NEW PUBLICATION.
Ready September 1.
SPEECHES, LECTURES,
AND
LETTERS:
BY
WENDELL PHILLIPS.
Fourth Edition
In One Vol., crown octavo, pp. 570; printed on clear new type, and the best tinted linen paper; bound in fine English green or maroon vellum-cloth; with gilt tops, and illuminated title; and illustrated with an excellent portrait of Mr. Phillips, on steel, by H. Wright Smith, of Boston.
PRICE $2,50.
The first three editions of this work were sold as rapidly as they could be bound, and the demand continues unabated.
In his Prospectus, the Publisher guaranteed to produce this work in the best style of Boston manufacture; and that he amply redeemed this pledge, the universal testimony of the subscribers, the Agents, and the Trade attest. It was announced at $2, and intended to be of 500 pages. But it is considerably larger, and more expensively gotten up than was originally designed; and hence, and in order, by the last adornments, to make it the very finest Book in the Boston market, its price has been necessarily increased to $2.50.
Due notice having been given to all Agents,—all their subscribers having been supplied at the price first announced,—no injustice is done to any party by this increase of charge.
By mutual agreement, also, between the Publisher and his Agents, he is now at liberty to offer the Book to the Trade, and will be ready to supply cash orders at the shortest notice.
The following is a table of the
CONTENTS OF THE VOLUME:
I. Publisher's Advertisement, containing a Letter from Mr. Phillips.
II. The Murder of Lovejoy. Mr. Phillips' first Speech in Boston, delivered December 8, 1837, which at once established his fame as one of the ablest of living orators.
III. Woman's Rights. Speech at Worcester, October 15, 1851, with the Resolutions, embodying the whole philosophy of the Woman's Rights Movement, prepared and presented by Mr. Phillips.
IV. Public Opinion. Delivered January 28, 1852.
V. Surrender of Sims. January 30, 1852.
VI. Sims' Anniversary. April 12, 1852.
VII. Philosophy of the Abolition Movement. January 27, 1853.
VIII. Removal of Judge Loring. February 20, 1855.
IX. The Boston Mob. October 21, 1855.
X. The Pilgrims. December 21, 1855.
XI. Letter to Judge Shaw and President Walker. August 1, 1859.
XII. Idols. October 4, 1859.
XIII. Harper's Ferry. November 1, 1859.
XIV. Burial of John Brown. Delivered at the Grave of the Martyr, December 8, 1859.
XV. Lincoln's Election. November 7, 1860.
XVI. Mobs and Education. December 21, 1860.
XVII. Disunion. January 20, 1861.
XVIII. Progress. February 17, 1861.
XIX. Under the Flag. April 21, 1861.
XX. The War for the Union. December, 1861.
XXI. The Cabinet. August 1, 1862.
XXII. Letter to the New York Tribune. August 16, 1862.
XXIII. Toussaint L'Ouverture. December, 1861.
XXIV. A Metropolitan Police. April 25, 1863.
XXV. The State of the Country. May 11, 1863.
Copies will be sent by mail on receipt of the retail price.
JAMES REDPATH, Publisher,
221 Washington Street. Boston.