sense. We hope our young readers will in their turn enjoy this sort of pleasure, and that their parents and preceptors will also in their turn enjoy the satisfaction we have felt in seeing this gradual, but certain progress of the mind, and in perceiving that the taste for literature once form ed, must be for life a source of continual, independent, unreproved plea sure. IN POETRY EXPLAINED FOR THE USE OF YOUNG PEOPLE. PAGE 39, "And every shepherd tells his tale There is an error in the explanation of this passage: the word tale here means the tally, or the account of the flock which each shepherd numbers or tells in the morning, and not a love tale. There is another error in explaining the following lines, my due feet never fail, "Let "To walk the studious cloisters pale." Page 80-Pale is here explained to mean dim, but this is an error.Pale here is a substantive, not an adjective. It means the pale or inclosure of the cloister. Correct List of Mr. and Miss Edgeworth's Works. RATIONAL PRIMER, by Mr. Edgeworth. EARLY LESSONS FOR CHILDREN, in 2 vols. half-bound, 5s. CONTINUATION OF DITTO, in 2 vols. halfbound, 6s. PARENT'S ASSISTANT; or, Stories for Children, 6 vols. 12s. POETRY EXPLAINED for the use of Young People. By Mr. Edgeworth, 3s. bound. ESSAYS ON PRACTICAL EDUCATION, by Mr. and Miss Edgeworth, 2 vols. 11. Is. PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION, by Mr. Edge worth, 12s. LETTERS EOR LATERARY LADIES, 4s. CASTLE RACKRENT, 4s. t Books published by R. Hunter. ESSAY ON BULLS, by Mr. and Miss Edgeworth, 5s. MORAL TALES, 3 vols. 10s. 6d. BELINDA, 3 vols. 15s. LEONORA. 2 vols. 10s. THE MODERN GRISELDA. 4s, POPULAR TALES, 3 vols. 12s. TALES OF 11. 19s. FASHIONABLE LIFE, 6 vols. PATRONAGE, 4 vols. 11. 8s. ESSAY ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF ROADS AND CARRIAGES, by Mr. Edgeworth, 14s, PAMPHLETS. LETTER TO LORD CHARLEMONT ON THE TELEGRAPH, by Mr. Edgeworth. MR. EDGEWORTH'S SPEECHES IN PARLIA MENT. |