Part 34
“The preface is really more interesting than the ‘Prince of the Hundred Soups,’ and that—as we hope our readers will find out for themselves—is saying a good deal.”—_Academy_.
“For myself, I can say that it had upon me the appetising effect of that dish in Horace which ‘replaced the sated guest upon his elbow;’ for though, when I took it up, I was utterly weary and dazed with the number of books I had gone through, yet I devoured it from cover to cover with a new zest.”—_Truth_.
* * * * *
INDUSTRIAL CURIOSITIES: Glances Here and There in the World of Labour. Written and Edited by ALEXANDER HAY JAPP, LL.D., F.R.S.E. Third edition. Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 3s. 6d.
“Would make an excellent prize or present-book, especially for boys with a taste for miscellaneous information. Anyone, however, whose notion of a book is not limited to novels ought to be able to read it with pleasure, and can hardly do so without profit.”—_Academy_.
“Dr. Japp travels through a variety of subjects, always entertaining and instructive.”—_Spectator_.
“Nowadays boys are so fed upon story books and books of adventure that we welcome a book which tells them something about the facts of the world they live in.”—_Graphic_.
* * * * *
OLD FAITHS IN NEW LIGHT. By NEWMAN SMYTH, D.D. Crown 8vo., cloth. 3s. 6d.
* * * * *
PLANT LIFE: Popular Papers on the Phenomena of Botany. By EDWARD STEP. With 148 Illustrations drawn by the Author. Third edition. Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 3s. 6d.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
“The author has produced a little volume well suited to attract the attention and stimulate the curiosity of the student. By clothing the dry details of morphological construction with information as to the life history of plants, and by calling attention to the varied adaptations of form to function, he has followed in the wake of that numerous band of naturalists who have at once done so much to extend the bounds of botanical science, and to make it attractive to the amateur.”—_Athenæum_.
“More delightful reading for the country at this season of the year authors and publishers have not provided for us.”—_Pall Mall Gazette_.
“An unpretending book, whose contents cover a very great extent of botanical ground.”—_Science Gossip_.
* * * * *
ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF PAINTERS IN WATER COLOURS, 1884. Comprising Seventy-five Facsimiles of Sketches by the Artists. Demy. 1s.
NEW AND RECENT POETRY.
A MINOR POET: And other Verses. By AMY LEVY. Crown 8vo., paper board style, uncut edges. 3s. 6d.
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“Her idea of the character of ‘Xantippe’ is certainly original, and several of her shorter pieces are simple, heartfelt, and harmonius.”—_Whitehall Review_.
“Deserves to be singled out from the mass of every-day verse for special commendation. The book is very much above the average of such productions.”—_Derby Mercury_.
* * * * *
MEASURED STEPS. By ERNEST RADFORD. Crown 8vo., cloth. 4s.
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“Mr. Radford is himself a poet of no mean ability, and with a good deal of Heine in his composition.”—_Sheffield Independent_.
“He has imported into his deeper verse the beauty of a half-regretful subtlety and the interest of a real penetration. He can think with fineness and record his thoughts with point.”—_Frederick Wedmore_, _in The Academy_.
* * * * *
POEMS AND BALLADS. By PRYCE GWYNNE. Square Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 3s. 6d.
* * * * *
COLLEGE DAYS: Recorded in Blank Verse. Printed on Dutch hand-made paper. Fcap. 8vo., parchment. 5s.
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A RIVER HOLIDAY. The Lay of a Boating Trip. With 17 Illustrations by HARRY FURNISS. Demy 8vo. 1s.
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OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
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* * * * *
BEAUTIES AND FRIGHTS, WITH THE STORY OF BOBINETTE. By SARAH TYTLER, Author of “Papers for Thoughtful Girls,” “Footprints,” &c. Illustrated by M. E. EDWARDS. Second Edition. Small 8vo., cloth extra, gilt edges. 2s. 6d.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
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“Clever bits of character sketching.”—_Publishers’ Circular_.
* * * * *
THE SHIPWRECKED MARINER: A Quarterly Maritime Magazine. Edited by W. R. BUCK, Secretary of the Shipwrecked Mariners’ Society. Illustrated. Published in January, April, July, and October. 6d. Yearly Volumes 3s. 6d.
* * * * *
VERS DE SOCIÉTÉ & PARODY, with other Essays. By H. A. PAGE, Author of “De Quincey,” and “Thoreau.” Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 2d. 6d.
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* * * * *
THE ILLUSTRATED POETRY BOOK for Young Readers. Sm. Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 2s. 6d. Gilt edges. 3s.
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* * * * *
THE WAY TO FORTUNE: A Series of Short Essays, with Illustrative Proverbs and Anecdotes from many sources. Third edition. Small 8vo., cloth extra 2s. 6d.
“Profusely illustrated with proverbs and anecdotes, which being throughout apt to the injunctions, are likely to act as useful memories, when the text of ‘The Way to Fortune’ is not at hand.”—_The Inquirer_.
“The author is not only a man with a large outlook upon human affairs, but with a wide and varied knowledge of English literature. Any young man—or, for that matter, any young woman—who will lay the counsels of this book to heart, cannot fail to find the way to nobility, fruitfulness, and usefulness of life, if not to fortune. We could wish nothing better for this book than to see it in the hands of all who set any value on self-help.”—_Literary World_.
“This is not a big book, but it contains no fewer than fifty essays. Each is necessarily brief, and yet there is not one that does not contain a large amount of wisdom, made more effective by the help of illustrative proverbs and anecdotes. We gratefully recognise the high-toned manliness and spirituality of the skilful maker of the book. It ought to become a standard, and will make a useful present to a young man—all the more that it is certain to be read, so full is it of interest, so amusing and vivacious, as well as instructive and solid.”—_The Freeman_.
* * * * *
MARGARET THE MOONBEAM: A Tale for the Young. By CECILIA LUSHINGTON, Author of “Over the Seas and Far Away.” With Illustrations by M. E. EDWARDS. Second Edition. Small 8vo., cloth extra, gilt edges. 2s. 6d.
[Picture: A specimen of the illustrations: girl with mother and old lady]
PRINCIPLES TO START WITH. By ISAAC WATTS, D.D. Introduction by THOMAS BINNEY, D.D. Seventh Thousand. 32mo, red edges, cloth elegant, or in the new wood binding: maple, cedar, walnut, and sycamore. 1s.
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* * * * *
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* * * * *
THE STARRY BLOSSOM, and OTHER STORIES. By M. BETHAM-EDWARDS, Author of “Minna’s Holiday,” &c. Illustrations by Miss JOANNA SAMWORTH. Small 8vo., cloth extra. 1s. 6d.
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DAN STAPLETON’S LAST RACE. By Mrs. MILNE RAE, Author of “Morag,” “Hartleigh Towers,” &c. Small 8vo., cloth extra. 1s. 6d.
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WINMORE & CO. A Tale of the Great Bank Failure. Small 8vo., cloth extra. 1s.
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A HANDBOOK TO THE FERNERY AND AQUARIUM,
containing full directions how to make, stock, and maintain Ferneries and Freshwater Aquaria. By J. H. MARTIN and JAMES WESTON. With 43 Illustrations. Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 1s. Paper Covers. 9d.
*** Issued also in two parts, paper covers, 6d. each.
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“Few of the people, perhaps, who are sincere lovers of flowers and gardens, imagine the ‘fern paradise’ it is possible for them to make with very little trouble. To such we would commend this admirable manual. In brief compass, and without wasting words, it tells all that is necessary to be known for the general cultivation of these lovely plants.”—_Literary World_.
“Those who are anxious to know the methods by which the fresh-water, the insect, the microscopical and the marine aquaria, are managed with success will do well to consult Mr. Weston’s pages.”—_Field Naturalist_.
* * * * *
ADULTERATIONS OF FOOD (How to Detect the). By the Author of “Ferns and Ferneries.” Numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo., sewed. 9d.
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THE BATH AND BATHING. By Dr. J. FARRAR, F.R.C.P.E. Crown 8vo., limp cloth. 9d.
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* * * * *
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_The last three are in preparation_.
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“Capital guides to walks in the districts.”—_Daily Chronicle_.
“A pleasant and convenient series of books for the guidance of the pedestrian.”—_Literary World_.
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“The publishers have hit upon a good idea in their Half-Holiday Handbooks, which are likely to become popular favourites.”—_Graphic_.
“The publishers have done well in issuing these little readable manuals for the guidance of the Londoner, who, pent up all the week over his desk, or otherwise debarred from the sight of more natural objects than city sparrows, seeks in the short space granted him by the Saturday half-holiday movement, or on the feast-days of St. Lubbock, that closer acquaintance with the rural delights so necessary for his bodily and mental health. It is, of course, impossible in the short space of some seventy or eighty small pages to do more than indicate the chief attractions of localities so pleasant by nature as those above named; but these are very fairly set forth, and being illustrated by sections of a map on the scale of nearly one and a half miles to the inch, will be found of decided utility to the pedestrian in search of an object.”—_The Field_.
“Fulfil their purpose thoroughly as a tourist’s companions in his rambles about districts within a short distance from London.”—_Bookseller_.
“They combine the useful information of the hackneyed local guide-book with something which is rarer and more difficult to present—the fostering of a love of nature and the kindling of some enthusiasm for the objects generally passed unheeded by the run of holiday excursionists, because they have had no chance of learning how to observe, nor have tasted the delights of it. . . . The information is very closely packed, and justice is done to the lovely scenery and scientific novelties of the neighbourhood. The books are certainly cheap and well got up.”—_Nonconformist_.
“The best guides of the kind we have yet seen.”—_Lund and Water_.
“Will be found to add much interest to a Saturday afternoon walk into the country.”—_Nature_.
“Should achieve a wide popularity.”—_Court Circular_.
“All models of what a gossiping guide-book should be.”—_South London Press_.
* * * * *
GENESIS THE THIRD: History, not Fable. Being the Merchants’ Lecture for March, 1883. By EDWARD WHITE. Crown 8vo., Cloth extra. 1s. Sewed 6d.
* * * * *
SISTER EDITH’S PROBATION. By E. CONDER GRAY, Author of “Wise Words.” Small 8vo., cloth extra. 1s.
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EDUCATIONAL WORKS.
ARMY EXAMINATION SERIES.
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II. A MANUAL OF FRENCH GRAMMAR. By LE COMPTE DE LA HOUSSAYE, Officier de la Légion d’Honneur, French Examiner for Military and Civil Appointments. Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 2s. 6d.
III. GEOGRAPHY QUESTIONS: Especially adapted for Candidates preparing for the Preliminary Examination. By R. H. ALLPRESS. M.A., Trin. Coll., Camb. Crown 8vo., cloth extra. 2s. 6d.
* * * * *
EASY LESSONS IN BOTANY. By EDWARD STEP, Author of “Plant Life.” With 120 Illustrations by the Author. Third Edition. Linen covers. 7d. Also in two parts, paper covers, 3d. each.
OPINIONS Of THE PRESS.
“Numerously illustrated, clearly written, with a good deal of matter packed with much dexterity into a small space.”—_Science Gossip_.
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“Still another primer of botany! Well, we cannot have too many, provided all are as good as this one.”—_The Inquirer_.
* * * * *
POETICAL READER FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS. Arranged on an entirely new principle, with Illustrations specially done for the work. In Two Parts, each. 1s. 3d. Or in sections separately.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
“The editor of these two little volumes has managed to strike out an entirely new line for his pupils, and one which scarcely at any point crosses the beaten track. . . . To many readers besides school-children his volumes will present all the charms of novelty. The compiler has evidently a large acquaintance with the poetical literature of our country, and an excellent ear for the music of poetry. . . . The work is therefore one of exceptional interest.”—_School Board Chronicle_.
* * * * *
AN ENGLISH GRAMMAR FOR SCHOOLS. Adapted to the Requirements of the Revised Code. In Three Parts. Price 2d. each, or complete in one cover, 6s.
* * * * *
*** _Adopted by the London School Board_.
FIRST NATURAL HISTORY READER. For Standard II. In accordance with the requirements of the Revised Code. Beautifully Illustrated. Crown 8vo., cloth. 9d.
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* * * * *
THE HOUSE PURCHASERS GUIDE: Practical Hints for all Householders. By FREDERICK SNELLING. Demy 16mo., Cloth limp. 9d.
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A CUP OF COFFEE. Illustrated. Fcap. 8vo., boards. 1s.
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THE HISTORY OF RASSELAS, Prince of Abyssinia. By SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D. A new edition, small crown 8vo. 1s.
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Temple, The.
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* * * * *
LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN, 26, PATERNOSTER SQUARE, E.C.
FOOTNOTES.
{161} “Our GIPSY CHILDREN.—(To the Editor of the _Daily News_.)—Sir, I counted to-day at the great Oxford Fair over two hundred and twenty vans and covered carts, in each of which there would be an average of four children and two men and women living and huddling together regardless of every principle of decency. In many cases filth, dirt, and ignorance prevailed to an alarming extent. Not a few of the poor women and children exhibited signs of their having been in close warfare with rough treatment. Not five per cent. of the thousand human beings could read and write a sentence. What a farce upon our Christianity and civilization it is to have this mass of human beings living actually in the centre of learning, religious influences, and civilization. We have Bibles, ministers, colleges, sanitary officers, and education inspectors on every hand, and no power but the police-man exerting any influence over our poor lost wanderers. What I want is that their thirty thousand children should receive a free education—as I propose in an amending Bill to meet the case of the canal children—and their vans registered and brought under the influence of the sanitary officers on a simple plan. The gipsies themselves will hail a measure of this kind with considerable delight.”
This letter brought forth a reply, to which I rejoined as follows: