Times. III. MEN, WOMEN, AND BOOKS. 2 vols. post 8vo, with Portrait, 10*. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every possible shape a charming companion. The Bhilsa Topes: Or, Buddhist Monuments of Central Indiaby Sir Alexander Cunningham - 1854 - 370 pagesFull view - About this book
| Karl Friedrich August Gützlaff - China - 1852 - 320 pages
...parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a half-hour's leisure, for a whole day-s luxury; in any and every possible shape a charming companion." — Westminster Review. Iv. TABLE TALK. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. " Precisely the book we would take as a companion on the green... | |
| Charlotte Brontë - 1853 - 350 pages
...10*. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every...cloth. "A book at once exhilarating and suggestive." — Athenaeum. VI, A JAR OF HONEY FROM MOUNT HYBLA. 5*. " A book acceptable at all seasons." — Athenaeum.... | |
| Micaiah Hill, Caroline Frances Cornwallis - Juvenile delinquency - 1853 - 474 pages
...10s. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every...cloth. " A book at once exhilarating and suggestive." — Athenaum. VI. A JAR OF HONEY FROM MOUNT HYBLA. 5*. " A book acceptable at all seasons." — Athenaum.... | |
| Micaiah Hill, Caroline Frances Cornwallis - Juvenile delinquency - 1853 - 474 pages
...parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury j in any and every possible shape a charming companion."...cloth. " A book at once exhilarating and suggestive." — Athenaeum. VI. A JAR OF HONEY FROM MOUNT HYBLA. y. " A book acceptable at all seasons." — Athenaeum.... | |
| sir John Forbes - Ireland - 1853 - 358 pages
...10s. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every...the English poets." — Atlas. V. WIT AND HUMOUR. 5s. cloth. "A book at once exhihrating and suggestive." — Athenesum. VI. A JAR OF HONEY FROM MOUNT... | |
| William Ferguson Beatson Laurie - Anglo-Burmese War, 2nd, 1852 - 1853 - 334 pages
...IQS. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every...sunniest qualities of the English poets." — Atlas. T. WIT AND HUMOUR. 5,. cloth. "A book at once exhilarating and suggestive." — Athenteum. VI. A JAR... | |
| William Swainson - Auckland (N.Z.) - 1853 - 204 pages
...parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury j in any and every possible shape a charming companion."...the English poets." — Atlas. V. WIT AND HUMOUR. 5s. cloth. " A book at once exhilarating and suggestive." — Athenaeum. VI. A JAR OF HONEY FROM MOUNT... | |
| Thomas Doubleday - Food - 1853 - 458 pages
...10s. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a half-hour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury; in any and every...Westminster Review. Iv. IMAGINATION AND FANCY. 5*. doth. "The very essence of the sunniest qualities of the English poets." — Atlas. v. WIT AND HUMOUR.... | |
| William Ferguson Beatson Laurie - Anglo-Burmese War, 2nd, 1852 - 1853 - 366 pages
...icw. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every...— Westminster Review. IV. IMAGINATION AND FANCY. 5s. cloth. " The very essence of the sunniest qualities of the English poets." — Atlas. V. WIT AND... | |
| William Makepeace Thackeray - English literature - 1853 - 360 pages
...los. cloth. " A book for a parlour-window, for a summer's eve, for a warm fireside, for a halfhour's leisure, for a whole day's luxury ; in any and every possible shape a charming companion." — Watminaer Review. IV. IMAGINATION AND FANCY. 5,. cloth. " The very essence of the sunniest qualities... | |
| |