SUCCESSORS TO J. HARRIS. NOVEL AND ELEGANT CIFT. THE LADY'S ALBUM OF FANCY WORK FOR 1850, Consisting of Novel, Elegant, and Usefui Patterns in Knitting, Netting, Crochet, and Embroidery, printed in colours. Bound in a beautiful cover. Post 4to. price 5s. gilt edges. HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN. THE DREAM OF LITTLE TUK, AND OTHER TALES, by H. C. ANDERSEN. Translated and dedi- cated to the Author by CHARLES BonER. Illustrated by Count Pocct. Feap. 8vo. price 3s 6d. plain, 4s. coloured.-' “¢ Full of charming passages of prose, poetry, and such tiny dramatic scenes, as will make the pulses of young readers throb with delight.’’—Aé/as. TALES FROM DENMARK, by Hans CurisTIAN ANDERSEN. Translated by CHARLES Bonzr. With Fifty Illustrations by Count Pocci. Small 4to. price 6s. plain ; 7s. 6d. coloured. ‘‘ We prophesy for these tales an immortality in the nursery.”’—Blackwood 8 Magazine. ‘A charming volume of Fairy Tales, full of invention and fancy, and yet pointed with excellent morals.”—Literary Gazette. VISITS TO BEECHWOOD FARM; or, CountRY PLEASURES, AND HINTS FOR HAPPINESS AD- DRESSED TO THE YounG. By CATHARINE M. A. CouPER. Illustrations by ABSOLON. Small 4to. 3s.6d.plain; 4s. 6d.coloured. ‘The work is well calculated to impress upon the minds of the young, the superiority of simple and natural pleasures over those which are artificial.” — Englishwoman’s Magazine. MARIN DE LA VOYE’S ELEMENTARY FRENCH WORKS. LES JEUNES NARRATEURS; ou, Petits Contes Moravux. With A Key to the difficult words and phrases. Frontispiece. 18mo. Price 2s. cloth. “The stories are thoroughly French in spirit as well as in style; this is bet- ter than giving children Anglicised French.” —Douglas Jerrold. THE PICTORIAL FRENCH GRAMMAR, FOR THE Use or CuitprENn. With Eighty Engravings. Royal 16mo., price 2s. in illuminated cloth. _ “The publication has greater than mechanical merit; it contains the prin- cipal elements of the French language, exhibited in a plain and expressive manner.”—