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task which he had proposed to himself, namely, that of transforming William Penn "from a myth into a man." His vindication of this great man from what he designates "The Macaulay Charges" would not, however, have lost one iota of its efficiency, had it been couched in somewhat more measured terms. Mr. Murray announces _The Grenville Papers; being the Private Correspondence of Richard Grenville Earl Temple, his brother George Grenville, their Friends and Contemporaries_, as in the press. It will contain some letters from Junius, and Mr. Grenville's Diary, particularly during his premiership, from 1763 to 1765. The fifth and sixth volumes of Lord Mahon's _History of England from the Peace of Utrecht_ are also at press. Lady Theresa Lewis is nearly ready with a work which cannot but be of great interest. It is entitled _Lives of the Friends and Contemporaries of Lord Chancellor Clarendon, illustrative of Portraits in his Gallery; with an Account of the Origin of the Collection; and a descriptive Catalogue of the Pictures_. It will form two volumes, and be accompanied by illustrative portraits. Mr. Colburn announces a new library edition of Miss Strickland's _Lives of the Queens of England_. Although revised and considerably augmented by new materials which have been placed at Miss Strickland's disposal since the appearance of the earlier impressions of her book, this edition is to be comprised in eight monthly volumes. BOOKS RECEIVED.--_The Buried City of the East: Nineveh._ A popular view of the discovery of the remains of the great city, compiled principally from Botta, and illustrated with numerous woodcuts, affords information enough, perhaps, for those who may be unable to consult the stirring narrative of Layard himself, but must send to his pages a great number of readers, in whom it can only serve to waken a lively interest in this great triumph of individual perseverance.--_The Iliad of Homer, literally translated, with explanatory Notes_, by T. A. Buckley, B.A., is the new volume of Bohn's _Classical Library_; and the Editor expresses his hopes "that it will be found to convey, more accurately than any which has preceded it, the words and thoughts of the original." The work has obviously been executed with great care; and the notes, though brief, are to the point. CATALOGUES RECEIVED.--John Miller's (43. Chandos Street) Catalogue No. XXI. of Books Old and New; J. Russell Smith's (4. Old Compton Street)
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