Doll Trkk*e</ M"< Gardner. Mrs. Hwlewe.
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il nic fit ions, post-paid, are requested to be i, and C. Chappie, 59, Pall-Mall.No, XIV.—PIUC& OtOS SHILLING,Of a Work, to appear in numbers Montlily, calledFLOWERS OF LITERATURE; encyclopedia of anecdote By WILLIAM OXBERRY, Comedian. " An Olio, " Compiled from quarto and from folio ;11 From pamphlet, newspaper, and book. The object of this Work is to collect, in a narronass, and at a moderate expense, (he lighter and more en-tertaining parts of literature. Every reader, who has theexperience or a lew years only, must recollect how much of' is time lias been wasted in unprofitable toil when he onlyMight amusement, in wailing through volumes lo be at lastrewarded by a solitary gem, the value of which has beendiminished to nothing by the labour of the acquisition. Theessence of most volumes might be contained in a nut shell,while the huge, cap thai covers them might make an helmetfor Goliah. To a hard-headed phlegmatic reader all thais nothing ; he travels you through a quarto, much as ahack horse goes over his beaten road ! but to the light-hearted, volatile reader, with whom literature is a luxury,who sips up a volume as he sips up hia coffee, and i.« obligedearefully to double down the resting leaf, that he may besure not lo read the same page twice over, all this is a most•erious grievance; lo him therefore, we venture to say,that the FZotatrt >•/' Ltieratun will prove a pleasant com-panion, and one whose monthly visitation will be as wel-come to him as if it brought May-day along with it. Hewill find in it what he most desires, amusement without toil,and will travel over the world of literature, as the reader ofCooke's Voyages makes u girdle round ihe ijlobe whilesitting in hia elbow chair. That our little volume is neithere nor learned, is precisely its greatest merit. Thereare hours in which even gravity \a g\iiAv.c>tte\ , i'5.,a.TAu\>\Vc*5>reloads only to fill up such horns, wWv\*>e\«vi'«v">a."'*is temper jg clouded, and thehcai -wou\ft »&"* ^ ^'/"encountering a solid qviatUi. 'N^Vq.W*'*-""" nn.u mese are saving times, — he will have reason to rejoice aithe cheapness of this publication, which makes as moderatea demand on his purse as it does upon his patience. Th(work will appear in monthly numbers, at the moderate pria«>f One Shilling each, and six of such numbers will form jvolume, to be ornamented with an elegant Engraving, illustrative of its most interesting subject. A new type is casexpressly for this work, which in form will be a fac-simile o0,rberry\s New English Drama; it is calculated that eaclNumber will contain nearly Seventy Pages, closely printecupon (ine paper, hot pressed. The Original articles will b«written by gentlemen of acknowledged literary talent; theAnecdotes will be collected from the wide circle of EnglishFrench, and Italian literature; and the Editor presumes t(hope that the work will in no instance belie the promise!held out to the public in the prospectus. The Sixth Number, which completes the First Volumecontains a beautiful engraving of Mr. Kean, and the first panof his Memoirs, which are concluded in the Second Vo-lume. In this biography will be found the only authenticaccount of the Wolfe Club and the dispute with Mr. Bucke. The Second Volume is embellished with a Portrait of Ed-ward Lord Herbert of Cherburv. •*• • In the Press, and speedily will be Published, by Sim plan and Marshall, Stationers'* -court, Ludgate-street ; ana may be had of all Booksellers, a New Edition, being the Fifth* embellished with a Portrait of the Author, of \ An APOLOGY for the LIFE of COLLEY GIBBER mComediais ; containing an Historical View of the Stage in his vwn time, Biographical Sketches, and man^ t\mov\?. kwit lotes of the great Actors with whom Yve w^ coww^cXsy bitten 6y Himself, and now enlarged w\\ta mote vWxvT ndred Explanatory Notes, a Preface, and an\w&^,
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