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No. XI.

Pages

Specimen of Mr Macpherson's juvenile poetry,....................... 157 1. Extract from a poem on death,...........

2. Extract from canto 4........

ib.

..... 158

No. XII.

Specimen of the original of Carrickthura,................ 162

No. XIII.

Captain A. Morrison's answer to queries,................ 175 General observations by ditto,...........

177

No. XIV.

Original passages of Gaul,....

....... 179

3. Original of Ossian's address to the sun in Carthon,

from the same,...........

..... 185

4. Original of Ossian's address to the sun in Carrick

thura, from the same,..........

... 187

No. XV.

Passages of ancient Gaelic poems in the possession of the

Committee,.............

Netes,.........

...... 189

..... 260

No. XVI.

1. Affidavit of Archibald Fletcher,.......

2. Account of Duncan Kennedy,

No. XVII.

Declaration of Lauchlan Macvurich,.................

Translation of ditto,........

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No. XVIII.

Letter from Lord Bannatyne to Henry Mackenzie, Esq. 280

No. XIX.

Account of ancient MSS. now in the possession of the
Highland Society,......

..... 285

No. XX.

Extract of a poem in Kennedy's collection, called Bas Oisiain, representing the manners of Fingal's heroes,... 313

No. XXI.

Comparison of poems, which appear under the same title in Miss Brooke's collection and Mr Kennedy's,... 319

No, XXII.

Page

The Death of Carril, a Gaelic poem, from Kennedy's Collection, with his argument prefixed,.................. 335

ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO. EDINBURGH,

AND

LONGMAN, HURST, REES & ORME, LONDON.

1. THE POEMS OF OSSIAN, containing the Poetical Works of JAMES MACPHERSON, Esq. in Prose and Verse, with Notes and Illustrations. By MALCOLM LAING, Esq. 2 vols. 8vo.

2. PRIZE ESSAYS AND TRANSACTIONS OF THE HIGHLAND SOCIETY OF SCOTLAND.

8vo. 16s. boards.

N. B. Volume II. may be had separately.

2 vols.

3. THE HISTORY OF SCOTLAND, from the Union of the Crowns on the Accession of James VI. to the throne of England, to the Union of the Kingdoms in the reign of Queen Anne. With a Historical and Critical Dissertation on the supposed authenticity of Ossian's poems. Second Edition, corrected. To which is prefixed, a Dissertation on the Participation of Mary, Queen of Scots, in the Murder of Darnley. By MALCOLM LAING, Esq. 4 vols.

8vo. 11. 16s. boards.

4. OBSERVATIONS ON THE PRESENT STATE OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND, with a View of the Causes and Probable Consequences of Emigration. By the Earl of Selkirk. 8vo.

5. THE HISTORY OF THE ORKNEY ISLANDS: In which is comprehended, An Account of their Present as well as their Ancient State; together with the Advantages they possess for several Branches of Industry, and the means by which they may be improved. Illustrated with an accurate and extensive Map of the whole Islands, and with Plates of some of the most interesting objects they contain. By the Reverend GEORGE BARRY, D. D. minister of Shapinshay. 4to. boards, 11. 11s. 6d.

6. THE FARMERS MAGAZINE, a Periodical Work, exclusively devoted to Agriculture and Rural Affairs, for 1800, 1801, 1802, 1803, & 1804. 5 vols. 21.

3s. 6d. boards. (Published Quarterly.) Edinburgh: Printed for ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & Co. Edinburgh; and sold by LONGMAN, HURST, REES & ORME, London.

The design of the Farmers Magazine is to collect and disseminate ingenious Theories, important and well au thenticated Facts, and accurate Experiments, which relate to the different branches of Rural Economy. It must be well known to every person in the least acquainted with the different parts of the United Kingdom, that discoveries and improvements, particularly in Agriculture, travel very slowly. To remedy this, the Farmers Magazine was first projected; and the Proprietors are happy to say, that, if they may judge from the almost unprecedented sale of more than 4000 copies of each Number, the object of this publication is in a great degree answered. The work, in its plan and arrangement, is well calculated for the end. the Proprietors had in view; it consists of-1. Miscellaneous Communications, chiefly of the most important prac tical nature-2. The Review of Agricultural Publications. -3. Agricultural Intelligence from almost every district in Scotland, and from several in England. The utility and importance of this branch must be evident to every practical Farmer, who, at the moderate price of Two Shillings a quarter, may learn the state of the crops, and the price of grain, cattle, &c. in the different parts of the kingdom, besides being enabled to compare his own practice with that in other districts, and thus to correct what is improper or deficient.

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