Serapeum, Volume 33

Front Cover
T.O. Weigel, 1852 - Bibliography
 

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Page 50 - The Oration of Hyperides against Demosthenes, respecting the Treasure of Harpalus. The Fragments of the Greek Text, now first Edited from the Facsimile of the MS. discovered at Egyptian Thebes in 1847 ; together with other Fragments of the same Oration cited in Ancient Writers. With a Preliminary Dissertation and Notes, and a Facsimile of a portion of the MS.
Page 28 - OF NORTH CAROLINA, From 1584 to 1851. Compiled from Original Records, Official Documents, and Traditional Statements; with Biographical Sketches of her Distinguished Statesmen, Jurists, Lawyers, Soldiers, Divines, &c.
Page 378 - Manual of Technical Analysis ; a Guide for the Testing and Valuation of the various Natural and Artificial Substances employed in the Arts and Domestic Economy, founded on the work of Dr.
Page 81 - Regesta Historiae Westfaliae. Accedit codex diplomaticus. Die Quellen der Geschichte Westfalens, in chronologisch geordneten Nachweisungen und Auszügen, begleitet von einem Urkundenbuche.
Page 90 - To the tourist this work will prove invaluable. It is the most complete and interesting portraiture of Spain that has ever come under our notice.
Page 75 - ... instruction. The cost of apparatus for carrying on the work is very small. The rapidity of execution is such, that one man could produce at least 25 octavo pages a day, all finished and ready for use. The plates give a beautiful impression. They seem as durable as common...
Page 132 - Denkmäler aus Ägypten u. Äthiopien nach den Zeichnungen der v. Sr. M. dem Könige v. Preussen Friedrich Wilhelm IV. nach diesen Ländern gesendeten u. in den J. 1842 — 1845 ausgeführten Wissenschaft!.
Page 159 - DOUBLEDAY AND HEWITSON'S BUTTERFLIES. - THE GENERA of DIURNAL LEPIDOPTERA ; comprising their Generic Characters - a Notice of tlie Habits and Transformations— and a Catalogue of the Species of each Genus.
Page 86 - ... authorship, ignorant of what others have written, and adding to the mass of books without adding to the sum of knowledge ; how much by giving confidence to the true and heroic student, who fears no labor so that it bring him to the commanding height at which he aims — the summit of learning in the branch to which he devotes himself; how much such a work would, in these and other ways, promote the great object we have in view, is well deserving the attention of every thoughtful mind.
Page 77 - ... the old matter, which would be very inconsiderable. But there would be still further gains. It would not be thought necessary to print so large editions if the work could be reproduced at a trifling expense. The rearrangement, too, passes from the hands of the librarian to those of the printer; and the proof reading has been done, once for all.

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