Johnson's new universal cyclopædia. 4 v. Projected by Horace Greeley, edited (on a somewhat different plan) by Pres. Barnard. The articles are signed, and on some controverted subjects there are articles on both sides. Rich in Amer. matters, geog.and biog. Joret, C. Herder et la renaissance lit. en Allemagne. "Cette remarquable étude, dont on s'est plus occupé en Allemagne qu'en France, offre le tableau curieux et souvent piquant de l'évolution accomplie par l'Allemagne au 18e siècle pour échapper au joug de la France et retrouver une littérature nationale. Nous avons été long temps dupes des vertus des Allemands, nous avons trop cru à leur désintéressement, à leur humanité, il est temps de rétablir les droits du bons sens avec ceux de Joret loue ce que les Allemands ont l'esprit français. montré de puissante originalité, sans rien dissimmuler de leurs erreurs et de leur injustice envers la France." Rev. pol. et lit. King, T. Starr. Christianity and humanity; ser Lefroy, J. H. Memoirs of discoveries and early settlements of the Bermudas. Legeay, U. Histoire de Louis XI. 2 v. and legal tender in the U. S. Luard, H. R. Relations between Eng. and Rome, reign of Henry III. Maclean, J. Hist. of the Coll. of New Jersey. 2 v. McCoan, J. C. Egypt as it is. "A hash-up of guide-books and official materials. His opinions are those of an advocate pleading for his client [the Khedive]; facts are glossed over, excuses and palliatives urged. The style too is cumbrous and pretentious." Spectator. Manning, H. E., Archbp. of Westminster. Miscellanies. Matthews, W. Ethnography and philology of the Hidatsa Indians. Mazade, C. de. Life of Count Cavour. From the Revue des Deux Mondes. "The best work on Cavour is by H. von Treitschke. having the great merit that the milieu in which Cavour lived and worked, the atmosphere in which he was brought up, and the varied social and political forces which he partly guided and partly followed, are de. scribed with a fulness and clearness, which make the book much more than a simple biography. Mazade has not all these merits, yet his narrative is full of life and ease, his style readable, and his criticism clear, pointed, and vigorous. His book is aimed at the understanding of a foreign people and not at the fostering of French national vanity." - Exam. Mérimée, P. Chronique de Charles IX. Mélanges historiques et littéraires. Contents. Les Mormons. Les Cosaques de l'Ukraine et leurs derniers Atamans. - Sur un tombeau découvert à Tarragone. De l'histoire ancienne de la Grèce. L'hôtel de Cluny. De la littérature espagnole. - Les Romains sous l'Empire. Mémoires d'une famille huguenote. De Penseignement des beaux-arts. Res. tauration du Musée. - Vie de César-Auguste. - Inventaire des joyaux de Louis, duc d'Anjou. Miln, J. Excavations at Carnac. Mr. Miln made important discoveries of traces of Roman occupation at the Bossenno and Mont St. Michel, and here describes them modestly, and perhaps a little drily. 162 pages of interesting details admirably and abundantly illustrated." - Acad. Mitchell, S. W. Fat and blood; and how to make them. Modern surface ornament. [24 plates.] 1861-64. Morlev, J. Critical miscellanies. 2 series. Contents. Vol. 1. Vauvenargues. Condorcet. J. de Maistre. Carlyle. - Byron. Some Greek con. ceptions of social growth. On the development of morals. Condorcet, J. A. N. C. Plea for the citizenship of women. 2. France in the 18th century. Robespierre. Turgot. The death of Mr. Mill. Mr. Mill's Autobiography. Mr. Mill on religion. On popular culture. - Macaulay. The Contemp. rev. praises M.'s earnestness, courage, scrupulous honesty, and psychological acuteness. "Mr. Morley has in the course of the last few years risen out of the class of brilliant periodical essayist into the higher class of the very few who influence opinion. He has long had the car of the public as one they are willing to listen to; he is now looked to as one from whom they expect to learn. And he has long exchanged the juvenile gratification of saying a smart thing for the manly satisfaction of trying to say the true thing." Acad. Morris, E. E. The age of Anne. modern hist.) (Epochs of Narjoux. Notes and sketches of an architect in the north-west of Europe. "One of the pleasantest books of light reading which we have met with for some time." - Acad. Nineteenth century. Vol. 1. "The ablest piece of literary criticism in the vol. is the paper on George Sand by F. W. Myers." Nowell, R. Spending of [his] money, 1568-80. That is, his account-book. Oliphant, Mrs. M. O. W. Carità. "Written with more care than usual. Has one or more characters struck out from observation which may live in the reader's memory, and this is saying a good deal for a modern novel." Sat. rev. "Uneven but always pleasant and readable." "Contains, as is inevitable in a story from Mrs. Oliphant, fine observation, and clever semi-cynical remarks on life." Brit. g. rev. Osborn, R. D. Islam under the Arabs. Parkman, F. France and England in N. A. Pt. 5: Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV. Peile, J. F. Philology. (Green's Lit. primers.) "A brief and able résumé; fresh, bold, and inde. pendent treatment of the subject." - Nation. Phelps. Elizabeth Stuart. Story of Avis. "The author is suffering from the common complaint called 'gush', and many of her sentences are little better than those of the authoress of 'St. Elmo'. Yet, in spite of great blemishes, the novel is interesting, almost absorbing. Miss Phelps, for all her unreality and overstraining, does say many good things that show a knowledge of human nature. Her very boldness and excess may have an attraction, but she also has more deserving qualities. She reads women excellently in spite of the alarming pedestal she hoists them upon. The fault of her literary work is not in the conception, but in the execution." Scribner's. "Mr. Dobson keeps closer to nature than Mr. Lockyer, turns more frequently to quaint antique topics and sug. gestions, and cultivates forms of poetic writing which, however successfully used in France and Italy, have seldom been adopted with felicity into our perhaps inflexible tongue. In some of these Mr. Dobson's success is altogether extraordinary. Contains a large num. ber of poems for the due enjoyment of which a good deal of special culture is needed. Mr. Dobson exhibits a well-marked talent for light dramatic dialogue." Pierce, E. L. Memoir and letters of Ch. Sumner. Deals only with Sumner's private and literary life, 1811-45, including his European tour, in which are many entertaining sketches of men famous in literature, art, society, and politics. Pitman, Robert C. Alcohol and the State. ethnology. Prentiss, Mrs. E. Pemaquid; a story of old times in New England. Price, Francis C. Fac-similes illustrating the labours of W. Caxton at Westminster, and the introd. of printinginto Eng., with memoir, etc. Proctor, R. A., Myths and marvels of astronomy. Contents. Astrology. - Religion of the great pyramid. - Mystery of the pyramids. - Swedenborg's visions of other worlds. Other worlds and other universes. Suns in flames. - The rings of Saturn. - Comets as portents. The Innar hoax. Some astronomical paradoxes. Astronomical myths. Origin of the constellation-figures. Radcliffe, C. B., and others. Diseases of the spine and nerves. Ramsay, Allan. Poems with life. tion chrétienne. Virgil. A descriptive monograph, very warmly praised in the Nation. And the N. A. rev. pronounces the book "a masterpiece. Such a piece of critical writing is hardly to be found in English." To be succeeded by a volume on Horace. Séyd, E. The fall in the price of silver. "It is one of the writer's chief objects to show that the imagination in dealing with external nature is as really a truth-discovering faculty as is the intellect, although truths of the imagination are of a different order from those which science ascertains. Beauty, although for its existence it requires a living soul, is no less real than light or gravitation." E. Dowden, in Acad. Sharp, S. Rudiments of geology. Smith, H. B. Faith and philosophy, discourses and essays. Contents. The relations of faith and philosophy. Nature and worth of the science of church history. Reformed churches of Europe and America. - Christian theology as a system. The new latitudinarians of England. Theological system of Emmons. Christian union and ecclesiastical reunion. - Sir W. Hamil. ton's theory of knowledge. Draper's Intellectual de. velopment of Europe. Whedon on the will. Renan's Life of Jesus. - The new faith of Strauss. Southgate, H., Bp. The cross above the crescent; a romance of Constantinople. Stedman, E. C. Hawthorne and other poems. Stieler, K., and others. The Rhine from its source to the sea. Sumner, C. Works. Vol. 12. Sweetser, M. F. Raphael. (Artist-biographies.) Titian. (Artist-biographies.) T., M. W. Sursum corda; hymns for the sick and suffering. Taylor, T. Historical dramas. "Mr. Taylor is a skilful playwright, a fair dramatist, and poor poet. Nation. Theuriet. Gerard's marriage. "A story of provincial life and as fresh and charming in its idyllic simplicity as Goethe's Herman and Dorothea. M. Theuriet is a skillful artist, whose slightest touch tells upon the general effect; we make the acquaintance of a whole village society whose members are as clearly discriminated as the most labored creations of the modern English school." Appleton's journal. Other critics are a little less enthusiastic. Thompson, J. P. The U. S. as a nation; lectures Vapereau, L. G. Dict. univ. des littératures. on the centennial. A convenient book of reference in questions of literary history, literary æsthetics, and composition, and of bibliography. Verne, Jules. Aventures de trois Russes et de trois Anglais. Wagner, R. The Nibelung's ring; a festival play; English words to R. Wagner's Ring des Nibelungen, by A. Forman. Walford, L. B. Pauline. (Leisure hour ser.) By the author of Mr. Smith. "Fully sustains the favorable reputation produced by the writer's former story. To take a commonplace mortal and so to set him before the reader that he shall become a personal acquaintance, this is art. And he has succeeded in the wellnigh impossible task of putting a fairly new Minna and Brenda on paper." - Acad. Wilkinson, J. Narrative of a blockade-runner. Includes a full account of the passage hy the U. S. fleet of the forts below New Orleans, and some new facts about blockade-running. Woolsey, T. D. Political science. 2 v. is the matter with life insurance? Wylie, W. G. Hospitals; their history, organiza tion, and construction. Yonge, Miss C. M. Womankind. "I have no hesitation in declaring my full belief in the inferiority of woman, nor that she brought it upon herself." Chap. 1. A critical account of "The best works on the Eastern question", by E. S., of Constantinople. will be found in the Nation, Nov. 8, p. 284. There is a full and good list (by J. B. Matthews) of modern French plays in the November no. of Scribner's, entitled "French plays for American amateurs". He vouches for his list as not containing a single play "to the reading of which the most fastidious mother could object". All not now in this library will be immediately procured. Daniel Stern was called the Corinne du quai Malaquais, and the Sevigné du 19e siècle; Gaucher pronounces her "Ame romanesque, esprit positif. "Le style a le double mérite de l'éclat et de la netteté, beaucoup d'imagination et immensément d'esprit. Une galerie de curieux tableaux de genre, de por. traits finement tracés, d'ingénieuses remarques, des aperçus piquants et des reflexions un peu sévères sur la société moderne." - Rev. pol. et lit. Aio, pseud. Ceramics; a summary of leading facts in the history of ceramic art. American Acad. of Arts and Sciences. Proceed ings. Vol. 13, pt. 1. Anderson, A. D. The silver country; or, The great southwest. Appleton, T. G. Windfalls. - A Contents. Something about our good things. month in the Adirondacks. A plea for phrenology. Three months in the shadow. The loom of the East. Lavater; or, The two faces. The kingdom of the commonplace. - Were the slave states a part of the nation. - American good-nature. - Our contemporaries. A broken heart. Art, L'. 1877. Vol. 2, 3. The most noteworthy contents of vol. 2 are a paper by Ch. Yriarte on "the great Spanish painter Goya, illustrated by some half dozen of Goya's most striking etchings, stunning in their cold, fierce vigor; a wonderful portrait of a lady by Chaplin in the Paris Salon: Guillemet's Falaises de Dieppe, an impressive stretch of sand and sea overlooked by stupendous cliffs; an essay with illustrations from his own pencil on Théophile Gautier as a painter. and an essay on Mme. de Saux (Mme. Henriette Browne) who has for many years contributed such remarkable Arabic and Moorish pieces to the Paris Salon". - Contemp. rev. Vol. 3 "contains an excellent portrait in etching and fine engraving of M. Thiers; autograph etchings by Saintin, Toussaint, Desbrosses; other fine ones after Jules Breton, Orchardson, Burne, Jones, Diaz, - one in particular by Champollion, after Fortuny's 'Moors and vulture', - and above all, an etching, equally happy in subject and treatment, from Watts's portrait of Lady Lindsay of Balcarres. About the value of all these things there can be no doubt. The last seems to us a work in which the ideal and the real are quite wonder. fully united. There are excellent papers on the last Salon, Sèvres china, and early faïence at Quimper and Rouen. In short, there is a wonderful amount of good art for the money." - Contemp. rev. Arundel Society. Chromolith. Christ's charge to S. Peter; from the fresco by P. Perugino in the Sistine Chapel at Rome. Batterson, Rev. H. G. Christmas carols, and other Black, W. Green pastures and Piccadilly; by B. in conjunction with an American. The scene of part of this novel is laid in America. "The least satisfactory novel from an artistic point of view which Mr. Black has of late years produced, though of course it contains many pleasant touches of humor, much really charming description." - Ath. Bowditch, H.I. Public hygiene in America; centennial discourse, 1876; with corresp. [and] digest of Amer. sanitary law, by H. G. Pickering. Bridgman, M. F. Mosses; [verses]. ! 1 1 Caird, E. Critical account of the philosophy of Kant. A Hegelian commentary on Kant's "Critique of pure reason". Tells "what it was that Kant had to say, how he came to say it as he did, and how it has happened that what he said has had such a different significance for different enquirers in the same field". - Acad. "The introductory chapters contain a good and useful account of Kant's predecessors in modern philos.; in particular, we have for the first time in English such Information about Wolff's system as is needful for the hist, understanding of the remnants of dogmatism which in many places encumber Kant. Some space is also given to the 'præ critical period' of Kant's own philosophical growth." - Sat.rev. "Elaborate and important." - Mind. "I hope at some future time to complete the general plan of this work in another volume on the ethical and æsthetical works of Kant, especially the 'Critique of practical reason' and the 'Critique of judgment."" Preface. Caulfield, L. Annals of St. Fin Barre's Cathedral, Cork. Cesnola, L. P. di. Cyprus; its ancient cities, tombs, and temples; researches and excavations during ten years' residence. Charcot, J. M. Leçons sur les maladies du système nerveux faites à la Salpétrière. Tome 2. Clarke, J. F. Go up higher; or, Religion in com mon life; sermons. Cook, C. The house beautiful; essays on beds, tables, etc. "The book is not a formal trentise, therefore he has suggested the principles of furnishing and decoration rather than formulated them. It will be looked at and read with most pleasure by those who do not much need it, but it cannot fail to stimulate a love of beauty in household ware, even among those who would be lost in a fog if they took it for a guide." - Atlantic. Cook, J. Lectures on biology. Reviewed, not favorably, by "an eminent naturalist of orthodox opinions in religion" in New Englander, Jan. 1878. The intention of the lectures is declared to be excellent, but objection is made to the taste and rhetoric. to the "sensational biology", and to the attempt to prove immortality by the microscope and scalpel. Transcendentalism: with preludes on current Dow, J. Tuck genealogy; Robert Tuck, of Hampton, N. H., and his descendants, 1638-77. Fairbairn, Sir Wm. Life by himself, completed by W. Pole. "Fairbairn put his hand to the first sketches of some of the chief improvements of the age. His course is a justification of the saying that genius consists in the power of taking infinite pains." Ath. Field, H. M., D. D. From Egypt to Japan. "Le livre de Rabelais est une encyclopédie où toutes les théories dont l'ensemble constitue le progrès du 16e siècle sont venues se grouper: réforme de l'éducation, renouvellement de l'esprit humain par les sciences nouvelles et l'étude de l'antiquité; critique des institutions ecclésiastiques, financieres, judiciaires; tolèrance religieuse. M. Fleury a tenu à montrer brièvement les antécédents de toutes ces idées et le développement qu'elles devaient prendre après Rabelais. Dans le dernier chapitre M. Fleury passe en revue tous les jugements portés sur Rabelais par ses ennemis et ses amis." - Rev. pol. et lit. Forbes, A., and Greene, J. W. Rich men of Massachusetts; sketches. 1851. Fortnum, C. D. E. Bronzes. (So. Kensington Museum hand-books.). Friederici, C. Bibliotheca Orientalis; list of books Harvey, P. Reminiscences and anecdotes of Daniel Webster. Hedge, F. H. Ways of the Spirit, and other essays. Contents. The way of history. - The way of religion. The way of historic Christianity. - The way of his torie atonement. Natural history of theism. - Critique of proofs of the Being of God. - Origin of things. God of religion, or the human God. - Dualism and optimism. Pantheism. The two religions. The mythical element in the N. T. Incarnation and transubstantiation. - The human soul. Henshaw, Col. W. Orderly book, Apr. 20 Sept. 26, 1775. Herbert, E., Lord of Cherbury. Lives of Lord A diary of occurrences at the time of the coup d'état of December 1851. Over 100,000 copies have been sold. "All that he tells has been told and well told before by others. Tenot's work, which appeared towards the end of the Empire, is still by far the best account of Louis Napoleon's conspiracy and of the causes which favored its success. Schælcher's indignant narrative, published within a few months after the events it narrates, is still the best record of the sentiments entertained in 1851 and 1852 by all honest men. Nor have Victor Hugo's reminiscences all the power which might be expected from a protest against an infamous and successful crime uttered by the greatest of living French writers. The work is as a literary performance not quite equal to its author's reputation. But if it be considered as a political pamphlet, aimed at the conspirators of to-day, it will be perceived to be a work of which it is hardly possible to exaggerate the importance." - Nation. Hunterian Club. [Publications.] Nos. 33-40. Contents. No. 33. Rowlands, S. A sacred memorie of the miracles of Christ. 34. Rowlands, S. A whole crew of kind gossips. 35. Lodge, T. Scillæ's metamorphosis. 36. Lodge, T. A Margarite of America. 37. Rowlands, S. Heavens glory. Earths vanity. Hels torments. 38. Rowlands, S. Doctor Merrie-man. 39. Rowlands, S. Famous history of Guy, Earl of Warwick. 40. Bannatyne, G. The Bannatyne ms. Pt. 3. Ihne, J. A. F. W. History of Rome. Vol. 3. Thought to be less interesting than the preceding volumes. International Medical Congress of Phila. Transactions, 1876. Johns, E. W.? (pseud. Evan ap Coel). The silver wedding; romaunt de Moyen Age. Johnson, A. H. The Normans in Europe. "An excellent little manual of the hist. of the Norman incursions and settlements in Europe from the 9th to the 12th century." 19th cent. Kertbeny, K. M. Bibliografie ungarischer Litera tur. 1s Heft. King, T. S. Substance and show, and other lectures; ed. with introd. by E. P. Whipple. Ladson, G. S. Lotos land, and other poems. Lamb, C. and M. Poetry for children, and Prince Dorus. First published in London, 1809. 2 v. 18°; reprinted, Boston, 1812. The English edition has been lost since 1827 till last spring when a copy was found in South Australia. Two copies of the American edition are known to exist. Legouvé, G. J. B. E. W. Théâtre de campagne. Contents. le sér. Legouvé, G. J. B. E. W. Ma fille et mon bien; comédie. - Meilhac, H. Paturel; com. Bornier, vicomte A.de. Le monde renversé; com. Hervilly, E. de. La soupière; com. Legouvé, G. J. B. E. W. Autour d'un berceau. - Normand, J. Les petits cadeaux; com. Hervilly, E. de. Silence dans les rangs! com. - Legouvé, G. J. B. E. W. La fleur de Flemcen; com. Le Reboullet, A. Avant le bal. Choieçke, C. E. Un salon d'attente; com. 2e sér. Labiche, E. M. La lettre chargée; fantaisie. Droz, G. Les crises de monseigneur; com. Gondinet, E. Le mari qui dort; com. Sollohub, le comte V. Sa canne et son chapeau; com. Hervilly, E d'. Vent d'ouest; com. - Theuriet, A. La vieille maison: com. Sollohub, le comte V. Une sérénade; scène proverbe. Gondinet, E. Les convictions de papa; com. M. Legouvé, of the French Academy, was the literary partner of Scribe and the author of Médée. "None of these little plays is in the least immoral, and, with the exception, indeed, of two of the ten, 'Paturel', by M. Meilhac, and 'Les petits cadeaux', by M. Normand (which, although in no sense improper, may suggest phases of life of which the young mind is fortunately likely to be ignorant), there is nothing in the volume to offend the most fastidious. For students of French no longer novices, and seeking to acquire idioms and collo. quial phrases of use in actual talk, these plays, written in just the right conversational key, are very well adapted; and for acting in the parlor or reading aloud it would be difficult to surpass some of them, notably the two comedies of M. Ernest d'Hervilly, of which one especially. La soupière, slightly in the style of 'A morning call', and gracefully satirizing the chinamania of the day, is particularly polished and pointed." tion, noticing the 1st series. In the 2d series, 'La lettre chargée' and 'La vieille maison' are said to be "très joli"; 'Les crises de monseigneur', and 'Une sérénade' to be "très bête". Nu Linas, C. de. Les origines de l'orfévrerie cloisonnée. "J'appelle orfévrerie cloisonnée un travail particulier de joaillerie qui consiste à incruster à froid dans des alvéoles d'or, ou, par extension, dans une plaque de métal découpée à jour, soit des pâtes vitreuses, soit des lames de verre, soit des pierres précieuses taillées en table, soit enfin des cabochons, disposés de manière à former un ensemble décoratif, une sorte de mosaique." - Pref. Linton, Mrs. E. L. The world well lost. "Les additions comprennent en première ligne un Rev. d. London Library. Catalogue; by R. Harrison. Lorenz, O. Catalogue annuel, 1876. Lytton, E. R. B., 2d Baron Lytton. Julian Fane; a memoir, [with his literary remains]. Fane "was. I think, the most graceful and accomplished gentleman of the generation he adorned". Lytton. Similar appreciation comes from Henry Reeve, Forster, and others; and Morley speaks of his "refined and delicate nature, his graceful, poetic, and subtle in.. tellect, and the singular and remarkable charm of man. ner"; he says he never "found any one out of America more unwavering in his belief and sympathy, or more intelligent and appreciative as to the causes and progress of [our] great conflict than he was". Macy, Capt. W. H. There she blows! or, The log of the Arethusa. ancient history.) (Epochs of Mitchell, D. G. About old story-tellers: of how and when they lived, and what stories they told. Short biographies of the great story-tellers, Scott, DeFoe, Goldsmith, Swift, Bunyan, etc., and sketches of the stories they wrote. Mr. Mitchell confesses "a lurking fondness for those good old-fashioned stories which were current forty years ago - and some of them may be a hundred years ago-written in good straightforward English. I cannot outlive the zest with which I first pored over the story of 'Lazy Lawrence' or 'Barring out'."- Bookbuyer. Muffel, N. Beschreibung der Stadt Rom; hrsg. von W. Vogt. Newfane, Vt. Centennial proceedings and histor ical facts; [by a committee]. O'Callaghan, John Cornelius. History of the Irish brigades in the service of France. Palestine Exploration Fund. Quarterly state ment. [Dec. 22, 1877. caves of Derbyshire. Perkins, F. B. Devil-puzzlers, and other studies. Odd, bright, and amusing. Plumptre, E. H. Popular exposition of the epistles to the seven churches of Asia. Poor, H. V. Money and its laws. Summary. "Part 1. An abstract discussion of the Laws of money, in which it is shown that gold and silver became money, without convention or compact, from the universal and instinctive desire for their possession; that their value depends upon cost alone. Part 2. A critical History of money from the earliest times. In it is shown that Aristotle is the source of all monetary theories now prevailing; that his assumption that money is a creature of convention or compact, has, with little variations, been fully accepted by all succeeding writers, all hold. ing that the most worthless of substances might be made money which would circulate at the value of coin, provided their amount did not exceed that necessary for the exchanges that were taking place; in other words, that money was a 'medium of exchange', value itself being no necessary attribute of it; an erroneous assumption. Part 3. A history of currency and banking in the United States." "The laws of money' is clearly and strongly written. In the 'History of monetary theories' all the writers of note on money are reviewed by Mr. Poor, and are criticised unsparingly." - N. Y. Ev'g. Post. Prime, W. C. Pottery and porcelain of all times and nations. "Mr. Elliott's work should be possessed for the com. pendiousness and practicality of its information and for the superior elegance and variety of its illustrations; and Dr. Prime's treatise should be at hand for consultation on difficult or obscure points, and for filling in the details of one's knowledge. The list of marks on pottery and porcelain in Dr. Prime's book is believed to be the most complete that has appeared in any single volume, and beginners will find much useful advice in the chapter on 'Collectors and collecting in America'." Appleton's journ. Prince of Argolis; with illustrations by J. M. Smith. "The illustrations are excellent, following the best authorities in their representation of architecture and costume, including specimens of early sculpture and pottery in the British Museum and Schliemann's discoveries in the Troad. A lad with any liveliness of imagination would be led on by these to further study of such matter in other and graver works." - Lippincott. Prior, R. C. A. Popular names of British plants; [their] origin and meaning; a [dictionary]. Quaritch, B. General catalogue of books: Supplement, 1875-77. Raymond, Prof. G. L. Ideas made real, [and Haydn; verses]. Renan, E. Les évangiles et la seconde génération chrétienne, (74-117). According to the Revue pol. et lit. 'pour M. Renan les hommes sont plus que les doctrines. Ce n'est pas une certaine théorie sur la justification et la ré. demption que a fait la Réforme; c'est Luther, c'est Cal. vin. Le parsisme, le judaïsme, l'hellénisme auraient pu se combiner sous toutes les formes sans produire ce fait unique, fécond, grandiose, qui s'appelle le christianisme. Ce fait est l'œuvre de Jésus, de saint Paul, de |