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Norica; or, Tales of Nürnberg from the Olden Time. Translated from the German of August Hagen, Fcp. 8vo, ornamental binding, suitable for presentation, uniform with The Artist's Married Life.' Original price, 7s. 6d.; reduced to 5s. P. 6d.

"This pleasant volume is got up in that style of imitation of the books of a century ago, which has of late become so much the vogue. The typographical and mechanical departments of the volume speak loudly for the taste and enterprise employed upon it. Simple in its style, quaint, pithy, reasonably pungent-the book smacks strongly of the picturesque old days of which it treats. A long study of the art-antiquities of Nürnberg, and a profound acquaintance with the records, letters, and memoirs, still preserved, of the times of Albert Dürer and his great brother artists, have enabled the author to lay before us a forcibly-drawn and highly-finished picture of art and household life in that wonderfully art-practising and art-reverencing old city of Germany." -Atlas.

"A delicious little book. It is full of a quaint garrulity, and characterized by an earnest simplicity of thought and diction, which admirably conveys to the reader the

household and artistic German life of the times of Maximilian, Albert Dürer, and Hans Sachs, the celebrated cobbler and master-singer,' as well as most of the artist celebrities of Nürnberg in the 16th century. Art is the chief end and aim of this little history. It is lauded and praised with a sort of unostentatious devotion, which explains the religious passion of the early moulders of the ideal and the beautiful; and, perhaps, through a consequent deeper concentration of thought, the secret of their success."-Weekly Dispatch.

"A volume full of interest for the lover of old times; while the form in which it is presented to us may incite many to think of art, and look into its many wondrous influences with a curious earnestness unknown to them before. It points a moral also, in the knowledge that a people may be brought to take interest in what is chaste and beautiful as in what is coarse and degrading."--Manchester Examiner.

Hester and Elinor, or the Discipline of Suffering. A Novel.

Post 8vo, 10s. 6d.

"The end proposed by the writer of this fiction is excellent, that of inculcating the social and domestic duties as the true moral sphere of woman.-Spectator. "This book is calculated to awaken thought. The interests in the midst of which the actors live and struggle are those

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in which we live; and we see them here dealt with by an earnest mind and a warm heart. A nearer and nearer approximation to the perfection of faithful service is the prevailing idea of the book.... We hope that this book may be much read." |—Inquirer.

The Bridesmaid, Count Stephen, and other Poems. By MARY

C. HUME. Fep. 8vo, cloth, 6s. "There is a hearty, exhilarating, hopeful moral in her lays, a rich imagination, a treasury of words, and a masculine tone, cheering the faint heart on to the struggle and to the victory."-Morning Adver

tiser.

"Full of thoughts and honest-hearted striving after truth."-Atlas.

"Mr. Hume may be proud of the triumph his daughter has achieved. The pictures are natural, and there is no straining after effect; there is a gentle gale of melody

P. 6d.

rising upon the ear, to which we listen as to summer breezes in the woods and fields.' -Weekly Dispatch.

"Miss Hume's gifts are real ones; her volume abounds with genuine poetry."Scottish Press.

"These poems display a thoughtful, cultivated mind, possessed of powers not common among female writers, save the highest and most eminent."-Nonconformist.

Essays, Poems, Allegories, and Fables. By JANUARY SEARLE.

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28

MR. CHAPMAN'S PUBLICATIONS.

The Odes of Horace, translated into Unrhymed English Metres, with Illustrative Introductions and Notes, by F. W. NEWMAN, Professor of Latin at University College, London. Post 8vo, cloth, 78. 6d. P. 6d.

The ODES are so arranged, that the introductions to them form a small, continuous history of the period; and the notes are especially addressed to unclassical readers.

"Mr. Newman has given an elegant | to be singularly masterly. It presents a and, whenever the necessities of metre model of good construing, i. e. the rendo not forbid, a scholar-like translation of dering of the Latin original into the best Horace. The notes are admirable, and closest English equivalents."-Weekly and are likely to be of extensive use to News. the student. . . . Mr. Newman has written a singularly attractive book, which will be of infinite use to the student, and of some service to the ripe scholar in helping him to the best possible prose English of diffi cult passages."-Daily News.

"Professor Newman's command of pure and choice English is everywhere shown

"We most cordially recommend Mr. Newman's volume to all who are interested in the subject for the notes."Literary Gazette.

"Many of his (Mr. Newman's) metres are exceedingly pleasing in our earssweet, various, and sonorous."-Prospective Review.

By JAMES Original price, £1. 11s. 6d.;

The Siege of Damascus; an Historical Romance.
NISBET. In 3 vols. post 8vo, cloth.
reduced to 10s. P. 1s. 6d.

"A romance of very unusual power, | such as must arrest attention by its qualities as a work of fiction, and help the good cause of liberty of thought."—Leader.

"There is an occasional inequality of style in the writing, but, on the whole, it

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may be pronounced beyond the average of modern novelists whilst descriptive passages might be selected that betray very high order of merit."-Manchester Examiner.

Preciosa A Tale., Fep. Svo,

cloth, 78. 6d. P. 6d.

"A bridgeless chasm seems to stand between us and the unexplored world of feeling. There are many faults in 'Preciosa,' but we do not hesitate to say that there are passages in it, which, for the power of transporting the reader across this intervening depth, and of clothing in an intelligible form the dim creation of passionate imagination, have scarcely a rival in English prose."-rich refrain throughout. Morning Chronicle.

"Marked by qualities which we are accustomed to associate with the maturity of a writer's powers."-Guardian.

"Exquisitely beautiful writing.. It is full of sighs and lovers' aspirations, with many charming fancies and poetic thoughts. It is Petrarch and Laura over again, and the numerous quotations from the Italian interspersed, together with images suggested by the passionate melodies of the great composers, pretty clearly indicate the burden which runs like a Of its execution we have the right to speak in terms of unqualified praise."-Weekly Dispatch.

Poems by Bessie Rayner Parkes. Post 8vo, paper cover. 18.

Summer Sketches and other Poems. By BESSIE RAYNER PARKES. Post 8vo, paper cover. 1s.

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The Village Pearl: A Domestic Poem. Fcp. 8vo, 2s. 6d.

Peter Jones; or, Onward Bound. An Autobiography. 12mo, price 38. P. 6d.

Reverberations. Part I., 18. Part II., 28. Fep. Svo, paper

cover. P. 6d.

"In this little verse-pamphlet of some sixty or seventy pages, we think we see evidences of a true poet; of a fresh and natural fount of genuine song; and of a purpose and sympathy admirably suited to the times.... The purchaser of it will find himself richer in possessing it by many wise and charitable thoughts, many generous emotions, and much calm and quiet, yet deep reflection."-Examiner.

"Remarkable for earnestness of thought and strength of diction."--Morn. Herald.

"The author of these rhymed brochures has much of the true poetic spirit. He is always in earnest. He writes from the full heart. There is a manliness, too, in all his utterances that especially recommends them to us. . . . As long as we have such Reverberations' as these, we shall never grow weary of them."-Weekly News.

The Twin Sisters. By LUCY FIELD, Authoress of The Two Friends.' 3 vols. post 8vo, £1. 11s. 6d. P. 18.

something of the spontaneity of real life, rather than the mechanism of artificial contrivance. . . . The story we can cordially recommend as one which cannot be read without emotion, nor remembered without pleasure."-Morning Post.

"The characters in the Twin Sisters' | are remarkably well drawn. The novel is written in a very sound and wholesome spirit."- Westminster Review. "The characters are cleverly imagined, both as regards their beauties and defects, and they have that touch of na- "The tale is well told, and a fine geneture' which is the only thing that can rous spirit pervades the book, rendering make them kin with the reader. . . . The it worthy of being commended to the incidents too are, for the most part, in-young."-Literary Gazette. geniously devised, and come about with

Three Experiments of Living: Within the Means. Up to the Means. Beyond the Means. Fcap. 8vo, ornamental cover and gilt edges, 1s. P. 6d.

The Log-Cabin; or, The World Before You. By the Author of Three Experiments of Living;' 'Sketches of the Old Painters,'

etc.

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Adventures of a Gentleman in search of the Church of England.

Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 2s. P. 6d.

30

MR. CHAPMAN'S PUBLICATIONS.

Miscellanea.

An Analytical Catalogue of Mr. Chapman's Publications.

Price 18. Post 6d.

To enable the reader to judge for himself of the merits of Mr. CHAPMAN'S publications, irrespective of the opinions of the press-whether laudatory or otherwise-an Analytical Catalogue has been prepared, which contains an abstract of each work, or, at least, such an amount of information regarding it as will furnish him with a clear conception of its general aim and scope. At the same time, from the way in which the Catalogue is drawn up, it comprises a condensed body of Ideas and Facts, in themselves of substantive interest and importance, and is therefore intrinsically well worthy the attention of the Student.

Cheap Books, and how to get them. Being a Reprint from the WESTMINSTER REVIEW for April, 1852, of the article on 'The Commerce of Literature;' together with a Brief Account of the Origin and Progress of the Recent Agitation for Free Trade in Books. By JOHN CHAPMAN. To which is added, the Judgment pronounced by Lord Campbell. Second Edition. Price 1s. P. 6d.

A Report of the Proceedings of a Meeting (consisting chiefly of Authors) held May 4th, at the House of Mr. John Chapman, 142, Strand, for the purpose of hastening the removal of the Trade Restrictions on the Commerce of Literature. Third Edition. Price 2d.

Two Orations against taking away Human Life, under any Circumstances; and in Explanation and Defence of the Misrepresented Doctrine of Non-Resistance. By THOMAS COOPER, Author of 'The Purgatory of Suicides.' Post 8vo, in paper cover, 18. P. 6d.

"Mr. Cooper possesses undeniable abi- the highest degree manly, plain, and vigor. lities of no mean order, and moral courageous."-Morning Advertiser. beyond many. . . The manliness with "These two orations are thoroughly which he avows, and the boldness and zeal with which he urges, the doctrines of peace and love, respect for human rights, and moral power, in these lectures, are worthy of all honour."-Nonconformist.

"Mr. Cooper's style is intensely clear and forcible, and displays great earnest ness and fine human sympathy; it is in

imbued with the peace doctrines which have lately been making rapid progress in many unexpected quarters. To all who take an interest in that great movement, we would recommend this book, on account of the fervid eloquence and earnest truthfulness which pervade every line of it."-Manchester Examiner.

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Ultramontanism; or, The Roman Church and Modern Society. By E. QUINET (of the College of France). Translated from the French. Third Edition. With the Author's approbation. By C. COCKS, B.L.

Paddy-Land and the Lakes of Killarney. By a WYKEHAMIST. Illustrated, 1s. P. 6d.

The Public School Matches and those we meet there. By a

WYKEHAMIST. 1s. P. 6d.

Classical Education: its Use and Abuse.

Reprinted from

the Westminster Review.' No. VIII. October, 1853.

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Indian Political Reform: Being Brief Hints, together with a Plan for the Improvement of the Constituency of the East India Company and the Promotion of Public Works. By JOHN CHAPMAN, Author of "The Cotton and Commerce of India,' etc. 8vo. 1s. P. 6d.

The Cotton and Commerce of India, Considered in Relation to the Interests of Great Britain; with Remarks on Railway Communication in the Bombay Presidency. By JOHN CHAPMAN, Founder and late Manager of the Great Indian Peninsular Railway Company. 8vo, cloth. Original price, 12s.; reduced to 68. P. 18. "Promises to be one of the most useful | Nothing can be more correct than his treatises that have been furnished on this important subject.. It is distinguished by a close and logical style, coupled with an accuracy of detail which will, in a great measure, render it a text-book."-Times, Jan. 22, 1851.

"Marked by sound good sense, akin to the highest wisdom of the statesman. The author has given to the public the most complete book we have for some time met with on any subject."-Economist.

views, so far as they extend, his survey and character of districts, his conclusions as to the supply the earth can yield, and his assertion that the cost of transit is with Indian cotton the first and ruling element of price."-Daily News.

"Mr. Chapman's work is only appreciated in the fulness of its value and merits by those who are interested in one or other branch of his subject. Full of data for reasoning, replete with facts, to which the most implicit credit may be attached, and free from any political bias, the volume is that rara, if not incognita avis, a truthful blue book, a volume of statistics not cooked up to meet a theory or defend a practice."

"Mr. Chapman's great practical knowledge and experience of the subjects upon which he treats have enabled him to collect an amount of information, founded upon facts, such as we believe has never before been laid before the public. The-Britannia. all-important questions of supply, production, and prices of cotton in India, as well as the commercial and financial questions connected with it, are most ably treated." -Morning Chronicle.

"The arrangement is clear, and the treatment of the subject in all cases masterly."-Indian News.

"This is a comprehensive, practical, careful, and temperate investigation," etc.

"Written by an intelligent, pains-tak--Indian Mail. ing, and well-informed gentleman.

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