L of the old fashioned (and not a bit the worse on that account) precepts of the same period; such as we see in the various versions of the "De Moribus Juvenum," of which the "_Contenance de la
Table,"_ in the French language, is probably the most
popular. It is executed
throughout in the same small and smudged gothic character;

and, as I conceive; can have few purchasers. The printers

of Caen must

not be dismissed without respectful mention of the typographical talents of LE ROY;
who ranks after Poisson. Let both these be considered as the Bulmer and Bensley of the place.

But among these venders