The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 12, No. 340, Supplementary Number (1828) by Various
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page 2 of 54 (03%)
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of song and tale in their gay attire of silken sheen and burnished
gold--till their splendour has fairly put out the light of our _sinumbra_, and the drabs, blues, and yellows of sober, business-like quartos and octavos. Seven out of nine of these elegant little books are in "watered" silk bindings; and an ingenious lady-friend has favoured us with the calculation that the silk used in covering the presumed number sold (70,000) would extend five miles, or from Hyde Park Corner to Turnham Green. Brilliant as may be their exteriors, their contents are, as Miss Jane Porter says of her heroines, "transcendently beautiful." But of these we shall present our readers with some exquisite specimens. Our only trouble in this task is the _embarras du richesses_ with which we are surrounded; otherwise it is to us an exhaustless source of delight, especially when we consider the "gentle feelings and affections" which this annual distribution will cherish, and the innumerable intertwinings of hands and hearts which this shower of _bon-bons_ will produce; and such warm friends are we to this social scheme, that our presentation copies are already in the fair hands whither we had destined them. We begin with the parent-stock, The Forget-Me-Not. _Edited by Frederic Shoberl_, Esq. The present volume, in its graphic and literary attractions is decidedly superior to that of last year, an improvement which makes us credit what |
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