gave great weight and importance to his opinions with all parties. Of the writings and speeches of American statesmen, there are scarcely any which bear so directly upon the great measures adopted by our Government, during the last forty years, as those of the lamented Calhoun. The War, the Revenue System, the Currency, and States Rights, were subjects upon which he took a leading position, and greatly aided the decisions which were made on them. With those who take an interest in our national history, the value of the writings of our public men cannot be too highly estimated. Opinions of the Press. "Mr. Calhoun was a man of noble intellect and pure principles, and was justly ranked among the 'first three' American statesmen of the present century."-Boston Traveller. "Mr. Calhoun's works form a part of the history of our country, and are necessary to be studied in order to gain a correct notion of many of the most important questions which have agitated parties among us."-Boston Daily Courier. "John C. Calhoun has been esteemed one of the greatest men in the annals of our country. The foundation of his greatness is based upon a sound and practical knowledge of government, a comprehensive view of national character, and a thorough understanding of the sources from which springs republican strength, true national greatness, and upon which depends the perpetuity of republican institutions."-Highland Eagle. "He was a man of pure mind, heart and life; and men confided in him because they saw and felt that in him there was an absence of all duplicity. He could be trusted. He was too unselfish to knowingly mislead. He was a man of great mental activity. His mind knew no rest. Such a mind must be housed in a strong physical tenement, or it will intellectualize the body, and break it down. Mr. Calhoun had such a physical system, until age came upon him, and his vital energies lost their recuperative force."-Palladium. D. Appleton & Company's Publications. "Chestnut Wood will light up many a hearth with pleasure.” CHESTNUT WOOD: An American Cale. BY LIELE LINDEN. Two volumes, 12mo. Paper covers, $1 25; cloth, $1 75. PLOT OF THE STORY. Chestnut Wood is a country-seat, near Sleepy Hollow, owned and occupied by Mr. Atherton, a man of stern but not unkind disposition. The better feelings of his heart are brought into action, by the circumstances of his young grand-daughter, Sybil, the heroine of the tale, who is thrown, by the death of her mother at a farm-house in the vicinity, where she has been rescued from exposure on the road, upon his protection. The father of Sybil, as may be inferred from the fate of her mother, is a worthless scoundrel, who endeavors, with the help of associates as worthless as himself, to get possession of the child. They succeed in carrying her off, and concealing her in New York, where they employ her as an unconcious agent in the circulation of counterfeit money. She escapes from the wardship of an old misshapen hag, Moll, and is brought back to her home at Chestnut Wood; where, however, she is still subject to occasional manifestations from the same source. Opinions of the Press. "One of the pleasantest characters in the book is Jerry Goldsmith, a Yankee Caleb Quotem, ready to turn his hand to any thing, and more profuse in promise than performance."-Churchman. "One who has read it from preface to finis, pronounces it delightful; and hence our praise. She says there are spots that those who have tears can cry over, but never so sad that the tears need scald much."-N. Y. Daily Times. "We commend to men, women, and even children, a perusal of 'Chestnut Wood.' Lawrence Sentinel. "This work will be read. It has all the elements of a successful book, viz: originality, interest, power, and strong characterization."-Berks County Press. "It will please from its truthfulness to nature, and from the effect it will leave on the mind of the reader."-Hartford Courant. "Its plot is well developed, is ingenious, but not too intricate, and is managed throughout with the skill of a master."-Palladium. "The characters are very well and forcibly drawn, particularly the 'cute Yankee, Jerry Goldsmith."-Mobile Adv. Standard Historical Works. I. THE HISTORY OF ROME. By THOMAS ARNOLD, D. D., Late Regius Professor of Modern H tory in the University of Oxford, and Head Master of Rugby School. 1 large vol. 8vo. pp. 686. Price $3. II. HISTORY OF FRANCE, FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT TIME. By M. MICHELET, Professor à la Faculté des Lettres, Professor à l'Ecole Normale, &c. Translated by G. H. Smith, F. G. S 2 vols. Price $3 50. 8vo. pp. 480 and 400. III. HISTORY OF GERMANY, FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT TIME. By FREDERICK KOHLRAUSCH. Translated from the last German Edition. By James D. Haas. With a complete index prepared expressly for the American edition. 1 vol. 8vo. pp. 487. Price $1 50; or, an Illustrated Edition, neatly bound, $250. IV. HISTORY OF ENGLAND, FROM THE PEACE OF UTRECHT TO THE PEACE OF PARIS. By LORD MAHON. 2 large vols. 8vo. pp. 590, 609, well printed, $4. V. A DIGEST OF THE LAWS, CUSTOMS, MANNERS, AND INSTITUTIONS OF THE ANCIENT AND MODERN NATIONS. By THOMAS DEW, Late President of the VI. College of William and A MANUAL OF ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTORY. By W. C. TAYLOR, LL. D., &c. 1 large volume, 8vo. pp. 866. Price 2 25, VII. THE HISTORY OF CIVILIZATION, FROM THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE TO THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. By F. GUIZOT. Translated by W Hazlitt. 4 vols. 12mo. $3 50. THE SPECTATOR ENTIRE. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL EDITION EVER PUBLISHED, ГНЕ D. APPLETON & COMPANY 66 HAVE JUST PUBLISHED 'SPECTATOR:" WITH PREFACES, HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL, By Alexander Chalmers, A. M. A New and Carefully Revised Edition, Complete in six volumes, 8vo., pica type. Price in cloth, $9; half calf extra or antique, $15; calf extra or antique, $20. "It is praise enough to say of a writer, that, in a high department of literature, in which many eminent writers have distinguished themselves, he has had no equal; and this may, with strict justice, be said of Addison. He is entitled to be considered not only as the greatest of the English essayists, but as the forerunner of the great English novelists. His best essays approach near to absolute perfection; nor is their excellence more wonderful than their variety. His invention never seems to flag; nor is he ever under the necessity of repeating himself, or of wearing out a subject."-Macaulay. "He was not only the ornament of his age and country, but he reflects dignity on the nature of man. He has divested vice of its meretricious ornaments, and painted religion and virtue in the modest and graceful attire which charm and elevate the heart."-Dr. Anderson. "In Addison the reader will find a rich and chaste vein of humor and satire; lessons of morality and religion, divested of all austerity and gloom; criticism at once pleasing and profound; and pictures of national character and manners that must ever charm, from their vivacity and truth."-Dr. Hurd. "Of Addison's numerous and well-known writings, it may be affirmed, that they rest on the solid basis of real excellence, in moral tendency as well as literary merit. Vice and folly are satirized, virtue and decorum are rendered attractive; and while polished diction and Attic wit abound, the purest ethics are inculcated."-Maunder. "His glory is that of one of our greatest writers in prose. Here, with his delicate sense of propriety, his lively fancy, and, above all, his most original and exquisite humor, he was in his proper walk. He is the founder of a new school of popular writing, in which, like most other founders of schools, he is still unsurpassed by any who have attempted to imitate him. His Spectator gave us the first examples of a style possessing all the best qualities of a vehicle of general amusement and instruction; easy and familiar without coarseness, animated without extravagance, polished without unnatural labor, and, from its flexibility, adapted to all the variety of the gay and the serious."-Penny Cyclopedia. "To correct the vices, ridicule the follies, and dissipate the ignorance, which too generally prevailed at the commencement of the eighteenth century, were the great and noble objects the Spectator ever holds in view; and by enlivening morality with wit, and tempering wit with morality, not only were those objects attained in an eminent degree, but the authors conferred a lasting benefit on their country, by establishing and rendering popular a species of writing which has materially tended to cultivate the understanding, refine the taste, and augment and purify the moral feeling of successive generations."-Chalmers. "He not only brought a good philological taste into fashion, but gave a pleasing ele vation and popular turn to religious studies, and placed Milton upon a pedestal from which he can never be pulled down."-Aiken. "It stands at the head of all works of the same kind that have since been produced, and as a miscellany of polite literature, is not surpassed by any book whatever."Chambers. "I consider the spectator invaluable, as containing on the subject of religion all that the world would then bear. Had Addison or his friends attempted more, it would not have been endured. The work was a stepping-stone to truth of the highest order ud, as such, our obligations to it are great."-John Wesley The Great Work on Russia. Fifth Edition now ready. RUSSIA AS IT IS. One neat volume 12mo., pp. 328, well printed. Prico $1, cloth. CONTENTS.-Preface.-Introduction.-Czarism: its historical origin-The Czar Nicholas.—The Organization of the Government.--The Army and Navy. The Nobility.-The Clergy.-The Bourgeoisie-The Cossacks.The Real People, the Peasantry.-The Rights of Aliens and Strangers. -The Commoner.-Emancipation.-Manifest Destiny.-Appendix.The Amazons.-The Fourteen Classes of the Russian Public Service; or, the Tschins.-The Political Testament of Peter the Great.-Extract from an Old Chronicle. Notices of the Press. * * "The author takes no superficial, empirical view of his subject, but collecting a rich variety of facts, brings the lights of a profound philosophy to their explanation. His work, indeed, neglects no essential detail-it is minute and accurate in its statistics-it abounds in lively pictures of society, manners and character. Whoever wishes to obtain an accurate notion of the internal condition of Russia, the nature and extent of her resources, and the practical influence of her institutions, will here find better materials for his purpose than in any single volume now extant."-N. Y. Tribune. "This is a powerfully-written book, and will prove of vast service to every one who desires to comprehend the real nature and bearings of the great contest in which Russia is now engaged."-N. Y. Courier. "It is original in its conclusions; it is striking in its revelations. Numerous as are the volumes that have been written about Russia, we really hitherto have known little of that immense territory-of that numerous people. Count Gurowski's work sheds a light which at this time is most welcome and satisfactory."-N. Y. Times. "The book is well written, and as might be expected in a work by a writer so unu sually conversant with all sides of Russian affairs, it contains so much important information respecting the Russian people, their government and religion."-Com. Advertiser. "This is a valuable work, explaining in a very satisfactory manner the internal conditions of the Russian people, and the construction of their political society. The institutions of Russia are presented as they exist in reality, and as they are determined by existing and obligatory laws."-N. Y. Herald. * * "A hasty glance over this handsome volume has satisfied us that it is one worthy of general perusal. * It is full of valuable historical information, with very interesting accounts of the various classes among the Russian people, their condition and aspirations."-N. Y. Sun. "This is a volume that can hardly fail to attract very general attention, and command & wide sale in view of the present juncture of European affairs, and the prominent part therein which Russia is to play."-Utica Gazette. "A timely book. It will be found all that it professes to be, though some may be start led at some of its conclusions."-Boston Atlas. "This is one of the best of all the books caused by the present excitement in relation to Russia. It is a very able publication-one that will do much to destroy the general belief in the infallibility of Russia. The writer shows himself master of his subject, and treats of the internal condition of Russia, her institutions aud customs, society, laws, &c., in an en lightened and scholarly manner."-City Item. |