Murray published
The Swiss Emigrants, a tale (anon.), in 1804; two philosophical treatises (
The Morality of Fiction, 1805, and
Enquiries respecting the Character of Nations, 1808); and another romance,
Corasmin, or the Minister, in 1814. A supplement was published in 1843. The work contained 82 maps and over a thousand woodcuts. It was well received, and an American edition (1843) in three volumes was edited by
Thomas Gamaliel Bradford. After his death were published: •
The African Continent: a Narrative of Discovery and Invention … with an Account of recent exploring expeditions by J. M. Wilson, 1853. • ''Pictorial History of the United States of America to the close of Pres. Taylor's Admin. … with Additions and Corrections by H. C. Watson'', illustrated, Boston, Massachusetts, 1861.
Other works To the
Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Murray contributed, among other papers, one, in 1818,
On the Ancient Geography of Central and Eastern Asia, with Illustrations derived from Recent Discoveries in the North of India. In 1817 he enlarged and completed
John Leyden's
Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa.’ Similar works by him on Asia (3 vols. Edinburgh, 1820) and North America (London, 1829) followed. Murray also contributed to the press, and in the
Edinburgh Cabinet Library there appeared compilations by him on the history or geography of: the
Polar Seas (1830),
British India (1832),
China (1836),
British America (1839),
Africa (1830), and
The United States (1844). Some of these volumes had contributions on natural history, by Robert Jameson, Thomas Stewart Traill,
James Nicol, and others. ==Notes==