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20
ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK’S PUBLICATIONS.
MISCELLANEOUS WORKS—(continued),
Scott—Memoir of David Scott, E.S.A.
Containing his Journal in Italy, Notes on Art, and other Papers. By William B. Scott. With
seven Engravings, 8vo, 10s. 6d., cloth.
Scrymgeour—Poetry and Poets of Britain.
From Chaucer to Tennyson; with Biographical Sketches, and a rapid View of the Characteristic
. Attributes of each. Preceded by an Introductory Essay on the Origin and Progress of English
Poetical Literature. By Daniel Sckymgeoue. Post 8vo, 6s., cloth; 6d. 6d., cloth, gilt edges.
Smith—Wealth of Nations.
An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. By Adam Smith, LL.D.
With the Life of the Author, an Introductory Discourse, Notes, and Supplemental Dissertations,
by J. R. JPCulloch, Esq. Fourth Edition, corrected throughout, and greatly enlarged. With
two Portraits. 8vo, 16s., cloth.
Thomson—Brewing and Distillation.
By Thomas Thomson, M.D., F.R.S. London and Edinburgh, Professor of Chemistry in the
University of Glasgow. With Practical Instructions for Brewing Porter and Ales according to
the English and Scottish Methods. By William Stewart. With Engravings. Post 8vo,
6s., cloth.
Tytler—History of Scotland.
By Patrick Fraser Tytler, Esq. Third Edition, Seven Volumes demy 8vo, £2,12s. 6d. cloth.
THE SAME.—A Cheap Stereotyped Edition, in nine vols. post 8vo, cloth, £2, 5s.
“ The Standard History of Scotland.”—Quarterly Review.
Wilson—Voyage round the Coasts of Scotland and the Isles.
By James Wilson, F.R.S.E., M.W.S., &c. With Twenty Etchings on Steel by Charles H.
Wilson, A.R.S.A., from Sketches during the Voyage by Sir Thomas Dick Lauder, Bart.; and
numerous Wood Engravings from the same Sketches, drawn by Montague Stanley, Prior.
and Sargent. Two volumes, post 8vo, 10s. 6d., cloth.
“ Written in a flowing and animated style Those who wish to know Scotland in its Coasts
and Islands, will derive from this work both instruction and pleasure ; those who desire to know the value of their
country and its institutions, as shewn even in the most inaccessible parts of its remotest provinces, will ponder over
its contents; and the general reader, who seeks only for that rational amusement which the personal narrative of a
lively and intelligent tourist never fails to yield, will find it in these volumes.”—Edinburgh Review.
EDINBURGH: ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK.

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