Part 42 (1/2)
[13] Physical Education and the Preservation of Health, by John C.
Warren.
[14] Physiological and Moral Management of Infancy, by Andrew Combe, M.
D.
[15] Narrative of the Life of Frederick Dougla.s.s, an American Slave, written by himself.
[16] Philip van Artevelde, A Dramatic Romance, by Henry Taylor.
[17] For a translation by my sister of this Drama, see Part III. of her ”Art, Literature, and the Drama,” where it is now, for the first time, published, simultaneously with the appearance of this volume.--ED.
[18] The Poetical Works of Percy Bysche Sh.e.l.ley. First American edition (complete.) With a Biographical and Critical Notice, by G. G. Foster.
[19] Festus: A Poem, by Philip James Bailey. First American edition, Boston.
[20] Balzac, Eugene Sue, De Vigny.
[21] Etherology, or the Philosophy of Mesmerism and Phrenology: Including a New Philosophy of Sleep and of Consciousness, with a Review of the Pretensions of Neurology and Phreno-Magnetism. By J. Stanley Grimes.
[22] A German newspaper.
[23] Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, by Thomas Carlyle.
[24] I conclude the poor boy Oliver has already fallen in these wars; none of us knows where, though his father well knew.
[25] Sir Philip Warwick's Memoirs, (London, 1701,) p. 249.
[26] Essays, Second Series, by Ralph Waldo Emerson.
[27] A Defence of Capital Punishment, and an Essay on the Ground and Reason of Punishment, with Special Reference to the Penalty of Death New York, 1846.
[28] [In refusing to repeal what are technically and significantly termed her ”Black Laws,” relating to the settlement of colored men, and their rights within that state.--ED.]
[29] John Quincy Adams.
[30] For her treatment of a sister republic in our late war with Mexico.
[31] Miss Delia Webster.
[32] Hon. Samuel h.o.a.r, sent to Charleston, S. C., to test in the courts her laws, and driven thence with his daughter by a mob.