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Emperfect : - pp. 471, 472, 557, 558 au toin

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Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1860, by
JOHN A. GRAY,

In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New-York.

JOHN A. GRAY,
PRINTER,

16 & 18 Jacob Street, New-York.

511-86

1-20

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Lines,...... 52, 80, 176, 277, 889, 897, 486, 511, 526
LITERARY NOTICES: French Classics: in Six

By

Volumes, 81; Modern Philology.
BENJAMIN W. DWIGHT, 83; Wayside
Glimpses: North and South. By LILIAN
FOSTER, 84; The History of Herodotus,
Translated and Copiously Annotated, 84;
The Professor at the Breakfast-Table, 212;
Appleton's New American Cyclopædia,
213; Self-Help: Character and Conduct,'
214; History of the Progress of Educa-
tion, 214; The Rivals: A Tale of the
Times of Burr and Hamilton, 318; Poems
by Sydney Dobell, 319; The Puritans:
Church, Court, and Parliament of Eng-
land, 820; Foot-Falls on the Boundary of
Another World, 821; New Miscellanies:
by CHARLES KINGSLEY, 822; Smith and
Martin's Book-Keeping, 823; Treason of
Major-General Lee. By GEORGE H. MOOre,
422; The Doomed Chief, 428; Poems by
Henry Harbaugh, 425; Life and Corre-
spond ence of Thomas Arnold, D.D., 426;
Life in Spain: Past and Present. By
WALTER THORNBURY, 427; Life and Times
of General Sam Dale, 428; Edgar A. Poe
and his Critics. By SARAH H. WHITMAN,
429; Dr. Oldham at Greystones, and his
Talk there, 528; Harper's Greek and
Latin Texts, 584; Undertow of Trade-
Wind Surf. By GEO. H. CLARK, 585;
The Satires of Juvenal and Persius, 587;
Walter Ashwood: a Love-Story.
PAUL SIOGVOLK, 539; Extemporaneous
Discourses by Dr. Chapin, 589; Kit Kel-
vin's Kernels, 540; Leonilda: a Romance
of the Sixteenth Century, 633; Tylney
Hall. By THOMAS HOOD, 634; A Diction-
ary of the English Language. By JOSEPH
E. WORCESTER, LL.D., 636; The Mill on
the Floss, 687; Stories of Inventors and
Discoverers in Science and the Useful
Arts, 689; The Complete Works of Charles
Dickens, 689; The North-American Re-
view for the April Quarter, 640.-Brief
Notices of New Publications, 349, 452.

By

ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1860.

In order to increase the already large circulation of the KNICKERBOCKER, we publish this month a splendid line engraving of FRITH'S picture of Merry-Making in the Olden Time,' which we shall present exclusively to the $3 subscribers to the Magazine for 1860, whether old or new. The subject represents the pastimes of our ancestors, and is eminently of a genial, domestic character. The plate, engraved in England at an expense of $2000, is entirely new, measures twenty-five by nineteen and a half inches in size, contains thirty-nine figures, and is beyond comparison the finest work of the kind ever offered as a premium in this country. The engravings are richly worth $3 a piece, and will be sent to our subscribers for 1860 in the exact numerical order in which their $3 subscriptions are received at the office of publication, the first impressions always being the best. As we give $6 in return for $3, our mail subscribers must inclose twelve cents extra in stamps, to pre-pay postage on the engraving, which will be sent them in strong paste-board tubes.

Both the Engraving (free of postage) and the KNICKERBOCKER for 1860 will be sent GRATIS to any one who will make up a club of five $3 subscribers, ($15.60.) Two copies of each, worth $12, will be sent gratis for a club of eight subscribers, ($25.) A copy of 'MerryMaking in the Olden Time' will be sent, free of postage, to any one desiring to act as agent for the KNICKERBOCKER, on the receipt of $1.12, which amount may be deducted from his remittance for subscribers. We refer to the following description of the engraving, kindly furnished for our use by WILLIAM CULLEN Bryant, Esq. :

"THE engraving of FRITH's picture of Merry-Making in the Olden Time, represents the humors of an English holiday in the country in those good old times when the men wore cocked-hats and knee-breeches, and the women stays and hoops—a costume not essentially differing from the corset and crinoline of the present day. Almost in the centre of the picture and a little in the back-ground is a country dance on the green, with a hard-featured fiddler perched on a high seat, and another musician in a tie-wig standing by him, playing with all their might. On the right, two bouncing girls are gaily pulling toward the dance a gray-haired man, who seems vainly to remonstrate that his dancing days are over,' while a waggish little chit pushes him forward from behind, greatly to the amusement of his spouse, who is still sitting at the tea-table, from which he has been dragged. On the left, under a magnificent spreading oak, sit the 'squire and his wife, whom a countryman with his hat off is respectfully inviting to take part in the dance. To the left of the 'squire is a young couple on the grass, to whom a gipsy with an infant on her shoulder is telling their fortune. Over the shoulders of this couple is seen a groud engaged in quoit-playing, and back of the whole is a landscape of gentle slopes and copses. The picture has the expression of gaiety throughout, and the engraving is splendidly executed. It is fresh from the burin of HOLL, not having yet been published in England.'

For Prospectus, Clubs, etc., see Third Page.

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