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(1859) [MARC] Author: W. Mattieu Williams
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smith, elder ^istjd co.

NEW PUBLICATIONS—continued.
Gunnery in 1858: a Treatise on Rifles, Cannon,

and Sporting Arms. By William Greener, Author of
"The Gun."

Demy Svo, with Illustrations, price 14s., clotli.

’A very comprehensive work. Those who
jeruse it will know almost all, if not all, that
looks can teach them of guns and gunnery."—
Nanni and Military Gazette.

" The most interesting work of the kind that
ins come under our notice."—Saturday Review.

" We can confidently recommend this book of
Gunnery, not only to the professional student,
Nut also to the sportsman."—Naval and Military
Herald.

" Mr. Greener’s treatise is suggestive, ample,
and elaborate, and deals with the entire subject
systematically."—Athenæum.

"A work of great practical value, which bids
fair to stand, for many years to conic, the cliiet
practical authority on the subject."— ililitari/
Spectator.

"An acceptable contribution to professional
literature, written in a popular style."—United
Service ilatjazine.

^Phantasies: a Faerie Romance for Men and
Women. By George MacDonald, Author of " Within
and Without." Post 8vo, price 10s. Gel. cloth.

" ’Phantastes’ is, in some respects, original;
we know of nothing with which it can he fairly
compared. It must be read, and re-read. There
is an indescribable, nameless grace in the mixture
of deep thought and bright coloured fancy which
pervades the whole."—Globe.

" ’ i’han tastes’ will be read for its story—for its
hidden meaning and solemn teaching." — New
Quarterly.

" The work is one which will form a source of
agreeable reading to many. It is replete with

wild imagery, strange flights of fancy, and
beautiful descriptions of nature."—Daily Telegraph.

" Not without fine fancy, considerable invention,
and an occasional vein of real poetic feeling."—
Lender.

"The whole book is instinct with poetry, witli
delicate perception of the hidden emotions of the
soul, with thought, and with ideal truth. The
story is in fact a parable—an allegory of human
life, its temptations and its sorrows."—Literary
Gazette.

Esmond. By W. M. Thackeray, Esq.

A New Edition, being the Third, in One Volume, Crown 8vo, price 6s. cloth.

" Apart from its special merits ’ Esmond ’ must
he read just now as an introduction to ’The
Virginians.’ It is quite impossible fully to understand
and enjoy the latter story without a knowledge
of ’ Esmond.’ The new tale is in the strictest
sense the sequel of the old, not only introducing
the same characters, but continuing their history
at a later period."—Leader.

" The book has the great charm of reality.
Queen Anne’s colonel writes his life—anda very
interesting life it is—just as a Queen Anne’s
colonel might be supposed to have written it.
Mr. Thackeray lias selected for his hero a very
noble type of the cavalier softening into the man

of the eighteenth century, and for his heroine,
one of the sweetest women that ever breathed
from canvas or from book since Kaffaelle painted
and Shakespeare wrote."—Spectator.

"Once more we feel that we have before us a
masculine and thoroughly English writer, uniting
ho power of subtle analysis, with a strong
volition and a moving eloquence—an eloquence
which has gained in richness and harmony.
’Esmond’ must be read, not for its characters,
but for its romantic plot, its spirited grouping,
and its many thrilling utterances of the anguish
of the human heart."—Athenæum.

The Education of the Human Race. Now
first Translated from the German of Lessing.

Fcap. 8vo, antique cloth, price 4s.
*** This remarkable work is now first published in English.

" An agreeable and flowing translation of one
ol’ Lessing’s liuest Essays."—National Review.

" The Essay makes quite a gem in its English
form."— Westminster Review.

" This invaluable tract."— Critic.

"A little book on a great subject, and one which,
in its day, exerted no slight influence upon
European thought,"—Inquirer.

Homely Ballads for the Working Man s

Fireside. By Mary Sewell.

Seventh Thousand. Post 8vo, cloth, One Shilling.

" Very good verses conveying very useful
lessons."— Literary Gazette.

" Simple poems, well suited to the taste of the
classes for whom they are written."—Globe.

" There is a real homely flavour about them, and
tliey contain sound and wholesome lessons."—
Critic.

The Endowed Schools of Ireland. By Harriet

MaRTINEAU. 8vo, 3s. 6d., cloth, boards.

" The friends of education will do well to possess themselves of this book."—Spectator.

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