SECTION I.

Bedford Street, Covent Garden, London.April, 1871.Macmillan & Co.’s General Catalogueof Works in the Departments of History, Biography, Travels, Poetry, and Belles Lettres. With some short Account or Critical Notice concerning each Book.SECTION I.HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, and TRAVELS.Baker (Sir Samuel W.).—THE NILE TRIBUTARIES OF ABYSSINIA, and the Sword Hunters of the Hamran Arabs. BySir Samuel W. Baker, M.A., F.R.G.S. With Maps and Illustrations. Fourth and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.Sir Samuel Baker here describes twelve months’ exploration, during which he examined the rivers that are tributary to the Nile from Abyssinia, including the Atbara, Settite, Royan, Salaam, Angrab, Rahad, Dinder, and the Blue Nile. The interest attached to these portions of Africa differs entirely from that of the White Nile regions, as the whole of Upper Egypt and Abyssinia is capable of development, and is inhabited by races having some degree of civilization; while Central Africa is peopled by a race of savages, whose future is more problematical.THE ALBERT N’YANZA Great Basin of the Nile, and Exploration of the Nile Sources. New and Cheaper Edition, with Portraits, Maps, and Illustrations. Two vols. crown 8vo. 16s.“Bruce won the source of the Blue Nile; Speke and Grant won the Victoria source of the great White Nile; and I have been permitted tosucceed in completing the Nile Sources by the discovery of the great reservoir of the equatorial waters, the Albert N’yanza, from which the river issues as the entire White Nile.”—Preface.NEW AND CHEAP EDITION OF THE ALBERT N’YANZA.1 vol. crown 8vo. With Maps and Illustrations. 7s.6d.Barker (Lady).—STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND. ByLady Barker. Second and Cheaper Edition. Globe 8vo. 3s.6d.“These letters are the exact account of a lady’s experience of the brighter and less practical side of colonization. They record the expeditions, adventures, and emergencies diversifying the daily life of the wife of a New Zealand sheep-farmer; and, as each was written while the novelty and excitement of the scenes it describes were fresh upon her, they may succeed in giving here in England an adequate impression of the delight and freedom of an existence so far removed from our own highly-wrought civilization.”—Preface.“We have never read a more truthful or a pleasanter little book.”Athenæum.Baxter (R. Dudley, M.A.).—THE TAXATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. ByR. Dudley Baxter, M.A. 8vo. cloth, 4s.6d.The First Part of this work, originally read before the Statistical Society of London, deals with the Amount of Taxation; the Second Part, which now constitutes the main portion of the work, is almost entirely new, and embraces the important questions of Rating, of the relative Taxation of Land, Personalty, and Industry, and of the direct effect of Taxes upon Prices. The author trusts that the body of facts here collected may be of permanent value as a record of the past progress and present condition of the population of the United Kingdom, independently of the transitory circumstances of its present Taxation.NATIONAL INCOME. With Coloured Diagrams. 8vo. 3s.6d.PartI.—Classification of the Population, Upper, Middle, and Labour Classes.II.—Income of the United Kingdom.“A painstaking and certainly most interesting inquiry.”—Pall Mall Gazette.Bernard.—FOUR LECTURES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH DIPLOMACY. ByMountague Bernard, M.A., Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, Oxford. 8vo. 9s.Four Lectures, dealing with (1) The Congress of Westphalia; (2) Systems of Policy; (3) Diplomacy, Past and Present; (4) The Obligations of Treaties.Blake.—THE LIFE OF WILLIAM BLAKE, THE ARTIST. ByAlexander Gilchrist. With numerous Illustrations from Blake’s designs, and Fac-similes of his studies of the “Book of Job.” Medium 8vo. half morocco, 18s.These volumes contain a Life of Blake; Selections from his Writings, including Poems; Letters; Annotated Catalogue of Pictures and Drawings, List, with occasional notes, of Blake’s Engravings and Writings. There are appended Engraved Designs by Blake; (1) The Book of Job, twenty-one photo-lithographs from the originals; (2) Songs of Innocence and Experience, sixteen of the original Plates.Blanford (W. T.).—GEOLOGY AND ZOOLOGY OF ABYSSINIA. ByW. T. Blanford. 8vo. 21s.This work contains an account of the Geological and Zoological Observations made by the Author in Abyssinia, when accompanying the British Army on its march to Magdala and back in 1868, and during a short journey in Northern Abyssinia, after the departure of the troops. Part I. Personal Narrative; Part II. Geology; Part III. Zoology. With Coloured Illustrations and Geological Map.Bright (John, M.P.).—SPEECHES ON QUESTIONS OF PUBLIC POLICY. By the Right Hon.John Bright, M. P. Edited by ProfessorThorold Rogers. Two vols. 8vo. 25s.Second Edition, with Portrait.“I have divided the Speeches contained in these volumes into groups. The materials for selection are so abundant, that I have been constrained to omit many a speech which is worthy of careful perusal. I have naturally given prominence to those subjects with which Mr. Bright has been especially identified, as, for example, India, America, Ireland, and Parliamentary Reform. But nearly every topic of great public interest on which Mr. Bright has spoken is represented in these volumes.”Editor’s Preface.AUTHOR’S POPULAR EDITION. Extra fcap. 8vo. cloth. Second Edition. 3s.6d.Bryce.—THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE. ByJames Bryce, B.C.L., Regius Professor of Civil Law, Oxford. New and Revised Edition. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.CHATTERTON: A Biographical Study.By Daniel Wilson, LL.D., Professor of History and English Literature in University College, Toronto. Crown 8vo. 6s.6d.The Author here regards Chatterton as a Poet, not as a mere “resetter and defacer of stolen literary treasures.” Reviewed in this light, he has found much in the old materials capable of being turned to new account; and to these materials research in various directions has enabled him to make some additions.Clay.—THE PRISON CHAPLAIN. A Memoir of the Rev.John Clay, B.D., late Chaplain of the Preston Gaol. With Selections from his Reports and Correspondence, and a Sketch of Prison Discipline in England. By his Son, the Rev.W. L. Clay, M.A. 8vo. 15s.“Few books have appeared of late years better entitled to an attentive perusal. . . . It presents a complete narrative of all that has been done and attempted by various philanthropists for the amelioration of the condition and the improvement of the morals of the criminal classes in the British dominions.”—London Review.Cobden.—SPEECHES ON QUESTIONS OF PUBLIC POLICY. ByRichard Cobden. Edited by the Right Hon.John Bright, M.P., and ProfessorRogers. Two vols. 8vo. With Portrait. (Uniform withBright’s Speeches.)The Speeches contained in these two volumes have been selected and edited at the instance of the Cobden Club. They form an important part of that collective contribution to political science which has conferred on their author so vast a reputation.Cooper.—ATHENÆ CANTABRIGIENSES. ByCharles Henry Cooper, F.S.A., andThompson Cooper, F.S.A. Vol. I. 8vo., 1500–85, 18s.; Vol. II., 1586–1609, 18s.This elaborate work, which is dedicated by permission to Lord Macaulay, contains lives of the eminent men sent forth by Cambridge, after the fashion of Anthony à Wood, in his famous “Athenæ Oxonienses.”Cox (G. V., M.A.).—RECOLLECTIONS OF OXFORD. ByG. V. Cox, M.A., New College, Late Esquire Bedel and Coroner in the University of Oxford.Second Edition.Crown 8vo. 10s.6d.“An amusingfarragoof anecdote, and will pleasantly recall in many a country parsonage the memory of youthful days.”—Times.“Daily News.”—THE WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF THEDAILY NEWS, 1870. Edited, with Notes and Comments, forming a Continuous Narrative of the War between Germany and France. With Maps.Third Edition, revised.Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.This volume brings before the public in a convenient and portable form the record of the momentous events which have marked the last six months of 1870.The special value of letters from camps and battle-fields consists in the vividness with which they reproduce the life and spirit of the scenes and transactions in the midst of which they are written. In the letters which have appeared in theDaily Newssince the Franco–Prussian War, the public has recognized this quality as present in an eminent degree.The book begins with a chronology of the war from July 4th, when the French government called out the army reserves, to December 4th; the detailes of the campaign are illustrated by four maps representing—1. The battles of Weissenburg and Wörth. 2. The battles of Saarbrücken and Speiecheren. 3. The battle-field before Sedan. 4. A plan of Metz and its vicinity.THE WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF THEDAILY NEWScontinued to the Peace. Edited, with Notes and Comments. Second Edition, Crown 8vo. with Map, 7s.6d.Dicey (Edward).—THE MORNING LAND. ByEdward Dicey. Two vols. crown 8vo. 16s.“An invitation to be present at the opening of the Suez Canal was the immediate cause of my journey. But I made it my object also to see as much of the Morning Land, of whose marvels the canal across the Isthmus is only the least and latest, as time and opportunity would permit. The result of my observations was communicated to the journal I then represented, in a series of letters, which I now give to the public in a collected form.”—Extract fromAuthor’s Preface.Dilke.—GREATER BRITAIN. A Record of Travel in English-speaking Countries during 1866–7. (America, Australia, India.) By SirCharles Wentworth Dilke, M.P. Fifth and Cheap Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.“Mr. Dilke has written a book which is probably as well worth reading as any book of the same aims and character that ever was written. Its merits are that it is written in a lively and agreeable style, that it implies a great deal of physical pluck, that no page of it fails to show an acute and highly intelligent observer, that it stimulates the imagination as well as the judgment of the reader, and that it is on perhaps the most interesting subject that can attract an Englishman who cares about his country.”Saturday Review.Dürer (Albrecht).—HISTORY OF THE LIFE OF ALBRECHT DÜRER, of Nürnberg. With a Translation of his Letters and Journal, and some account of his works. By Mrs.Charles Heaton. Royal 8vo. bevelled boards, extra gilt. 31s.6d.This work contains about Thirty Illustrations, ten of which are productions by the Autotype (carbon) process, and are printed in permanent tints by Messrs. Cundall and Fleming, under license from the Autotype Company, Limited; the rest are Photographs and Woodcuts.EARLY EGYPTIAN HISTORY FOR THE YOUNG.See“Juvenile Section.”Elliott.—LIFE OF HENRY VENN ELLIOTT, of Brighton. ByJosiah Bateman, M.A., Author of “Life of Daniel Wilson, Bishop of Calcutta,” &c. With Portrait, engraved byJeens; and an Appendix containing a short sketch of the life of the Rev. Julius Elliott (who met with accidental death while ascending the Schreckhorn in July, 1869.) Crown 8vo. 8s.6d.Second Edition, with Appendix.“A very charming piece of religious biography; no one can read it without both pleasure and profit.”—British Quarterly Review.EUROPEAN HISTORY, narrated in a Series of Historical Selections from the best Authorities. Edited and arranged byE. M. SewellandC. M. Yonge. First Series, crown 8vo. 6s.; Second Series, 1088–1228, crown 8vo. 6s.When young children have acquired the outlines of history from abridgments and catechisms, and it becomes desirable to give a more enlarged view of the subject, in order to render it really useful and interesting, a difficulty often arises as to the choice of books. Two courses are open, either to take a general and consequently dry history of facts, such as Russell’s Modern Europe, or to choose some work treating of a particular period or subject, such as the works of Macaulay and Froude. The former course usually renders history uninteresting; the latter is unsatisfactory, because it is not sufficiently comprehensive. To remedy this difficulty, selections, continuous and chronological, have in the present volume been taken from the larger works of Freeman, Milman, Palgrave, and others, which may serve as distinct landmarks of historical reading. “We know of scarcely anything,” says the Guardian, of this volume, “which is so likely to raise to a higher level the average standard of English education.”Fairfax.—A LIFE OF THE GREAT LORD FAIRFAX, Commander-in-Chief of the Army of the Parliament of England. ByClements R. Markham, F.S.A. With Portraits, Maps, Plans, and Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 16s.No full Life of the great Parliamentary Commander has appeared; and it is here sought to produce one—based upon careful research in contemporary records and upon family and other documents.“Highly useful to the careful student of the History of the Civil War. . . . Probably as a military chronicle Mr. Markham’s book is one of the most full and accurate that we possess about the Civil War.”—Fortnightly Review.Forbes.—LIFE OF PROFESSOR EDWARD FORBES, F.R.S. ByGeorge Wilson, M.D., F.R.S.E., andArchibald Geikie, F.R.S. 8vo. with Portrait, 14s.“From the first page to the last the book claims careful reading, as being a full but not overcrowded rehearsal of a most instructive life, and the true picture of a mind that was rare in strength and beauty.”—Examiner.Freeman.—HISTORY OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, from the Foundation of the Achaian League to the Disruption of the United States. ByEdward A. Freeman, M.A. Vol. I. General Introduction. History of the Greek Federations. 8vo. 21s.“The task Mr. Freeman has undertaken is one of great magnitude and importance. It is also a task of an almost entirely novel character. No other work professing to give the history of a political principle occurs to us, except the slight contributions to the history of representative government that is contained in a course of M. Guizot’s lectures. . . . The history of the development of a principle is at least as important as the history of a dynasty, or of a race.”—Saturday Review.OLD ENGLISH HISTORY. ByEdward A. Freeman, M.A., late Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. WithFive Coloured Maps. Second Edition extra. Fcap. 8vo., half-bound. 6s.“Its object is to show that clear, accurate, and scientific views of history, or indeed of any subject, may be easily given to children from the very first . . . I have, I hope, shown that it is perfectly easy to teach children, from the very first, to distinguish true history alike from legend and from wilful invention, and also to understand the nature of historical authorities, and to weigh one statement against another. . . . I have throughout striven to connect the history of England with the general history of civilized Europe, and I have especially tried to make the book serve as an incentive to a more accurate study of historical geography.”—Preface.HISTORY OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF WELLS, as illustrating the History of the Cathedral Churches of the Old Foundation. ByEdward A. Freeman, D.C.L., formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. Crown 8vo. 3s.6d.“I have here tried to treat the history of the Church of Wells as a contribution to the general history of the Church and Kingdom of England, and specially to the history of Cathedral Churches of the Old Foundation. . . . I wish to point out the general principles of the original founders as the model to which the Old Foundations should be brought back, and the New Foundations reformed after their pattern.”—Preface.French (George Russell).—SHAKSPEAREANA GENEALOGICA. 8vo. cloth extra, 15s.Uniform with the “Cambridge Shakespeare.”Part I.—Identification of the dramatis personæ in the historical plays, from King John to King Henry VIII.; Notes on Characters in Macbeth and Hamlet; Persons and Places belonging to Warwickshire alluded to.Part II.—The Shakspeare and Arden families and their connexions, with Tables of descent. The present is the first attempt to give a detailed description, in consecutive order, of each of thedramatis personæin Shakespeare’s immortal chronicle-histories, and some of the characters have been,it is believed, herein identified for the first time. A clue is furnished which, followed up with ordinary diligence, may enable any one, with a taste for the pursuit, to trace a distinguished Shakespearean worthy to his lineal representative in the present day.Galileo.—THE PRIVATE LIFE OF GALILEO. Compiled principally from his Correspondence and that of his eldest daughter, Sister Maria Celeste, Nun in the Franciscan Convent of S. Matthew in Arcetri. With Portrait. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.It has been the endeavour of the compiler to place before the reader a plain, ungarbled statement of facts; and as a means to this end, to allow Galileo, his friends, and his judges to speak for themselves as far as possible.Gladstone (Right Hon. W. E., M.P.).—JUVENTUS MUNDI. The Gods and Men of the Heroic Age. Crown 8vo. cloth extra. With Map. 10s.6d.Second Edition.This new work of Mr. Gladstone deals especially with the historic element in Homer, expounding that element and furnishing by its aid a full account of the Homeric men and the Homeric religion. It starts, after the introductory chapter, with a discussion of the several races then existing in Hellas, including the influence of the Phœnicians and Egyptians. It contains chapters on the Olympian system, with its several deities; on the Ethics and the Polity of the Heroic age; on the geography of Homer; on the characters of the Poems; presenting, in fine, a view of primitive life and primitive society as found in the poems of Homer. To this New Edition various additions have been made.“GLOBE” ATLAS OF EUROPE. Uniform in size with Macmillan’s Globe Series, containing 45 Coloured Maps, on a uniform scale and projection; with Plans of London and Paris, and a copious Index. Strongly bound in half-morocco, with flexible back, 9s.This Atlas includes all the countries of Europe in a series of 48 Maps, drawn on the same scale, with an Alphabetical Index to the situation of more than ten thousand places, and the relation of the various maps and countries to each other is defined in a general Key-map. All the maps being on a uniform scale facilitates the comparison of extent and distance, and conveys a just impression of the relative magnitude of different countries. The size suffices to show the provincial divisions, the railways and main roads, the principal rivers and mountain ranges. “This atlas,” writes theBritish Quarterly, “will be an invaluable boon for the school, the desk, or the traveller’s portmanteau.”Godkin (James).—THE LAND WAR IN IRELAND. A History for the Times. ByJames Godkin, Author of “Ireland and her Churches,” late Irish Correspondent of theTimes. 8vo. 12s.A History of the Irish Land Question.Guizot.—(Author of “John Halifax, Gentleman.”)—M. DE BARANTE, a Memoir, Biographical and Autobiographical. ByM. Guizot. Translated by the Author of “John Halifax, Gentleman.” Crown 8vo. 6s.6d.“The highest purposes of both history and biography are answered by a memoir so lifelike, so faithful, and so philosophical.”British Quarterly Review.Hole.—A GENEALOGICAL STEMMA OF THE KINGS OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE. By the Rev.C. Hole, M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge. On Sheet, 1s.The different families are printed in distinguishing colours, thus facilitating reference.A BRIEF BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY. Compiled and Arranged by the Rev.Charles Hole, M.A. Second Edition. 18mo, neatly and strongly bound in cloth. 4s.6d.One of the most comprehensive and accurate Biographical Dictionaries in the world, containing more than 18,000 persons of all countries, with dates of birth and death, and what they were distinguished for. Extreme care has been bestowed on the verification of the dates; and thus numerous errors, current in previous works, have been corrected. Its size adapts it for the desk, portmanteau, or pocket.“An invaluable addition to our manuals of reference, and, from its moderate price, cannot fail to become as popular as it is useful.”—Times.Hozier.—THE SEVEN WEEKS’ WAR; Its Antecedents and its Incidents. ByH. M. Hozier. With Maps and Plans. Two vols. 8vo. 28s.This work is based upon letters reprinted by permission from“The Times.”For the most part it is a product of a personal eye-witness of some of the most interesting incidents of a war which, for rapidity and decisive results, may claim an almost unrivalled position in history.THE BRITISH EXPEDITION TO ABYSSINIA. Compiled from Authentic Documents. ByCaptain Henry M. Hozier, late Assistant Military Secretary to Lord Napier of Magdala. 8vo. 9s.“Several accounts of the British Expedition have been published. . . . They have, however, been written by those who have not had access to those authentic documents, which cannot be collected directly after the termination of a campaign. . . . The endeavour of the author of this sketch has been to present to readers a succinct and impartial account of an enterprise which has rarely been equalled in the annals of war.”—Preface.Irving.—THE ANNALS OF OUR TIME. A Diurnal of Events, Social and Political, which have happened in or had relation to the Kingdom of Great Britain, from the Accession of Queen Victoria to the Opening of the present Parliament. ByJoseph Irving. Second Edition, continued to the present time. 8vo. half-bound. 18s.[Immediately.“We have before us a trusty and ready guide to the events of the past thirty years, available equally for the statesman, the politician, the public writer, and the general reader. If Mr. Irving’s object has been to bring before the reader all the most noteworthy occurrences which have happened since the beginning of Her Majesty’s reign, he may justly claim the credit of having done so most briefly, succinctly, and simply, and in such a manner, too, as to furnish him with the details necessary in each case to comprehend the event of which he is in search in an intelligent manner. Reflection will serve to show the great value of such a work as this to the journalist and statesman, and indeed to every one who feels an interest in the progress of the age; and we may add that its value is considerably increased by the addition of that most important of all appendices, an accurate and instructive index.”—Times.Kingsley (Canon).—ON THE ANCIEN REGIME as it existed on the Continent before theFrench Revolution. Three Lectures delivered at the Royal Institution. By the Rev.C. Kingsley, M.A., formerly Professor of Modern History in the University of Cambridge. Crown 8vo. 6s.These three lectures discuss severally (1) Caste, (2) Centralization, (3) The Explosive Forces by which the Revolution was superinduced. The Preface deals at some length with certain political questions of the present day.THE ROMAN AND THE TEUTON. A Series of Lectures delivered before the University of Cambridge. By Rev.C. Kingsley, M.A. 8vo. 12s.Contents:—Inaugural Lecture; The Forest Children; The Dying Empire; The Human Deluge; The Gothic Civilizer; Dietrich’s End; The Nemesis of the Goths; Paulus Diaconus; The Clergy and the Heathen; The Monk a Civilizer; The Lombard Laws; The Popes and the Lombards; The Strategy of Providence.Kingsley(Henry, F.R.G.S.).—TALES OF OLD TRAVEL. Re-narrated byHenry Kingsley, F.R.G.S. WithEight IllustrationsbyHuard. Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.Contents:—Marco Polo; The Shipwreck of Pelsart; The Wonderful Adventures of Andrew Battel; The Wanderings of a Capuchin; Peter Carder; The Preservation of the “Terra Nova;” Spitzbergen; D’Ermenonville’s Acclimatization Adventure; The Old Slave Trade; Miles Philips; The Sufferings of Robert Everard; John Fox; Alvaro Nunez; The Foundation of an Empire.Latham.—BLACK AND WHITE: A Journal of a Three Months’ Tour in the United States. ByHenry Latham, M.A., Barrister-at-Law. 8vo. 10s.6d.“The spirit in which Mr. Latham has written about our brethren in America is commendable in high degree.”—Athenæum.Law.—THE ALPS OF HANNIBAL. ByWilliam John Law, M.A., formerly Student of Christ Church, Oxford. Two vols. 8vo. 21s.“No one can read the work and not acquire a conviction that, in addition to a thorough grasp of a particular topic, its writer has at command a large store of reading and thought upon many cognate points of ancient history and geography.”—Quarterly Review.Liverpool.—THE LIFE AND ADMINISTRATION OF ROBERT BANKS, SECOND EARL OF LIVERPOOL, K.G. Compiled from Original Family Documents byCharles Duke Yonge, Regius Professor of History and English Literature in Queen’s College, Belfast; and Author of “The History of the British Navy,” “The history of France under the Bourbons,” etc. Three vols. 8vo. 42s.Since the time of Lord Burleigh no one, except the second Pitt, ever enjoyed so long a tenure of power; with the same exception, no one ever held office at so critical a time . . . Lord Liverpool is the very last minister who has been able fully to carry out his own political views; who has been so strong that in matters of general policy the Opposition could extort no concessions from him which were not sanctioned by his own deliberate judgment. The present work is founded almost entirely on the correspondence left behind him by Lord Liverpool, and now in the possession of Colonel and Lady Catherine Harcourt.“Full of information and instruction.”—Fortnightly Review.Macmillan (Rev. Hugh).—HOLIDAYS ON HIGH LANDS; or, Rambles and Incidents in search of Alpine Plants. By the Rev.Hugh Macmillan, Author of “Bible Teachings in Nature,” etc. Crown 8vo. cloth. 6s..“Botanical knowledge is blended with a love of nature, a pious enthusiasm, and a rich felicity of diction not to be met with in any works of kindred character, if we except those of Hugh Miller.”—Daily Telegraph.FOOT-NOTES FROM THE PAGE OF NATURE. With numerous Illustrations. Fcap. 8vo. 5s.“Those who have derived pleasure and profit from the study of flowers and ferns—subjects, it is pleasing to find, now everywhere popular—by descending lower into the arcana of the vegetable kingdom, will find a still more interesting and delightful field of research in the objects brought under review in the following pages.”—Preface.BIBLE TEACHINGS IN NATURE. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.Martin (Frederick).—THE STATESMAN’S YEAR-BOOK: A Statistical and Historical Account of the States of the Civilized World. Manual for Politicians and Merchants for the year 1871.By Frederick Martin.Eighth Annual Publication.Crown 8vo. 10s.6d.The new issue has been entirely re-written, revised, and corrected, on the basis of official reports received direct from the heads of the leading Governments of the World, in reply to letters sent to them by the Editor.“Everybody who knows this work is aware that it is a book that is indispensable to writers, financiers, politicians, statesmen, and all who are directly or indirectly interested in the political, social, industrial, commercial, and financial condition of their fellow-creatures at home and abroad. Mr. Martin deserves warm commendation for the care he takes in making ‘The Statesman’s Year Book’ complete and correct.”Standard.HANDBOOK OF CONTEMPORARY BIOGRAPHY. ByFrederick Martin, Author of “The Statesman’s Year-Book.” Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.This volume is an attempt to produce a book of reference, furnishing in a condensed form some biographical particulars of notable living men. The leading idea has been to give only facts, and those in the briefest form, and to exclude opinions.Martineau.—BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, 1852–1868. ByHarriet Martineau. Third and cheaper Edition, with New Preface. Crown 8vo. 6s.A Collection of Memoirs under these several sections:—(1) Royal, (2) Politicians, (3) Professional, (4) Scientific, (5) Social, (6) Literary. These Memoirs appeared originally in the columns of the“Daily News.”Milton.—LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. Narrated in connexion with the Political, Ecclesiastical, and Literary History of his Time. ByDavid Masson, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Rhetoric at Edinburgh. Vol. I. with Portraits. 8vo. 18s.Vol. II. in a few days.—Vol. III. in the Press.It is intended to exhibit Milton’s life in its connexions with all the more notable phenomena of the period of British history in which it was cast—its state politics, its ecclesiastical variations, its literature and speculative thought. Commencing in 1608, the Life of Milton proceeds through the last sixteen years of the reign of James I., includes the whole of the reign of Charles I. and the subsequent years of the Commonwealth and the Protectorate, and then, passing the Restoration, extends itself to 1674, orthrough fourteen years of the new state of things under Charles II. The first volume deals with the life of Milton as extending from 1608 to 1640, which was the period of his education and of his minor poems.Mitford (A. B.).—TALES OF OLD JAPAN. ByA. B. Mitford, Second Secretary to the British Legation in Japan. With upwards of 30 Illustrations, drawn and cut on Wood by Japanese Artists. Two vols. crown 8vo. 21s.This work is an attempt to do for Japan what Sir J. Davis, Dr. Legge, and M. Stanislas Julien, have done for China. Under the influence of more enlightened ideas and of a liberal system of policy, the old Japanese civilization is fast disappearing, and will, in a few years, be completely extinct. It was important, therefore, to preserve as far as possible trustworthy records of a state of society which although venerable from its antiquity, has for Europeans the dawn of novelty; hence the series of narratives and legends translated by Mr. Mitford, and in which the Japanese are very judiciously left to tell their own tale. The two volumes comprise not only stories and episodes illustrative of Asiatic superstitions, but also three sermons. The preface, appendices, and notes explain a number of local peculiarities; the thirty-one woodcuts are the genuine work of a native artist, who, unconsciously of course, has adopted the process first introduced by the early German masters.Morley (John).—EDMUND BURKE, a Historical Study. ByJohn Morley, B.A. Oxon. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.“The style is terse and incisive, and brilliant with epigram and point. It contains pithy aphoristic sentences which Burke himself would not have disowned. But these are not its best features: its sustained power of reasoning, its wide sweep of observation and reflection, its elevated ethical and social tone, stamp it as a work of high excellence, and as such we cordially recommend it to our readers.”—Saturday Review.Morison.—THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SAINT BERNARD, Abbot of Clairvaux. ByJames Cotter Morison, M.A. New Edition, revised. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.“One of the best contributions in our literature towards a vivid, intelligent, and worthy knowledge of European interests and thoughts and feelings during the twelfth century. A delightful and instructive volume, and one of the best products of the modern historic spirit.”Pall Mall Gazette.Mullinger.—CAMBRIDGE CHARACTERISTICS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. ByJ. B. Mullinger, B.A. Crown 8vo. 4s.6d.“It is a very entertaining and readable book.”—Saturday Review.“The chapters on the Cartesian Philosophy and the Cambridge Platonists are admirable.”—Athenæum.Palgrave.—HISTORY OF NORMANDY AND OF ENGLAND. By SirFrancis Palgrave, Deputy Keeper of Her Majesty’s Public Records. Completing the History to the Death of William Rufus. Four vols. 8vo. £4 4s.Volume I. General Relations of Mediæval Europe—The Carlovingian Empire—The Danish Expeditions in the Gauls—And the Establishment of Rollo. Volume II. The Three First Dukes of Normandy; Rollo, Guillaume Longue-Épée, and Richard Sans-Peur—The Carlovingian line supplanted by the Capets. Volume III. Richard Sans-Peur—Richard Le-Bon—Richard III.—Robert Le Diable—William the Conqueror. Volume IV. William Rufus—Accession of Henry Beauclerc.Palgrave(W. G.).—A NARRATIVE OF A YEAR’S JOURNEY THROUGH CENTRAL AND EASTERN ARABIA, 1862–3. ByWilliam Gifford Palgrave, late of the Eighth Regiment Bombay N. I. Fifth and cheaper Edition. With Maps, Plans, and Portrait of Author, engraved on steel by Jeens. Crown 8vo. 6s.“Considering the extent or our previous ignorance, the amount of his achievements, and the importance of his contributions to our knowledge, we cannot say less of him than was once said of a far greater discoverer. Mr. Palgrave has indeed given a new world to Europe.”Pall Mall Gazette.Parkes(Henry).—AUSTRALIAN VIEWS OF ENGLAND. ByHenry Parkes. Crown 8vo. cloth. 3s.6d.“The following letters were written during a residence in England, in the years 1861 and 1862, and were published in the“Sydney Morning Herald”on the arrival of the monthly mails. . . . On re-perusal, these letters appear to contain views of English life and impressions of English notabilities which, as the views and impressions of an Englishman on his return to his native country after an absence of twenty years, may not be without interest to the English reader. The writer had opportunities of mixing with different classes of the British people, and of hearing opinions on passing events from opposite standpoints of observation.”—Author’s Preface.Prichard.—THE ADMINISTRATION OF INDIA. From 1859 to 1868. The First Ten Years of Administration under the Crown. ByIltudus Thomas Prichard, Barrister-at-Law. Two vols. Demy 8vo. With Map. 21s.In these volumes the author has aimed to supply a full, impartial, and independent account of British India between 1859 and 1868—which is in many respects the most important epoch in the history of that country which the present century has seen.Ralegh.—THE LIFE OF SIR WALTER RALEGH, based upon Contemporary Documents. ByEdward Edwards. Together with Ralegh’s Letters, now first collected. With Portrait. Two vols. 8vo. 32s.“Mr. Edwards has certainly written the Life of Ralegh from fuller information than any previous biographer. He is intelligent, industrious, sympathetic: and the world has in his two volumes larger means afforded it of knowing Ralegh than it ever possessed before. The new letters and the newly-edited old letters are in themselves a boon.”—Pall Mall Gazette.Robinson(Crabb).—DIARY, REMINISCENCES, AND CORRESPONDENCE OF HENRY CRABB ROBINSON. Selected and Edited by Dr.Sadler. With Portrait. Second Edition. Three vols. 8vo. cloth. 36s.Mr. Crabb Robinson’s Diary extends over the greater part of three-quarters of a century. It contains personal reminiscences of some of the most distinguished characters of that period, including Goethe, Wieland, De Quincey, Wordsworth (with whom Mr. Crabb Robinson was on terms of great intimacy), Madame de Staël, Lafayette, Coleridge, Lamb, Milman, &c. &c.: and includes a vast variety of subjects, political, literary, ecclesiastical, and miscellaneous.Rogers(James E. Thorold).—HISTORICAL GLEANINGS: A Series of Sketches. Montague, Walpole, Adam Smith, Cobbett. By ProfessorRogers. Crown 8vo. 4s.6d.Professor Rogers’s object in the following sketches is to present a set of historical facts, grouped round a principal figure. The essays are in the form of lectures.HISTORICAL GLEANINGS. Second Series. Crown 8vo. 6s.A companion volume to the First Series recently published. It contains papers on Wiklif, Laud, Wilkes, Horne Tooke. In these lectures the author has aimed to state the social facts of the time in which the individual whose history is handled took part in public business.Smith(Professor Goldwin).—THREE ENGLISH STATESMEN: PYM, CROMWELL, PITT. A Course of Lectures on the Political History of England. ByGoldwin Smith, M.A. Extra fcap. 8vo. New and Cheaper Edition. 5s.“A work which neither historian nor politician can safely afford to neglect.”—Saturday Review.SYSTEMS OF LAND TENURE in VARIOUS COUNTRIES. A Series of Essays published under the sanction of theCobden Club. Demy 8vo. Second Edition. 12s.The subjects treated are:—1. Tenure of Land in Ireland; 2. Land Laws of England; 3. Tenure of Land in India; 4. Land System of Belgium and Holland; 5. Agrarian Legislation of Prussia during the Present Century; 6. Land System of France; 7. Russian Agrarian Legislation of 1861; 8. Farm Land and Land Laws of the United States.Tacitus.—THE HISTORY OF TACITUS, translated into English. ByA. J. Church, M.A. andW. J. Brodribb, M.A. With a Map and Notes. 8vo. 10s.6d.The translators have endeavoured to adhere as closely to the original as was thought consistent with a proper observance of English idiom. At the same time it has been their aim to reproduce the precise expressions of the author. This work is characterised by the Spectator as “a scholarly and faithful translation.”THE AGRICOLA AND GERMANIA. Translated into English byA. J. Church, M.A. andW. J. Brodribb, M.A. With Maps and Notes. Extra fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.The translators have sought to produce such a version as may satisfy scholars who demand a faithful rendering of the original, and English readers who are offended by the baldness and frigidity which commonly disfigure translations. The treatises are accompanied by introductions, notes, maps, and a chronological summary. The Athenæum says of this work that it is “a version at once readable and exact, which may be perused with pleasure by all, and consulted with advantage by the classical student.”Taylor(Rev. Isaac).—WORDS AND PLACES; or Etymological Illustrations of History, Etymology, and Geography. By the Rev.Isaac Taylor. Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 12s.6d.“Mr. Taylor has produced a really useful book, and one which stands alone in our language.”—Saturday Review.Trench(Archbishop).—GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS: Social Aspects of the Thirty Years’ War. ByR. Chenevix Trench, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin. Fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.“Clear and lucid in style, these lectures will be a treasure to many to whom the subject is unfamiliar.”—Dublin Evening Mail.Trench(Mrs. R.).—Remains of the lateMrs.RICHARD TRENCH. Being Selections from her Journals, Letters, and other Papers. Edited byArchbishop Trench. New and Cheaper Issue, with Portrait, 8vo. 6s.Contains notices and anecdotes illustrating the social life of the period—extending over a quarter of a century (1799–1827). It includes also poems and other miscellaneous pieces by Mrs. Trench.Trench(Capt. F., F.R.G.S.).—THE RUSSO-INDIAN QUESTION, Historically, Strategically, and Politically considered. By Capt.Trench, F.R.G.S. With a Sketch of Central Asiatic Politics and Map of Central Asia. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.“The Russo–Indian, or Central Asian question has for several obvious reasons been attracting much public attention in England, in Russia, and also on the Continent, within the last year or two. . . . I have thought that the present volume, giving a short sketch of the history of this question from its earliest origin, and condensing much of the most recent and interesting information on the subject, and on its collateral phases, might perhaps be acceptable to those who take an interest in it.”—Author’s Preface.Trevelyan(G. O., M.P.).—CAWNPORE. Illustrated with Plan. ByG. O. Trevelyan, M.P., Author of “The Competition Wallah.” Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.“In this book we are not spared one fact of the sad story; but our feelings are not harrowed by the recital of imaginary outrages. It is good for us at home that we have one who tells his tale so well as does Mr. Trevelyan.”—Pall Mall Gazette.THE COMPETITION WALLAH. New Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.“The earlier letters are especially interesting for their racy descriptions of European life in India. . . . Those that follow are of more serious import, seeking to tell the truth about the Hindoo character and English influences, good and bad, upon it, as well as to suggest some better course of treatment than that hitherto adopted.”—Examiner.Vaughan(late Rev. Dr. Robert, of the British Quarterly).—MEMOIR OF ROBERT A. VAUGHAN. Author of “Hours with the Mystics.” ByRobert Vaughan, D.D. Second Edition, revised and enlarged. Extra fcap. 8vo. 5s.“It deserves a place on the same shelf with Stanley’s ‘Life of Arnold,’ and Carlyle’s ‘Stirling.’ Dr. Vaughan has performed his painful but not all unpleasing task with exquisite good taste and feeling.” —Nonconformist.Wagner.—MEMOIR OF THE REV. GEORGE WAGNER, M.A., late Incumbent of St. Stephen’s Church, Brighton. By the Rev.J. N. Simpkinson, M.A. Third and Cheaper Edition, corrected and abridged. 5s.“A more edifying biography we have rarely met with.”—Literary Churchman.Wallace.—THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO: the Land of the Orang Utan and the Bird of Paradise. A Narrative of Travel with Studies of Man and Nature. ByAlfred Russel Wallace. With Maps and Illustrations. Second Edition. Two vols. crown 8vo. 24s.“A carefully and deliberately composed narrative. . . . We advise our readers to do as we have done, read his book through.”—Times.Ward(Professor).—THE HOUSE OF AUSTRIA IN THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR. Two Lectures, with Notes and Illustrations. ByAdolphus W. Ward, M.A., Professor of History in Owens College, Manchester. Extra fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.“Very compact and instructive.”—Fortnightly Review.Warren.—AN ESSAY ON GREEK FEDERAL COINAGE. By the Hon.J. Leicester Warren, M.A. 8vo. 2s.6d.“The present essay is an attempt to illustrate Mr. Freeman’s Federal Government by evidence deduced from the coinage of the times and countries therein treated of.”—Preface.Wedgwood.—JOHN WESLEY AND THE EVANGELICAL REACTION of the Eighteenth Century. ByJulia Wedgwood. Crown 8vo. 8s.6d.This book is an attempt to delineate the influence of a particular man upon his age.Wilson.—A MEMOIR OF GEORGE WILSON, M.D., F.R.S.E., Regius Professor of Technology in the University of Edinburgh. By hisSister. New Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.“An exquisite and touching portrait of a rare and beautiful spirit.” —Guardian.Wilson(Daniel, LL.D.).—PREHISTORIC ANNALS OF SCOTLAND. ByDaniel Wilson, LL.D., Professor of History and English Literature in University College, Toronto. New Edition, with numerous Illustrations. Two vols. demy 8vo. 36s.This elaborate and learned work is divided into four Parts. Part I. deals withThe Primeval or Stone Period:Aboriginal Traces, Sepulchral Memorials, Dwellings, and Catacombs, Temples, Weapons, &c. &c.; Part II.,The Bronze Period:The Metallurgic Transition, Primitive Bronze, Personal Ornaments, Religion, Arts, and Domestic Habits, with other topics; Part III.,The Iron Period:The Introduction of Iron, The Roman Invasion, Strongholds, &c. &c.; Part IV.,The Christian Period:Historical Data, the Norrie’s Law Relics, Primitive and Mediæval Ecclesiology, Ecclesiastical and Miscellaneous Antiquities. The work is furnished with an elaborate Index.PREHISTORIC MAN. New Edition, revised and partly re-written, with numerous Illustrations. One vol. 8vo. 21s.This work, which carries out the principle of the preceding one, but with a wider scope, aims to “view Man, as far as possible, unaffected by those modifying influences which accompany the development of nations and the maturity of a true historic period, in order thereby to ascertain the sources from whence such development and maturity proceed.” It contains, for example, chapters on the Primeval Transition; Speech; Metals; the Mound-Builders; Primitive Architecture; the American Type; the Red Blood of the West, &c. &c.CHATTERTON: A Biographical Study. ByDaniel Wilson, LL.D., Professor of History and English Literature in University College, Toronto. Crown 8vo. 6s.6d.The Author here regards Chatterton as a Poet, not as a “mere resetter and defacer of stolen literary treasures.” Reviewed in this light, he has found much in the old materials capable of being turned to new account: and to these materials research in various directions has enabled him to make some additions.Yonge(Charlotte M.)—A PARALLEL HISTORY OF FRANCE AND ENGLAND: consisting of Outlines and Dates. ByCharlotte M. Yonge, Author of “The Heir of Redclyffe,” “Cameos from English History,” &c. &c. Oblong 410. 3s.6d.This tabular history has been drawn up to supply a want felt by many teachers of some means of making their pupils realize what events in the two countries were contemporary. A skeleton narrative has been constructed of the chief transactions in either country, placing a column between for what affected both alike, by which means it is hoped that young people may be assisted in grasping the mutual relation of events.SECTION II.POETRY AND BELLES LETTRES.Allingham.—LAURENCE BLOOMFIELD IN IRELAND or, the New Landlord. ByWilliam Allingham. New and Cheaper Issue, with a Preface. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.In the new Preface, the state of Ireland, with special reference to the Church measure, is discussed.“It is vital with the national character. . . . It has something of Pope’s point and Goldsmith’s simplicity, touched to a more modern issue.”—Athenæum.Arnold(Matthew).—POEMS. ByMatthew Arnold. Two vols. Extra fcap. 8vo. cloth. 12s.Also sold separately at 6s.each.Volume I contains Narrative and Elegiac Poems; Volume II. Dramatic and Lyric Poems. The two volumes comprehend the First and Second Series of the Poems, and the New Poems.NEW POEMS. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.6d.In this volume will be found “Empedocles on Etna:” “Thyrsis” (written in commemoration of the late Professor Clough); “Epilogue to Lessing’s Laocoön;” “Heine’s Grave;” “Obermann once more.” All these poems are also included in the Edition (two vols.) above-mentioned.ESSAYS IN CRITICISM. New Edition, with Additions. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.Contents:—Preface; The Function of Criticism at the present time; The Literary Influence of Academies; Maurice de Guerin; Eugenie de Guerin; Heinrich Heine; Pagan and Mediæval Religious Sentiment; Joubert; Spinoza and the Bible; Marcus Aurelius.ASPROMONTE, AND OTHER POEMS. Fcap. 8vo. cloth extra. 4s.6d.Contents:—Poems for Italy; Dramatic Lyrics; Miscellaneous.“Uncommon lyrical power and deep poetic feeling.”—Literary Churchman.Barnes(Rev. W.).—POEMS OF RURAL LIFE IN COMMON ENGLISH. By theRev. W. Barnes, Author of “Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect.” Fcap. 8vo. 6s.“In a high degree pleasant and novel. The book is by no means one which the lovers of descriptive poetry can afford to lose.”—Athenæum.Bell.—ROMANCES AND MINOR POEMS. ByHenry Glassford Bell. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.“Full of life and genius.”—Court Circular.Besant.—STUDIES IN EARLY FRENCH POETRY. ByWalter Besant, M.A. Crown. 8vo. 8s.6d.A sort of impression rests on most minds that French literature begins with the “siècle de Louis Quatorze;” any previous literature being for the most part unknown or ignored. Few know anything of the enormous literary activity that began in the thirteenth century, was carried on by Rulebeuf, Marie de France, Gaston de Foix, Thibault de Champagne, and Lorris; was fostered by Charles of Orleans, by Margaret of Valois, by Francis the First; that gave a crowd of versifiers to France, enriched, strengthened, developed, and fixed the French language, and prepared the way for Corneille and for Racine. The present work aims to afford information and direction touching the early efforts of France in poetical literature.“In one moderately sized volume he has contrived to introduce us to the very best, if not to all of the early French poets.”—Athenæum.Bradshaw.—AN ATTEMPT TO ASCERTAIN THE STATE OF CHAUCER’S WORKS, AS THEY WERE LEFT AT HIS DEATH. With some Notes of their Subsequent History. ByHenry Bradshaw, of King’s College, and the University Library, Cambridge.In the Press.Brimley.—ESSAYS BY THE LATE GEORGE BRIMLEY, M.A. Edited by the Rev.W. G. Clark, M.A. With Portrait. Cheaper Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 3s.6d.Essays on literary topics, such as Tennyson’s “Poems,” Carlyle’s “Life of Stirling,” “Bleak House,” &c., reprinted fromFraser,theSpectator,and like periodicals.Broome.—THE STRANGER OF SERIPHOS. A Dramatic Poem. ByFrederick Napier Broome. Fcap. 8vo. 5s.Founded on the Greek legend of Danae and Perseus.“Grace and beauty of expression are Mr. Broome’s characteristics; and these qualities are displayed in many passages.”—Athenæum.Church(A. J.).—HORÆ TENNYSONIANÆ, Sive Eclogæ e Tennysono Latine redditæ. CuraA. J. Church, A.M. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.Latin versions of Selections from Tennyson. Among the authors are the Editor, the late Professor Conington, Professor Seeley, Dr. Hessey, Mr. Kebbel, and other gentlemen.Clough(Arthur Hugh).—THE POEMS AND PROSE REMAINS OF ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH. With a Selection from his Letters and a Memoir. Edited by his Wife. With Portrait. Two vols. crown 8vo. 21s.Or Poems separately, as below.The late Professor Clough is well known as a graceful, tender poet, and as the scholarly translator of Plutarch. The letters possess high interest, not biographical only, but literary—discussing, as they do, the most important questions of the time, always in a genial spirit. The “Remains” include papers on “Retrenchment at Oxford;” on Professor F. W. Newman’s book “The Soul;” on Wordsworth; on the Formation of Classical English; on some Modern Poems (Matthew Arnold and the late Alexander Smith), &c. &c.THE POEMS OF ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH, sometime Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford. Third Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.“From the higher mind of cultivated, all-questioning, but still conservative England, in this our puzzled generation, we do not know of any utterance in literature so characteristic as the poems of Arthur Hugh Clough.”—Fraser’s Magazine.Dante.—DANTE’S COMEDY, THE HELL. Translated byW. M. Rossetti. Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 5s.“The aim of this translation of Dante may be summed up in one word—Literality. . . . To follow Dante sentence for sentence, line for line, word for word—neither more nor less—has been my strenuous endeavour.”—Author’s Preface.De Vere.—THE INFANT BRIDAL, and other Poems. ByAubrey de Vere. Fcap. 8vo. 7s.6d.“Mr. De Vere has taken his place among the poets of the day. Pure and tender feeling, and that polished restraint of style which is called classical, are the charms of the volume.”—Spectator.Doyle(Sir F. H.).—Works by SirFrancis Hastings Doyle, Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford:—THE RETURN OF THE GUARDS, AND OTHER POEMS. Fcap. 8vo. 7s.“Good wine needs no bush, nor good verse a preface; and Sir Francis Doyle’s verses run bright and clear, and smack of a classic vintage. . . . His chief characteristic, as it is his greatest charm, is the simple manliness which gives force to all he writes. It is a characteristic in these days rare enough.”—Examiner.LECTURES ON POETRY, delivered before the University of Oxford in 1868. Crown 8vo. 3s.6d.Three Lectures:—(1)Inaugural; (2)Provincial Poetry; (3)Dr. Newman’s “Dream of Gerontius.”“Full of thoughtful discrimination and fine insight: the lecture on ‘Provincial Poetry’ seems to us singularly true, eloquent, and instructive.”—Spectator.Evans.—BROTHER FABIAN’S MANUSCRIPT, AND OTHER POEMS. BySebastian Evans. Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 6s.“In this volume we have full assurance that he has ‘the vision and the faculty divine.’ . . . Clever and full of kindly humour.”—Globe.Furnivall.—LE MORTE D’ARTHUR. Edited from theHarleianM.S. 2252, in the British Museum. ByF. J. Furnivall, M.A. With Essay by the lateHerbert Coleridge. Fcap. 8vo. 7s.6d.Looking to the interest shown by so many thousands in Mr. Tennyson’s Arthurian poems, the editor and publishers have thought that the old version would possess considerable interest. It is a reprint of the celebrated Harleian copy; and is accompanied by index and glossary.Garnett.—IDYLLS AND EPIGRAMS. Chiefly from the Greek Anthology. ByRichard Garnett. Fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.“A charming little book. For English readers, Mr. Garnett’s translations will open a new world of thought.”—Westminster Review.GUESSES AT TRUTH. ByTwo Brothers. With Vignette, Title, and Frontispiece. New Edition, with Memoir. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.“The following year was memorable for the commencement of the ‘Guesses at Truth.’ He and his Oxford brother, living as they did in constant and free interchange of thought on questions of philosophy and literature and art; delighting, each of them, in the epigrammatic terseness which is the charm of the ‘Pensées’ of Pascal, and the ‘Caractères’ of La Bruyère—agreed to utter themselves in this form, and the book appeared, anonymously, in two volumes, in 1827.”—Memoir.Hamerton.—A PAINTER’S CAMP. ByPhilip Gilbert Hamerton. Second Edition, revised. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.Book I.In England;Book II.In Scotland;Book III.In France. This is the story of an Artist’s encampments and adventures. The headings of a few chapters may serve to convey a notion of the character of the book: A Walk on the Lancashire Moors; the Author his own Housekeeper and Cook; Tents and Boats for the Highlands; The Author encamps on an uninhabited Island; A Lake Voyage; A Gipsy Journey to Glen Coe; Concerning Moonlight and Old Castles; A little French City; A Farm in the Autunois, &c. &c.“His pages sparkle with many turns of expression, not a few well-told anecdotes, and many observations which are the fruit of attentive study and wise reflection on the complicated phenomena of human life, as well as of unconscious nature.”—Westminster Review.ETCHING AND ETCHERS. A Treatise Critical and Practical. By P. G. Hamerton. With Original Plates byRembrandt,Callot,Dujardin,Paul Potter, &c. Royal 8vo. Half morocco. 31s.6d.“It is a work of which author, printer, and publisher may alike feel proud. It is a work, too, of which none but a genuine artist could by possibility have been the author.”—Saturday Review.Herschel.—THE ILIAD OF HOMER. Translated into English Hexameters. By SirJohn Herschel, Bart. 8vo. 18s.A version of the Iliad in English Hexameters. The question of Homeric translation is fully discussed in the Preface.“It is admirable, not only for many intrinsic merits, but as a great man’s tribute to Genius.”—Illustrated London News.HIATUS: the Void in Modern Education. Its Cause and Antidote. ByOutis. 8vo. 8s. 6d.The main object of this Essay is to point out how the emotional element which underlies the Fine Arts is disregarded and undeveloped at this time so far as (despite a pretence at filling it up) to constitute an Educational Hiatus.Huxley(Professor).—LAY SERMONS, ADDRESSES, AND REVIEWS. ByT. H. Huxley, LL.D., F.R.S. Second and Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo. 7s.6d.Fourteen discourses on the following subjects:—On the Advisableness of Improving Natural Knowledge; Emancipation—Black and White; A Liberal Education, and where to find it; Scientific Education; on the Educational Value of the Natural History Sciences; on the Study of Zoology; on the Physical Basis of Life; the Scientific Aspects of Positivism; on a Piece of Chalk; Geological Contemporaneity and Persistent Types of Life; Geological Reform; the Origin of Species; Criticisms on the “Origin of Species;” on Descartes’ “Discourse touching the Method of using one’s Reason rightly and of seeking Scientific Truth.”ESSAYS SELECTED FROM LAY SERMONS, ADDRESSES, AND REVIEWS. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 2s.Whilst publishing a second edition of hisLay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews,Professor Huxley has, at the suggestion of many friends, issued in a cheap and popular form the selection we are now noticing. It includes the following essays:—(1)On the Advisableness of Improving Natural Knowledge.(2)A Liberal Education, and where to find it.(3)Scientific Education, notes of an after-dinner speech.(4)On the Physical Basis of Life.(5)The Scientific Aspects of Positivism.(6)On Descartes’ “Discourse touching the Method of using one’s Reason Rightly and of seeking Scientific Truth.”Kennedy.—LEGENDARY FICTIONS OF THE IRISH CELTS. Collected and Narrated byPatrick Kennedy. Crown 8vo. With Two Illustrations. 7s. 6d.

Bedford Street, Covent Garden, London.April, 1871.

Macmillan & Co.’s General Catalogueof Works in the Departments of History, Biography, Travels, Poetry, and Belles Lettres. With some short Account or Critical Notice concerning each Book.

Baker (Sir Samuel W.).—THE NILE TRIBUTARIES OF ABYSSINIA, and the Sword Hunters of the Hamran Arabs. BySir Samuel W. Baker, M.A., F.R.G.S. With Maps and Illustrations. Fourth and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

Sir Samuel Baker here describes twelve months’ exploration, during which he examined the rivers that are tributary to the Nile from Abyssinia, including the Atbara, Settite, Royan, Salaam, Angrab, Rahad, Dinder, and the Blue Nile. The interest attached to these portions of Africa differs entirely from that of the White Nile regions, as the whole of Upper Egypt and Abyssinia is capable of development, and is inhabited by races having some degree of civilization; while Central Africa is peopled by a race of savages, whose future is more problematical.

THE ALBERT N’YANZA Great Basin of the Nile, and Exploration of the Nile Sources. New and Cheaper Edition, with Portraits, Maps, and Illustrations. Two vols. crown 8vo. 16s.

“Bruce won the source of the Blue Nile; Speke and Grant won the Victoria source of the great White Nile; and I have been permitted tosucceed in completing the Nile Sources by the discovery of the great reservoir of the equatorial waters, the Albert N’yanza, from which the river issues as the entire White Nile.”—Preface.

NEW AND CHEAP EDITION OF THE ALBERT N’YANZA.1 vol. crown 8vo. With Maps and Illustrations. 7s.6d.

Barker (Lady).—STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND. ByLady Barker. Second and Cheaper Edition. Globe 8vo. 3s.6d.

“These letters are the exact account of a lady’s experience of the brighter and less practical side of colonization. They record the expeditions, adventures, and emergencies diversifying the daily life of the wife of a New Zealand sheep-farmer; and, as each was written while the novelty and excitement of the scenes it describes were fresh upon her, they may succeed in giving here in England an adequate impression of the delight and freedom of an existence so far removed from our own highly-wrought civilization.”—Preface.

“We have never read a more truthful or a pleasanter little book.”

Athenæum.

Baxter (R. Dudley, M.A.).—THE TAXATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. ByR. Dudley Baxter, M.A. 8vo. cloth, 4s.6d.

The First Part of this work, originally read before the Statistical Society of London, deals with the Amount of Taxation; the Second Part, which now constitutes the main portion of the work, is almost entirely new, and embraces the important questions of Rating, of the relative Taxation of Land, Personalty, and Industry, and of the direct effect of Taxes upon Prices. The author trusts that the body of facts here collected may be of permanent value as a record of the past progress and present condition of the population of the United Kingdom, independently of the transitory circumstances of its present Taxation.

NATIONAL INCOME. With Coloured Diagrams. 8vo. 3s.6d.

PartI.—Classification of the Population, Upper, Middle, and Labour Classes.II.—Income of the United Kingdom.

“A painstaking and certainly most interesting inquiry.”—Pall Mall Gazette.

Bernard.—FOUR LECTURES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH DIPLOMACY. ByMountague Bernard, M.A., Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, Oxford. 8vo. 9s.

Four Lectures, dealing with (1) The Congress of Westphalia; (2) Systems of Policy; (3) Diplomacy, Past and Present; (4) The Obligations of Treaties.

Blake.—THE LIFE OF WILLIAM BLAKE, THE ARTIST. ByAlexander Gilchrist. With numerous Illustrations from Blake’s designs, and Fac-similes of his studies of the “Book of Job.” Medium 8vo. half morocco, 18s.

These volumes contain a Life of Blake; Selections from his Writings, including Poems; Letters; Annotated Catalogue of Pictures and Drawings, List, with occasional notes, of Blake’s Engravings and Writings. There are appended Engraved Designs by Blake; (1) The Book of Job, twenty-one photo-lithographs from the originals; (2) Songs of Innocence and Experience, sixteen of the original Plates.

Blanford (W. T.).—GEOLOGY AND ZOOLOGY OF ABYSSINIA. ByW. T. Blanford. 8vo. 21s.

This work contains an account of the Geological and Zoological Observations made by the Author in Abyssinia, when accompanying the British Army on its march to Magdala and back in 1868, and during a short journey in Northern Abyssinia, after the departure of the troops. Part I. Personal Narrative; Part II. Geology; Part III. Zoology. With Coloured Illustrations and Geological Map.

Bright (John, M.P.).—SPEECHES ON QUESTIONS OF PUBLIC POLICY. By the Right Hon.John Bright, M. P. Edited by ProfessorThorold Rogers. Two vols. 8vo. 25s.Second Edition, with Portrait.

“I have divided the Speeches contained in these volumes into groups. The materials for selection are so abundant, that I have been constrained to omit many a speech which is worthy of careful perusal. I have naturally given prominence to those subjects with which Mr. Bright has been especially identified, as, for example, India, America, Ireland, and Parliamentary Reform. But nearly every topic of great public interest on which Mr. Bright has spoken is represented in these volumes.”

Editor’s Preface.

AUTHOR’S POPULAR EDITION. Extra fcap. 8vo. cloth. Second Edition. 3s.6d.

Bryce.—THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE. ByJames Bryce, B.C.L., Regius Professor of Civil Law, Oxford. New and Revised Edition. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

CHATTERTON: A Biographical Study.By Daniel Wilson, LL.D., Professor of History and English Literature in University College, Toronto. Crown 8vo. 6s.6d.

The Author here regards Chatterton as a Poet, not as a mere “resetter and defacer of stolen literary treasures.” Reviewed in this light, he has found much in the old materials capable of being turned to new account; and to these materials research in various directions has enabled him to make some additions.

Clay.—THE PRISON CHAPLAIN. A Memoir of the Rev.John Clay, B.D., late Chaplain of the Preston Gaol. With Selections from his Reports and Correspondence, and a Sketch of Prison Discipline in England. By his Son, the Rev.W. L. Clay, M.A. 8vo. 15s.

“Few books have appeared of late years better entitled to an attentive perusal. . . . It presents a complete narrative of all that has been done and attempted by various philanthropists for the amelioration of the condition and the improvement of the morals of the criminal classes in the British dominions.”—London Review.

Cobden.—SPEECHES ON QUESTIONS OF PUBLIC POLICY. ByRichard Cobden. Edited by the Right Hon.John Bright, M.P., and ProfessorRogers. Two vols. 8vo. With Portrait. (Uniform withBright’s Speeches.)

The Speeches contained in these two volumes have been selected and edited at the instance of the Cobden Club. They form an important part of that collective contribution to political science which has conferred on their author so vast a reputation.

Cooper.—ATHENÆ CANTABRIGIENSES. ByCharles Henry Cooper, F.S.A., andThompson Cooper, F.S.A. Vol. I. 8vo., 1500–85, 18s.; Vol. II., 1586–1609, 18s.

This elaborate work, which is dedicated by permission to Lord Macaulay, contains lives of the eminent men sent forth by Cambridge, after the fashion of Anthony à Wood, in his famous “Athenæ Oxonienses.”

Cox (G. V., M.A.).—RECOLLECTIONS OF OXFORD. ByG. V. Cox, M.A., New College, Late Esquire Bedel and Coroner in the University of Oxford.Second Edition.Crown 8vo. 10s.6d.

“An amusingfarragoof anecdote, and will pleasantly recall in many a country parsonage the memory of youthful days.”—Times.

“Daily News.”—THE WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF THEDAILY NEWS, 1870. Edited, with Notes and Comments, forming a Continuous Narrative of the War between Germany and France. With Maps.Third Edition, revised.Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

This volume brings before the public in a convenient and portable form the record of the momentous events which have marked the last six months of 1870.

The special value of letters from camps and battle-fields consists in the vividness with which they reproduce the life and spirit of the scenes and transactions in the midst of which they are written. In the letters which have appeared in theDaily Newssince the Franco–Prussian War, the public has recognized this quality as present in an eminent degree.

The book begins with a chronology of the war from July 4th, when the French government called out the army reserves, to December 4th; the detailes of the campaign are illustrated by four maps representing—1. The battles of Weissenburg and Wörth. 2. The battles of Saarbrücken and Speiecheren. 3. The battle-field before Sedan. 4. A plan of Metz and its vicinity.

THE WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF THEDAILY NEWScontinued to the Peace. Edited, with Notes and Comments. Second Edition, Crown 8vo. with Map, 7s.6d.

Dicey (Edward).—THE MORNING LAND. ByEdward Dicey. Two vols. crown 8vo. 16s.

“An invitation to be present at the opening of the Suez Canal was the immediate cause of my journey. But I made it my object also to see as much of the Morning Land, of whose marvels the canal across the Isthmus is only the least and latest, as time and opportunity would permit. The result of my observations was communicated to the journal I then represented, in a series of letters, which I now give to the public in a collected form.”—Extract fromAuthor’s Preface.

Dilke.—GREATER BRITAIN. A Record of Travel in English-speaking Countries during 1866–7. (America, Australia, India.) By SirCharles Wentworth Dilke, M.P. Fifth and Cheap Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

“Mr. Dilke has written a book which is probably as well worth reading as any book of the same aims and character that ever was written. Its merits are that it is written in a lively and agreeable style, that it implies a great deal of physical pluck, that no page of it fails to show an acute and highly intelligent observer, that it stimulates the imagination as well as the judgment of the reader, and that it is on perhaps the most interesting subject that can attract an Englishman who cares about his country.”

Saturday Review.

Dürer (Albrecht).—HISTORY OF THE LIFE OF ALBRECHT DÜRER, of Nürnberg. With a Translation of his Letters and Journal, and some account of his works. By Mrs.Charles Heaton. Royal 8vo. bevelled boards, extra gilt. 31s.6d.

This work contains about Thirty Illustrations, ten of which are productions by the Autotype (carbon) process, and are printed in permanent tints by Messrs. Cundall and Fleming, under license from the Autotype Company, Limited; the rest are Photographs and Woodcuts.

EARLY EGYPTIAN HISTORY FOR THE YOUNG.See“Juvenile Section.”

Elliott.—LIFE OF HENRY VENN ELLIOTT, of Brighton. ByJosiah Bateman, M.A., Author of “Life of Daniel Wilson, Bishop of Calcutta,” &c. With Portrait, engraved byJeens; and an Appendix containing a short sketch of the life of the Rev. Julius Elliott (who met with accidental death while ascending the Schreckhorn in July, 1869.) Crown 8vo. 8s.6d.Second Edition, with Appendix.

“A very charming piece of religious biography; no one can read it without both pleasure and profit.”—British Quarterly Review.

EUROPEAN HISTORY, narrated in a Series of Historical Selections from the best Authorities. Edited and arranged byE. M. SewellandC. M. Yonge. First Series, crown 8vo. 6s.; Second Series, 1088–1228, crown 8vo. 6s.

When young children have acquired the outlines of history from abridgments and catechisms, and it becomes desirable to give a more enlarged view of the subject, in order to render it really useful and interesting, a difficulty often arises as to the choice of books. Two courses are open, either to take a general and consequently dry history of facts, such as Russell’s Modern Europe, or to choose some work treating of a particular period or subject, such as the works of Macaulay and Froude. The former course usually renders history uninteresting; the latter is unsatisfactory, because it is not sufficiently comprehensive. To remedy this difficulty, selections, continuous and chronological, have in the present volume been taken from the larger works of Freeman, Milman, Palgrave, and others, which may serve as distinct landmarks of historical reading. “We know of scarcely anything,” says the Guardian, of this volume, “which is so likely to raise to a higher level the average standard of English education.”

Fairfax.—A LIFE OF THE GREAT LORD FAIRFAX, Commander-in-Chief of the Army of the Parliament of England. ByClements R. Markham, F.S.A. With Portraits, Maps, Plans, and Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 16s.

No full Life of the great Parliamentary Commander has appeared; and it is here sought to produce one—based upon careful research in contemporary records and upon family and other documents.

“Highly useful to the careful student of the History of the Civil War. . . . Probably as a military chronicle Mr. Markham’s book is one of the most full and accurate that we possess about the Civil War.”—Fortnightly Review.

Forbes.—LIFE OF PROFESSOR EDWARD FORBES, F.R.S. ByGeorge Wilson, M.D., F.R.S.E., andArchibald Geikie, F.R.S. 8vo. with Portrait, 14s.

“From the first page to the last the book claims careful reading, as being a full but not overcrowded rehearsal of a most instructive life, and the true picture of a mind that was rare in strength and beauty.”—Examiner.

Freeman.—HISTORY OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, from the Foundation of the Achaian League to the Disruption of the United States. ByEdward A. Freeman, M.A. Vol. I. General Introduction. History of the Greek Federations. 8vo. 21s.

“The task Mr. Freeman has undertaken is one of great magnitude and importance. It is also a task of an almost entirely novel character. No other work professing to give the history of a political principle occurs to us, except the slight contributions to the history of representative government that is contained in a course of M. Guizot’s lectures. . . . The history of the development of a principle is at least as important as the history of a dynasty, or of a race.”—Saturday Review.

OLD ENGLISH HISTORY. ByEdward A. Freeman, M.A., late Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. WithFive Coloured Maps. Second Edition extra. Fcap. 8vo., half-bound. 6s.

“Its object is to show that clear, accurate, and scientific views of history, or indeed of any subject, may be easily given to children from the very first . . . I have, I hope, shown that it is perfectly easy to teach children, from the very first, to distinguish true history alike from legend and from wilful invention, and also to understand the nature of historical authorities, and to weigh one statement against another. . . . I have throughout striven to connect the history of England with the general history of civilized Europe, and I have especially tried to make the book serve as an incentive to a more accurate study of historical geography.”—Preface.

HISTORY OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF WELLS, as illustrating the History of the Cathedral Churches of the Old Foundation. ByEdward A. Freeman, D.C.L., formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford. Crown 8vo. 3s.6d.

“I have here tried to treat the history of the Church of Wells as a contribution to the general history of the Church and Kingdom of England, and specially to the history of Cathedral Churches of the Old Foundation. . . . I wish to point out the general principles of the original founders as the model to which the Old Foundations should be brought back, and the New Foundations reformed after their pattern.”—Preface.

French (George Russell).—SHAKSPEAREANA GENEALOGICA. 8vo. cloth extra, 15s.Uniform with the “Cambridge Shakespeare.”

Part I.—Identification of the dramatis personæ in the historical plays, from King John to King Henry VIII.; Notes on Characters in Macbeth and Hamlet; Persons and Places belonging to Warwickshire alluded to.Part II.—The Shakspeare and Arden families and their connexions, with Tables of descent. The present is the first attempt to give a detailed description, in consecutive order, of each of thedramatis personæin Shakespeare’s immortal chronicle-histories, and some of the characters have been,it is believed, herein identified for the first time. A clue is furnished which, followed up with ordinary diligence, may enable any one, with a taste for the pursuit, to trace a distinguished Shakespearean worthy to his lineal representative in the present day.

Galileo.—THE PRIVATE LIFE OF GALILEO. Compiled principally from his Correspondence and that of his eldest daughter, Sister Maria Celeste, Nun in the Franciscan Convent of S. Matthew in Arcetri. With Portrait. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

It has been the endeavour of the compiler to place before the reader a plain, ungarbled statement of facts; and as a means to this end, to allow Galileo, his friends, and his judges to speak for themselves as far as possible.

Gladstone (Right Hon. W. E., M.P.).—JUVENTUS MUNDI. The Gods and Men of the Heroic Age. Crown 8vo. cloth extra. With Map. 10s.6d.Second Edition.

This new work of Mr. Gladstone deals especially with the historic element in Homer, expounding that element and furnishing by its aid a full account of the Homeric men and the Homeric religion. It starts, after the introductory chapter, with a discussion of the several races then existing in Hellas, including the influence of the Phœnicians and Egyptians. It contains chapters on the Olympian system, with its several deities; on the Ethics and the Polity of the Heroic age; on the geography of Homer; on the characters of the Poems; presenting, in fine, a view of primitive life and primitive society as found in the poems of Homer. To this New Edition various additions have been made.

“GLOBE” ATLAS OF EUROPE. Uniform in size with Macmillan’s Globe Series, containing 45 Coloured Maps, on a uniform scale and projection; with Plans of London and Paris, and a copious Index. Strongly bound in half-morocco, with flexible back, 9s.

This Atlas includes all the countries of Europe in a series of 48 Maps, drawn on the same scale, with an Alphabetical Index to the situation of more than ten thousand places, and the relation of the various maps and countries to each other is defined in a general Key-map. All the maps being on a uniform scale facilitates the comparison of extent and distance, and conveys a just impression of the relative magnitude of different countries. The size suffices to show the provincial divisions, the railways and main roads, the principal rivers and mountain ranges. “This atlas,” writes theBritish Quarterly, “will be an invaluable boon for the school, the desk, or the traveller’s portmanteau.”

Godkin (James).—THE LAND WAR IN IRELAND. A History for the Times. ByJames Godkin, Author of “Ireland and her Churches,” late Irish Correspondent of theTimes. 8vo. 12s.

A History of the Irish Land Question.

Guizot.—(Author of “John Halifax, Gentleman.”)—M. DE BARANTE, a Memoir, Biographical and Autobiographical. ByM. Guizot. Translated by the Author of “John Halifax, Gentleman.” Crown 8vo. 6s.6d.

“The highest purposes of both history and biography are answered by a memoir so lifelike, so faithful, and so philosophical.”

British Quarterly Review.

Hole.—A GENEALOGICAL STEMMA OF THE KINGS OF ENGLAND AND FRANCE. By the Rev.C. Hole, M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge. On Sheet, 1s.

The different families are printed in distinguishing colours, thus facilitating reference.

A BRIEF BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY. Compiled and Arranged by the Rev.Charles Hole, M.A. Second Edition. 18mo, neatly and strongly bound in cloth. 4s.6d.

One of the most comprehensive and accurate Biographical Dictionaries in the world, containing more than 18,000 persons of all countries, with dates of birth and death, and what they were distinguished for. Extreme care has been bestowed on the verification of the dates; and thus numerous errors, current in previous works, have been corrected. Its size adapts it for the desk, portmanteau, or pocket.

“An invaluable addition to our manuals of reference, and, from its moderate price, cannot fail to become as popular as it is useful.”—Times.

Hozier.—THE SEVEN WEEKS’ WAR; Its Antecedents and its Incidents. ByH. M. Hozier. With Maps and Plans. Two vols. 8vo. 28s.

This work is based upon letters reprinted by permission from“The Times.”For the most part it is a product of a personal eye-witness of some of the most interesting incidents of a war which, for rapidity and decisive results, may claim an almost unrivalled position in history.

THE BRITISH EXPEDITION TO ABYSSINIA. Compiled from Authentic Documents. ByCaptain Henry M. Hozier, late Assistant Military Secretary to Lord Napier of Magdala. 8vo. 9s.

“Several accounts of the British Expedition have been published. . . . They have, however, been written by those who have not had access to those authentic documents, which cannot be collected directly after the termination of a campaign. . . . The endeavour of the author of this sketch has been to present to readers a succinct and impartial account of an enterprise which has rarely been equalled in the annals of war.”—Preface.

Irving.—THE ANNALS OF OUR TIME. A Diurnal of Events, Social and Political, which have happened in or had relation to the Kingdom of Great Britain, from the Accession of Queen Victoria to the Opening of the present Parliament. ByJoseph Irving. Second Edition, continued to the present time. 8vo. half-bound. 18s.[Immediately.

“We have before us a trusty and ready guide to the events of the past thirty years, available equally for the statesman, the politician, the public writer, and the general reader. If Mr. Irving’s object has been to bring before the reader all the most noteworthy occurrences which have happened since the beginning of Her Majesty’s reign, he may justly claim the credit of having done so most briefly, succinctly, and simply, and in such a manner, too, as to furnish him with the details necessary in each case to comprehend the event of which he is in search in an intelligent manner. Reflection will serve to show the great value of such a work as this to the journalist and statesman, and indeed to every one who feels an interest in the progress of the age; and we may add that its value is considerably increased by the addition of that most important of all appendices, an accurate and instructive index.”—Times.

Kingsley (Canon).—ON THE ANCIEN REGIME as it existed on the Continent before theFrench Revolution. Three Lectures delivered at the Royal Institution. By the Rev.C. Kingsley, M.A., formerly Professor of Modern History in the University of Cambridge. Crown 8vo. 6s.

These three lectures discuss severally (1) Caste, (2) Centralization, (3) The Explosive Forces by which the Revolution was superinduced. The Preface deals at some length with certain political questions of the present day.

THE ROMAN AND THE TEUTON. A Series of Lectures delivered before the University of Cambridge. By Rev.C. Kingsley, M.A. 8vo. 12s.

Contents:—Inaugural Lecture; The Forest Children; The Dying Empire; The Human Deluge; The Gothic Civilizer; Dietrich’s End; The Nemesis of the Goths; Paulus Diaconus; The Clergy and the Heathen; The Monk a Civilizer; The Lombard Laws; The Popes and the Lombards; The Strategy of Providence.

Kingsley(Henry, F.R.G.S.).—TALES OF OLD TRAVEL. Re-narrated byHenry Kingsley, F.R.G.S. WithEight IllustrationsbyHuard. Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

Contents:—Marco Polo; The Shipwreck of Pelsart; The Wonderful Adventures of Andrew Battel; The Wanderings of a Capuchin; Peter Carder; The Preservation of the “Terra Nova;” Spitzbergen; D’Ermenonville’s Acclimatization Adventure; The Old Slave Trade; Miles Philips; The Sufferings of Robert Everard; John Fox; Alvaro Nunez; The Foundation of an Empire.

Latham.—BLACK AND WHITE: A Journal of a Three Months’ Tour in the United States. ByHenry Latham, M.A., Barrister-at-Law. 8vo. 10s.6d.

“The spirit in which Mr. Latham has written about our brethren in America is commendable in high degree.”—Athenæum.

Law.—THE ALPS OF HANNIBAL. ByWilliam John Law, M.A., formerly Student of Christ Church, Oxford. Two vols. 8vo. 21s.

“No one can read the work and not acquire a conviction that, in addition to a thorough grasp of a particular topic, its writer has at command a large store of reading and thought upon many cognate points of ancient history and geography.”—Quarterly Review.

Liverpool.—THE LIFE AND ADMINISTRATION OF ROBERT BANKS, SECOND EARL OF LIVERPOOL, K.G. Compiled from Original Family Documents byCharles Duke Yonge, Regius Professor of History and English Literature in Queen’s College, Belfast; and Author of “The History of the British Navy,” “The history of France under the Bourbons,” etc. Three vols. 8vo. 42s.

Since the time of Lord Burleigh no one, except the second Pitt, ever enjoyed so long a tenure of power; with the same exception, no one ever held office at so critical a time . . . Lord Liverpool is the very last minister who has been able fully to carry out his own political views; who has been so strong that in matters of general policy the Opposition could extort no concessions from him which were not sanctioned by his own deliberate judgment. The present work is founded almost entirely on the correspondence left behind him by Lord Liverpool, and now in the possession of Colonel and Lady Catherine Harcourt.

“Full of information and instruction.”—Fortnightly Review.

Macmillan (Rev. Hugh).—HOLIDAYS ON HIGH LANDS; or, Rambles and Incidents in search of Alpine Plants. By the Rev.Hugh Macmillan, Author of “Bible Teachings in Nature,” etc. Crown 8vo. cloth. 6s..

“Botanical knowledge is blended with a love of nature, a pious enthusiasm, and a rich felicity of diction not to be met with in any works of kindred character, if we except those of Hugh Miller.”—Daily Telegraph.

FOOT-NOTES FROM THE PAGE OF NATURE. With numerous Illustrations. Fcap. 8vo. 5s.

“Those who have derived pleasure and profit from the study of flowers and ferns—subjects, it is pleasing to find, now everywhere popular—by descending lower into the arcana of the vegetable kingdom, will find a still more interesting and delightful field of research in the objects brought under review in the following pages.”—Preface.

BIBLE TEACHINGS IN NATURE. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.

Martin (Frederick).—THE STATESMAN’S YEAR-BOOK: A Statistical and Historical Account of the States of the Civilized World. Manual for Politicians and Merchants for the year 1871.By Frederick Martin.Eighth Annual Publication.Crown 8vo. 10s.6d.

The new issue has been entirely re-written, revised, and corrected, on the basis of official reports received direct from the heads of the leading Governments of the World, in reply to letters sent to them by the Editor.

“Everybody who knows this work is aware that it is a book that is indispensable to writers, financiers, politicians, statesmen, and all who are directly or indirectly interested in the political, social, industrial, commercial, and financial condition of their fellow-creatures at home and abroad. Mr. Martin deserves warm commendation for the care he takes in making ‘The Statesman’s Year Book’ complete and correct.”

Standard.

HANDBOOK OF CONTEMPORARY BIOGRAPHY. ByFrederick Martin, Author of “The Statesman’s Year-Book.” Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.

This volume is an attempt to produce a book of reference, furnishing in a condensed form some biographical particulars of notable living men. The leading idea has been to give only facts, and those in the briefest form, and to exclude opinions.

Martineau.—BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, 1852–1868. ByHarriet Martineau. Third and cheaper Edition, with New Preface. Crown 8vo. 6s.

A Collection of Memoirs under these several sections:—(1) Royal, (2) Politicians, (3) Professional, (4) Scientific, (5) Social, (6) Literary. These Memoirs appeared originally in the columns of the“Daily News.”

Milton.—LIFE OF JOHN MILTON. Narrated in connexion with the Political, Ecclesiastical, and Literary History of his Time. ByDavid Masson, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Rhetoric at Edinburgh. Vol. I. with Portraits. 8vo. 18s.Vol. II. in a few days.—Vol. III. in the Press.

It is intended to exhibit Milton’s life in its connexions with all the more notable phenomena of the period of British history in which it was cast—its state politics, its ecclesiastical variations, its literature and speculative thought. Commencing in 1608, the Life of Milton proceeds through the last sixteen years of the reign of James I., includes the whole of the reign of Charles I. and the subsequent years of the Commonwealth and the Protectorate, and then, passing the Restoration, extends itself to 1674, orthrough fourteen years of the new state of things under Charles II. The first volume deals with the life of Milton as extending from 1608 to 1640, which was the period of his education and of his minor poems.

Mitford (A. B.).—TALES OF OLD JAPAN. ByA. B. Mitford, Second Secretary to the British Legation in Japan. With upwards of 30 Illustrations, drawn and cut on Wood by Japanese Artists. Two vols. crown 8vo. 21s.

This work is an attempt to do for Japan what Sir J. Davis, Dr. Legge, and M. Stanislas Julien, have done for China. Under the influence of more enlightened ideas and of a liberal system of policy, the old Japanese civilization is fast disappearing, and will, in a few years, be completely extinct. It was important, therefore, to preserve as far as possible trustworthy records of a state of society which although venerable from its antiquity, has for Europeans the dawn of novelty; hence the series of narratives and legends translated by Mr. Mitford, and in which the Japanese are very judiciously left to tell their own tale. The two volumes comprise not only stories and episodes illustrative of Asiatic superstitions, but also three sermons. The preface, appendices, and notes explain a number of local peculiarities; the thirty-one woodcuts are the genuine work of a native artist, who, unconsciously of course, has adopted the process first introduced by the early German masters.

Morley (John).—EDMUND BURKE, a Historical Study. ByJohn Morley, B.A. Oxon. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

“The style is terse and incisive, and brilliant with epigram and point. It contains pithy aphoristic sentences which Burke himself would not have disowned. But these are not its best features: its sustained power of reasoning, its wide sweep of observation and reflection, its elevated ethical and social tone, stamp it as a work of high excellence, and as such we cordially recommend it to our readers.”—Saturday Review.

Morison.—THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SAINT BERNARD, Abbot of Clairvaux. ByJames Cotter Morison, M.A. New Edition, revised. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

“One of the best contributions in our literature towards a vivid, intelligent, and worthy knowledge of European interests and thoughts and feelings during the twelfth century. A delightful and instructive volume, and one of the best products of the modern historic spirit.”

Pall Mall Gazette.

Mullinger.—CAMBRIDGE CHARACTERISTICS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. ByJ. B. Mullinger, B.A. Crown 8vo. 4s.6d.

“It is a very entertaining and readable book.”—Saturday Review.

“The chapters on the Cartesian Philosophy and the Cambridge Platonists are admirable.”—Athenæum.

Palgrave.—HISTORY OF NORMANDY AND OF ENGLAND. By SirFrancis Palgrave, Deputy Keeper of Her Majesty’s Public Records. Completing the History to the Death of William Rufus. Four vols. 8vo. £4 4s.

Volume I. General Relations of Mediæval Europe—The Carlovingian Empire—The Danish Expeditions in the Gauls—And the Establishment of Rollo. Volume II. The Three First Dukes of Normandy; Rollo, Guillaume Longue-Épée, and Richard Sans-Peur—The Carlovingian line supplanted by the Capets. Volume III. Richard Sans-Peur—Richard Le-Bon—Richard III.—Robert Le Diable—William the Conqueror. Volume IV. William Rufus—Accession of Henry Beauclerc.

Palgrave(W. G.).—A NARRATIVE OF A YEAR’S JOURNEY THROUGH CENTRAL AND EASTERN ARABIA, 1862–3. ByWilliam Gifford Palgrave, late of the Eighth Regiment Bombay N. I. Fifth and cheaper Edition. With Maps, Plans, and Portrait of Author, engraved on steel by Jeens. Crown 8vo. 6s.

“Considering the extent or our previous ignorance, the amount of his achievements, and the importance of his contributions to our knowledge, we cannot say less of him than was once said of a far greater discoverer. Mr. Palgrave has indeed given a new world to Europe.”

Pall Mall Gazette.

Parkes(Henry).—AUSTRALIAN VIEWS OF ENGLAND. ByHenry Parkes. Crown 8vo. cloth. 3s.6d.

“The following letters were written during a residence in England, in the years 1861 and 1862, and were published in the“Sydney Morning Herald”on the arrival of the monthly mails. . . . On re-perusal, these letters appear to contain views of English life and impressions of English notabilities which, as the views and impressions of an Englishman on his return to his native country after an absence of twenty years, may not be without interest to the English reader. The writer had opportunities of mixing with different classes of the British people, and of hearing opinions on passing events from opposite standpoints of observation.”—Author’s Preface.

Prichard.—THE ADMINISTRATION OF INDIA. From 1859 to 1868. The First Ten Years of Administration under the Crown. ByIltudus Thomas Prichard, Barrister-at-Law. Two vols. Demy 8vo. With Map. 21s.

In these volumes the author has aimed to supply a full, impartial, and independent account of British India between 1859 and 1868—which is in many respects the most important epoch in the history of that country which the present century has seen.

Ralegh.—THE LIFE OF SIR WALTER RALEGH, based upon Contemporary Documents. ByEdward Edwards. Together with Ralegh’s Letters, now first collected. With Portrait. Two vols. 8vo. 32s.

“Mr. Edwards has certainly written the Life of Ralegh from fuller information than any previous biographer. He is intelligent, industrious, sympathetic: and the world has in his two volumes larger means afforded it of knowing Ralegh than it ever possessed before. The new letters and the newly-edited old letters are in themselves a boon.”—Pall Mall Gazette.

Robinson(Crabb).—DIARY, REMINISCENCES, AND CORRESPONDENCE OF HENRY CRABB ROBINSON. Selected and Edited by Dr.Sadler. With Portrait. Second Edition. Three vols. 8vo. cloth. 36s.

Mr. Crabb Robinson’s Diary extends over the greater part of three-quarters of a century. It contains personal reminiscences of some of the most distinguished characters of that period, including Goethe, Wieland, De Quincey, Wordsworth (with whom Mr. Crabb Robinson was on terms of great intimacy), Madame de Staël, Lafayette, Coleridge, Lamb, Milman, &c. &c.: and includes a vast variety of subjects, political, literary, ecclesiastical, and miscellaneous.

Rogers(James E. Thorold).—HISTORICAL GLEANINGS: A Series of Sketches. Montague, Walpole, Adam Smith, Cobbett. By ProfessorRogers. Crown 8vo. 4s.6d.

Professor Rogers’s object in the following sketches is to present a set of historical facts, grouped round a principal figure. The essays are in the form of lectures.

HISTORICAL GLEANINGS. Second Series. Crown 8vo. 6s.

A companion volume to the First Series recently published. It contains papers on Wiklif, Laud, Wilkes, Horne Tooke. In these lectures the author has aimed to state the social facts of the time in which the individual whose history is handled took part in public business.

Smith(Professor Goldwin).—THREE ENGLISH STATESMEN: PYM, CROMWELL, PITT. A Course of Lectures on the Political History of England. ByGoldwin Smith, M.A. Extra fcap. 8vo. New and Cheaper Edition. 5s.

“A work which neither historian nor politician can safely afford to neglect.”—Saturday Review.

SYSTEMS OF LAND TENURE in VARIOUS COUNTRIES. A Series of Essays published under the sanction of theCobden Club. Demy 8vo. Second Edition. 12s.

The subjects treated are:—1. Tenure of Land in Ireland; 2. Land Laws of England; 3. Tenure of Land in India; 4. Land System of Belgium and Holland; 5. Agrarian Legislation of Prussia during the Present Century; 6. Land System of France; 7. Russian Agrarian Legislation of 1861; 8. Farm Land and Land Laws of the United States.

Tacitus.—THE HISTORY OF TACITUS, translated into English. ByA. J. Church, M.A. andW. J. Brodribb, M.A. With a Map and Notes. 8vo. 10s.6d.

The translators have endeavoured to adhere as closely to the original as was thought consistent with a proper observance of English idiom. At the same time it has been their aim to reproduce the precise expressions of the author. This work is characterised by the Spectator as “a scholarly and faithful translation.”

THE AGRICOLA AND GERMANIA. Translated into English byA. J. Church, M.A. andW. J. Brodribb, M.A. With Maps and Notes. Extra fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.

The translators have sought to produce such a version as may satisfy scholars who demand a faithful rendering of the original, and English readers who are offended by the baldness and frigidity which commonly disfigure translations. The treatises are accompanied by introductions, notes, maps, and a chronological summary. The Athenæum says of this work that it is “a version at once readable and exact, which may be perused with pleasure by all, and consulted with advantage by the classical student.”

Taylor(Rev. Isaac).—WORDS AND PLACES; or Etymological Illustrations of History, Etymology, and Geography. By the Rev.Isaac Taylor. Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 12s.6d.

“Mr. Taylor has produced a really useful book, and one which stands alone in our language.”—Saturday Review.

Trench(Archbishop).—GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS: Social Aspects of the Thirty Years’ War. ByR. Chenevix Trench, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin. Fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.

“Clear and lucid in style, these lectures will be a treasure to many to whom the subject is unfamiliar.”—Dublin Evening Mail.

Trench(Mrs. R.).—Remains of the lateMrs.RICHARD TRENCH. Being Selections from her Journals, Letters, and other Papers. Edited byArchbishop Trench. New and Cheaper Issue, with Portrait, 8vo. 6s.

Contains notices and anecdotes illustrating the social life of the period—extending over a quarter of a century (1799–1827). It includes also poems and other miscellaneous pieces by Mrs. Trench.

Trench(Capt. F., F.R.G.S.).—THE RUSSO-INDIAN QUESTION, Historically, Strategically, and Politically considered. By Capt.Trench, F.R.G.S. With a Sketch of Central Asiatic Politics and Map of Central Asia. Crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

“The Russo–Indian, or Central Asian question has for several obvious reasons been attracting much public attention in England, in Russia, and also on the Continent, within the last year or two. . . . I have thought that the present volume, giving a short sketch of the history of this question from its earliest origin, and condensing much of the most recent and interesting information on the subject, and on its collateral phases, might perhaps be acceptable to those who take an interest in it.”—Author’s Preface.

Trevelyan(G. O., M.P.).—CAWNPORE. Illustrated with Plan. ByG. O. Trevelyan, M.P., Author of “The Competition Wallah.” Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

“In this book we are not spared one fact of the sad story; but our feelings are not harrowed by the recital of imaginary outrages. It is good for us at home that we have one who tells his tale so well as does Mr. Trevelyan.”—Pall Mall Gazette.

THE COMPETITION WALLAH. New Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

“The earlier letters are especially interesting for their racy descriptions of European life in India. . . . Those that follow are of more serious import, seeking to tell the truth about the Hindoo character and English influences, good and bad, upon it, as well as to suggest some better course of treatment than that hitherto adopted.”—Examiner.

Vaughan(late Rev. Dr. Robert, of the British Quarterly).—MEMOIR OF ROBERT A. VAUGHAN. Author of “Hours with the Mystics.” ByRobert Vaughan, D.D. Second Edition, revised and enlarged. Extra fcap. 8vo. 5s.

“It deserves a place on the same shelf with Stanley’s ‘Life of Arnold,’ and Carlyle’s ‘Stirling.’ Dr. Vaughan has performed his painful but not all unpleasing task with exquisite good taste and feeling.” —Nonconformist.

Wagner.—MEMOIR OF THE REV. GEORGE WAGNER, M.A., late Incumbent of St. Stephen’s Church, Brighton. By the Rev.J. N. Simpkinson, M.A. Third and Cheaper Edition, corrected and abridged. 5s.

“A more edifying biography we have rarely met with.”—Literary Churchman.

Wallace.—THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO: the Land of the Orang Utan and the Bird of Paradise. A Narrative of Travel with Studies of Man and Nature. ByAlfred Russel Wallace. With Maps and Illustrations. Second Edition. Two vols. crown 8vo. 24s.

“A carefully and deliberately composed narrative. . . . We advise our readers to do as we have done, read his book through.”—Times.

Ward(Professor).—THE HOUSE OF AUSTRIA IN THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR. Two Lectures, with Notes and Illustrations. ByAdolphus W. Ward, M.A., Professor of History in Owens College, Manchester. Extra fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.

“Very compact and instructive.”—Fortnightly Review.

Warren.—AN ESSAY ON GREEK FEDERAL COINAGE. By the Hon.J. Leicester Warren, M.A. 8vo. 2s.6d.

“The present essay is an attempt to illustrate Mr. Freeman’s Federal Government by evidence deduced from the coinage of the times and countries therein treated of.”—Preface.

Wedgwood.—JOHN WESLEY AND THE EVANGELICAL REACTION of the Eighteenth Century. ByJulia Wedgwood. Crown 8vo. 8s.6d.

This book is an attempt to delineate the influence of a particular man upon his age.

Wilson.—A MEMOIR OF GEORGE WILSON, M.D., F.R.S.E., Regius Professor of Technology in the University of Edinburgh. By hisSister. New Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

“An exquisite and touching portrait of a rare and beautiful spirit.” —Guardian.

Wilson(Daniel, LL.D.).—PREHISTORIC ANNALS OF SCOTLAND. ByDaniel Wilson, LL.D., Professor of History and English Literature in University College, Toronto. New Edition, with numerous Illustrations. Two vols. demy 8vo. 36s.

This elaborate and learned work is divided into four Parts. Part I. deals withThe Primeval or Stone Period:Aboriginal Traces, Sepulchral Memorials, Dwellings, and Catacombs, Temples, Weapons, &c. &c.; Part II.,The Bronze Period:The Metallurgic Transition, Primitive Bronze, Personal Ornaments, Religion, Arts, and Domestic Habits, with other topics; Part III.,The Iron Period:The Introduction of Iron, The Roman Invasion, Strongholds, &c. &c.; Part IV.,The Christian Period:Historical Data, the Norrie’s Law Relics, Primitive and Mediæval Ecclesiology, Ecclesiastical and Miscellaneous Antiquities. The work is furnished with an elaborate Index.

PREHISTORIC MAN. New Edition, revised and partly re-written, with numerous Illustrations. One vol. 8vo. 21s.

This work, which carries out the principle of the preceding one, but with a wider scope, aims to “view Man, as far as possible, unaffected by those modifying influences which accompany the development of nations and the maturity of a true historic period, in order thereby to ascertain the sources from whence such development and maturity proceed.” It contains, for example, chapters on the Primeval Transition; Speech; Metals; the Mound-Builders; Primitive Architecture; the American Type; the Red Blood of the West, &c. &c.

CHATTERTON: A Biographical Study. ByDaniel Wilson, LL.D., Professor of History and English Literature in University College, Toronto. Crown 8vo. 6s.6d.

The Author here regards Chatterton as a Poet, not as a “mere resetter and defacer of stolen literary treasures.” Reviewed in this light, he has found much in the old materials capable of being turned to new account: and to these materials research in various directions has enabled him to make some additions.

Yonge(Charlotte M.)—A PARALLEL HISTORY OF FRANCE AND ENGLAND: consisting of Outlines and Dates. ByCharlotte M. Yonge, Author of “The Heir of Redclyffe,” “Cameos from English History,” &c. &c. Oblong 410. 3s.6d.

This tabular history has been drawn up to supply a want felt by many teachers of some means of making their pupils realize what events in the two countries were contemporary. A skeleton narrative has been constructed of the chief transactions in either country, placing a column between for what affected both alike, by which means it is hoped that young people may be assisted in grasping the mutual relation of events.

Allingham.—LAURENCE BLOOMFIELD IN IRELAND or, the New Landlord. ByWilliam Allingham. New and Cheaper Issue, with a Preface. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.

In the new Preface, the state of Ireland, with special reference to the Church measure, is discussed.

“It is vital with the national character. . . . It has something of Pope’s point and Goldsmith’s simplicity, touched to a more modern issue.”—Athenæum.

Arnold(Matthew).—POEMS. ByMatthew Arnold. Two vols. Extra fcap. 8vo. cloth. 12s.Also sold separately at 6s.each.

Volume I contains Narrative and Elegiac Poems; Volume II. Dramatic and Lyric Poems. The two volumes comprehend the First and Second Series of the Poems, and the New Poems.

NEW POEMS. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.6d.

In this volume will be found “Empedocles on Etna:” “Thyrsis” (written in commemoration of the late Professor Clough); “Epilogue to Lessing’s Laocoön;” “Heine’s Grave;” “Obermann once more.” All these poems are also included in the Edition (two vols.) above-mentioned.

ESSAYS IN CRITICISM. New Edition, with Additions. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.

Contents:—Preface; The Function of Criticism at the present time; The Literary Influence of Academies; Maurice de Guerin; Eugenie de Guerin; Heinrich Heine; Pagan and Mediæval Religious Sentiment; Joubert; Spinoza and the Bible; Marcus Aurelius.

ASPROMONTE, AND OTHER POEMS. Fcap. 8vo. cloth extra. 4s.6d.

Contents:—Poems for Italy; Dramatic Lyrics; Miscellaneous.

“Uncommon lyrical power and deep poetic feeling.”—Literary Churchman.

Barnes(Rev. W.).—POEMS OF RURAL LIFE IN COMMON ENGLISH. By theRev. W. Barnes, Author of “Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect.” Fcap. 8vo. 6s.

“In a high degree pleasant and novel. The book is by no means one which the lovers of descriptive poetry can afford to lose.”—Athenæum.

Bell.—ROMANCES AND MINOR POEMS. ByHenry Glassford Bell. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.

“Full of life and genius.”—Court Circular.

Besant.—STUDIES IN EARLY FRENCH POETRY. ByWalter Besant, M.A. Crown. 8vo. 8s.6d.

A sort of impression rests on most minds that French literature begins with the “siècle de Louis Quatorze;” any previous literature being for the most part unknown or ignored. Few know anything of the enormous literary activity that began in the thirteenth century, was carried on by Rulebeuf, Marie de France, Gaston de Foix, Thibault de Champagne, and Lorris; was fostered by Charles of Orleans, by Margaret of Valois, by Francis the First; that gave a crowd of versifiers to France, enriched, strengthened, developed, and fixed the French language, and prepared the way for Corneille and for Racine. The present work aims to afford information and direction touching the early efforts of France in poetical literature.

“In one moderately sized volume he has contrived to introduce us to the very best, if not to all of the early French poets.”—Athenæum.

Bradshaw.—AN ATTEMPT TO ASCERTAIN THE STATE OF CHAUCER’S WORKS, AS THEY WERE LEFT AT HIS DEATH. With some Notes of their Subsequent History. ByHenry Bradshaw, of King’s College, and the University Library, Cambridge.In the Press.

Brimley.—ESSAYS BY THE LATE GEORGE BRIMLEY, M.A. Edited by the Rev.W. G. Clark, M.A. With Portrait. Cheaper Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 3s.6d.

Essays on literary topics, such as Tennyson’s “Poems,” Carlyle’s “Life of Stirling,” “Bleak House,” &c., reprinted fromFraser,theSpectator,and like periodicals.

Broome.—THE STRANGER OF SERIPHOS. A Dramatic Poem. ByFrederick Napier Broome. Fcap. 8vo. 5s.

Founded on the Greek legend of Danae and Perseus.

“Grace and beauty of expression are Mr. Broome’s characteristics; and these qualities are displayed in many passages.”—Athenæum.

Church(A. J.).—HORÆ TENNYSONIANÆ, Sive Eclogæ e Tennysono Latine redditæ. CuraA. J. Church, A.M. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.

Latin versions of Selections from Tennyson. Among the authors are the Editor, the late Professor Conington, Professor Seeley, Dr. Hessey, Mr. Kebbel, and other gentlemen.

Clough(Arthur Hugh).—THE POEMS AND PROSE REMAINS OF ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH. With a Selection from his Letters and a Memoir. Edited by his Wife. With Portrait. Two vols. crown 8vo. 21s.Or Poems separately, as below.

The late Professor Clough is well known as a graceful, tender poet, and as the scholarly translator of Plutarch. The letters possess high interest, not biographical only, but literary—discussing, as they do, the most important questions of the time, always in a genial spirit. The “Remains” include papers on “Retrenchment at Oxford;” on Professor F. W. Newman’s book “The Soul;” on Wordsworth; on the Formation of Classical English; on some Modern Poems (Matthew Arnold and the late Alexander Smith), &c. &c.

THE POEMS OF ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH, sometime Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford. Third Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.

“From the higher mind of cultivated, all-questioning, but still conservative England, in this our puzzled generation, we do not know of any utterance in literature so characteristic as the poems of Arthur Hugh Clough.”—Fraser’s Magazine.

Dante.—DANTE’S COMEDY, THE HELL. Translated byW. M. Rossetti. Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 5s.

“The aim of this translation of Dante may be summed up in one word—Literality. . . . To follow Dante sentence for sentence, line for line, word for word—neither more nor less—has been my strenuous endeavour.”—Author’s Preface.

De Vere.—THE INFANT BRIDAL, and other Poems. ByAubrey de Vere. Fcap. 8vo. 7s.6d.

“Mr. De Vere has taken his place among the poets of the day. Pure and tender feeling, and that polished restraint of style which is called classical, are the charms of the volume.”—Spectator.

Doyle(Sir F. H.).—Works by SirFrancis Hastings Doyle, Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford:—

THE RETURN OF THE GUARDS, AND OTHER POEMS. Fcap. 8vo. 7s.

“Good wine needs no bush, nor good verse a preface; and Sir Francis Doyle’s verses run bright and clear, and smack of a classic vintage. . . . His chief characteristic, as it is his greatest charm, is the simple manliness which gives force to all he writes. It is a characteristic in these days rare enough.”—Examiner.

LECTURES ON POETRY, delivered before the University of Oxford in 1868. Crown 8vo. 3s.6d.

Three Lectures:—(1)Inaugural; (2)Provincial Poetry; (3)Dr. Newman’s “Dream of Gerontius.”

“Full of thoughtful discrimination and fine insight: the lecture on ‘Provincial Poetry’ seems to us singularly true, eloquent, and instructive.”—Spectator.

Evans.—BROTHER FABIAN’S MANUSCRIPT, AND OTHER POEMS. BySebastian Evans. Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 6s.

“In this volume we have full assurance that he has ‘the vision and the faculty divine.’ . . . Clever and full of kindly humour.”—Globe.

Furnivall.—LE MORTE D’ARTHUR. Edited from theHarleianM.S. 2252, in the British Museum. ByF. J. Furnivall, M.A. With Essay by the lateHerbert Coleridge. Fcap. 8vo. 7s.6d.

Looking to the interest shown by so many thousands in Mr. Tennyson’s Arthurian poems, the editor and publishers have thought that the old version would possess considerable interest. It is a reprint of the celebrated Harleian copy; and is accompanied by index and glossary.

Garnett.—IDYLLS AND EPIGRAMS. Chiefly from the Greek Anthology. ByRichard Garnett. Fcap. 8vo. 2s.6d.

“A charming little book. For English readers, Mr. Garnett’s translations will open a new world of thought.”—Westminster Review.

GUESSES AT TRUTH. ByTwo Brothers. With Vignette, Title, and Frontispiece. New Edition, with Memoir. Fcap. 8vo. 6s.

“The following year was memorable for the commencement of the ‘Guesses at Truth.’ He and his Oxford brother, living as they did in constant and free interchange of thought on questions of philosophy and literature and art; delighting, each of them, in the epigrammatic terseness which is the charm of the ‘Pensées’ of Pascal, and the ‘Caractères’ of La Bruyère—agreed to utter themselves in this form, and the book appeared, anonymously, in two volumes, in 1827.”—Memoir.

Hamerton.—A PAINTER’S CAMP. ByPhilip Gilbert Hamerton. Second Edition, revised. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s.

Book I.In England;Book II.In Scotland;Book III.In France. This is the story of an Artist’s encampments and adventures. The headings of a few chapters may serve to convey a notion of the character of the book: A Walk on the Lancashire Moors; the Author his own Housekeeper and Cook; Tents and Boats for the Highlands; The Author encamps on an uninhabited Island; A Lake Voyage; A Gipsy Journey to Glen Coe; Concerning Moonlight and Old Castles; A little French City; A Farm in the Autunois, &c. &c.

“His pages sparkle with many turns of expression, not a few well-told anecdotes, and many observations which are the fruit of attentive study and wise reflection on the complicated phenomena of human life, as well as of unconscious nature.”—Westminster Review.

ETCHING AND ETCHERS. A Treatise Critical and Practical. By P. G. Hamerton. With Original Plates byRembrandt,Callot,Dujardin,Paul Potter, &c. Royal 8vo. Half morocco. 31s.6d.

“It is a work of which author, printer, and publisher may alike feel proud. It is a work, too, of which none but a genuine artist could by possibility have been the author.”—Saturday Review.

Herschel.—THE ILIAD OF HOMER. Translated into English Hexameters. By SirJohn Herschel, Bart. 8vo. 18s.

A version of the Iliad in English Hexameters. The question of Homeric translation is fully discussed in the Preface.

“It is admirable, not only for many intrinsic merits, but as a great man’s tribute to Genius.”—Illustrated London News.

HIATUS: the Void in Modern Education. Its Cause and Antidote. ByOutis. 8vo. 8s. 6d.

The main object of this Essay is to point out how the emotional element which underlies the Fine Arts is disregarded and undeveloped at this time so far as (despite a pretence at filling it up) to constitute an Educational Hiatus.

Huxley(Professor).—LAY SERMONS, ADDRESSES, AND REVIEWS. ByT. H. Huxley, LL.D., F.R.S. Second and Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo. 7s.6d.

Fourteen discourses on the following subjects:—On the Advisableness of Improving Natural Knowledge; Emancipation—Black and White; A Liberal Education, and where to find it; Scientific Education; on the Educational Value of the Natural History Sciences; on the Study of Zoology; on the Physical Basis of Life; the Scientific Aspects of Positivism; on a Piece of Chalk; Geological Contemporaneity and Persistent Types of Life; Geological Reform; the Origin of Species; Criticisms on the “Origin of Species;” on Descartes’ “Discourse touching the Method of using one’s Reason rightly and of seeking Scientific Truth.”

ESSAYS SELECTED FROM LAY SERMONS, ADDRESSES, AND REVIEWS. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 2s.

Whilst publishing a second edition of hisLay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews,Professor Huxley has, at the suggestion of many friends, issued in a cheap and popular form the selection we are now noticing. It includes the following essays:—(1)On the Advisableness of Improving Natural Knowledge.(2)A Liberal Education, and where to find it.(3)Scientific Education, notes of an after-dinner speech.(4)On the Physical Basis of Life.(5)The Scientific Aspects of Positivism.(6)On Descartes’ “Discourse touching the Method of using one’s Reason Rightly and of seeking Scientific Truth.”

Kennedy.—LEGENDARY FICTIONS OF THE IRISH CELTS. Collected and Narrated byPatrick Kennedy. Crown 8vo. With Two Illustrations. 7s. 6d.


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