for Empire and for the pride of a great Confederacy; and they have paid the penalty, first, in the poison which the domination of the slave-owner has spread through their political and social system, and, secondly, in this dreadful and disastrous war. Cambridge ; Stereotyped and Printed by Welch, Bigelow, & Co. THE GOLDEN TREASURY SERIES. Mow ready, uniform in style with The Golden Treasury and The Children's Garland, THE BOOK OF PRAISE, from the best English Hymnwriters. Selected and Arranged by RoundELL PALMER. 16mo. Wellum Cloth. Also, New Editions of THE GOLDEN TREASURY of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language. Selected and Arranged with Notes by FRANCIS TURNER PALGRAVE, Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. 16mo. Green Wellum. Price, $1.25. THE CHILDREN'S GARLAND, from the best Poets. Selected and Arranged by CovenTRY PATMORE. 16mo. Red Vellum, Wignette Title engraved by Marsh. Price, $1.25. Nearly Ready, THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS from this World to that which is to Come, by John BUNYAN. With Illustrations by Stothard. An Elegant Edition. 16mo. Wellum Cloth. Also, DREAM CHILDREN, by the Author of “Seven Little People and their Friends.” Copies of the above sent by mail on receipt of price. SEVER AND FRANCIS, Publishers, THE GREAT WORK ON AMERICAN INSTITUTIONs. DE TO C Q U E VILLE'S DEMO CRACY IN AMERICA. Translated by HENRY REEVE, Esq. Edited, with Notes, the This long famous work, read by tens of thousands in the original French, and by millions in the English translation, is here presented to the American public in a most elegant and substantial form. It is a book which should be generally studied in this country, for no writer has more thoroughly comprehended the great principles on which our government is founded than De Tocqueville, and this, his great work, is now universally recognized as the soundest and ablest treatise on our institutions. * This Edition is especially valuable, inasmuch as the old translation, which was in many respects very faulty, has been carefully revised and in part rewritten, and the additions made to the recent Paris editions are here first translated. “In the light of the present crisis, some of the opinions advanced by De Tocqueville upon the dangers which threaten the Union seem prophetic. These views were received with very general dissent when they were first published, but time has shown that they were as philosophic as those which were more readily accepted. No chapter in the work will now be read with more interest than that upon the present and probable future condition of the three races which inhabit the territory of the United States.” Copies mailed on receipt of the price. SEVER AND FRANCIS, Publishers, |