Изображения страниц
PDF
EPUB

'KNOWLEDGE' LIBRARY SERIES.

Crown 8vo. cloth, price 6s. each; postage 6d, each extra.

THE BORDERLAND OF SCIENCE. A Series of Familiar Dissertations on Stars; Planets and Meteors; Sun and Moon; Gambling; Earthquakes; Flying Machines; Coal; Coincidences; Ghosts, &c. By RICHARD A. PROCTOR, Author of Science Byways,' 'Saturn,' 'The Sun,' 'The Moon,' The Universe,' &c.

Mr. Proctor is one of the few English writers who can treat scientific subjects popularly, without either vulgarising them or lapsing into inaccuracy. In his charming pages every educated person will find instruction and solid information deftly combined with amusement.'-DAILY TELEGRAPH.

SCIENCE BYWAYS. A Series of Familiar Dissertations on Life in Other Worlds; Comets and the Sun; the North Pole; Danger from Lightning; Growth and Decay of Mind; the Brain and Mental Feats; Automata, &c. &c. To which is appended an Essay entitled Money for Science.' By RICHARD A. PROCTOR, Author of 'Saturn,' 'The Sun,' &c. &c.

'A clear as well as interesting summary of many subjects concerning which public interest has been aroused by recent research or discovery.'-WESTMINSTER REVIEW.

• Mr. Proctor has the happy knack, much rarer than he seems to think it, of putting a really scientific article into an attractive form.'-BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW.

THE POETRY OF ASTRONOMY. A Series of Familiar Essays on the Heavenly Bodies regarded less in their strictly Scientific Aspects than as suggesting Thoughts respecting Infinities of Time and Space, of Variety, of Vitality, and of Development. By RICHARD A. PROCTOR, Author of The Borderland of Science,'The Sun,' &c.

'Interesting in the highest degree, and at the same time quite capable of being appreciated without special acquaintance with the subject.'-SPECTATOR.

Whatever Mr. Proctor writes has about it grace and finish, and we can pay him, as a man of science, no higher or more merited compliment than to say that, if all natural philosophers would discard as completely as he does all technical jargon, their favourite branch of study would be perused more widely and studied with greater avidity than it is.'-WORLD.

Every Friday, price 2d.; post-free, 21d.; Yearly, post-free (Weekly Nos.), 10s. 6d. Also issued in Monthly Parts. KNOWLEDGE: an Illustrated Magazine of Science, plainly worded-exactly described. Edited by RICHARD A. PROCTOR. Volume II. nearly ready, comprising the numbers published from June to December 1882. The Third Volume commences January 5, 1883.

WYMAN & SONS, Office of KNOWLEDGE,' 74-76 Great Queen Street, London, W.C.; And may be had of all Booksellers.

WORKS BY RICHARD A.

PROCTOR.

FLOWERS OF THE SKY. With 55 Illustrations. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 4s. 6d.
EASY STAR LESSONS. With Star Maps for Every Night in the Year, Drawings
of the Constellations, &c. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.
FAMILIAR SCIENCE STUDIES.

Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 78. 6d.

MYTHS AND MARVELS OF ASTRONOMY. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s. PLEASANT WAYS IN SCIENCE. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.

ROUGH WAYS MADE SMOOTH: Familiar Essays on Scientific Subjects. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 68.

OUR PLACE AMONG INFINITIES: A Series of Essays Contrasting our Little Abode in Space and Time with the Infinities Around us. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.

THE EXPANSE OF HEAVEN: A Series of Essays on the Wonders of the Firmament. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.

SATURN AND ITS SYSTEM. New and Revised Edition, with 13 Steel Plates, demy 8vo. cloth extra, 10s. 6d.

THE GREAT PYRAMID: Observatory, Tomb, and Temple. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 68.

MYSTERIES OF TIME AND SPACE. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 78. 6d. [In preparation.

WAGES AND WANTS OF SCIENCE WORKERS. Crown Svo. 1s. 6d. "Mr. Proctor, of all writers of our time, best conforms to Matthew Arnold's conception of a man of culture, in that he strives to humanise knowledge and divest it of whatever is harsh, crude, or technical, and so makes it a source of happiness and brightness for all.'-WESTMINSTER REVIEW.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.

WORKS BY ROBERT BUCHANAN.

'The dumb, wistful yearning in man to something higher-yearning such as the animal creation showed in the Greek period towards the human-has not as yet found any interpreter equal to Buchanan.'-THE SPECTATOR.

In the great power of appealing to universal Humanity lies Buchanan's security. The light of Nature has been his guide, and the human heart his study. He must unquestionably attain an exalted rank among the poets of this century, and produce works which cannot fail to be accepted as incontestably great, and worthy of the world's preservation.'-CONTEMPORARY REVIEW.

'Buchanan is the most faithful poet of Nature among the new men. He is her familiar. Like no British poet, save himself, he knows her.'-STEDMAN'S VICTORIAN POETS.

BALLADS of LIFE, LOVE, and HUMOUR.

With a Frontispiece by ARTHUR HUGHES. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 68.

The present volume exhibits nothing more plainly than the author's knowledge of life, his acquaintance with the world, and his powerful grasp of actual fact....Judas Iscariot" is a poem of which any man whatever might be proud...." The Lights of Leith " is a truly noble ballad, full of tender feeling and right purpose, impregnated with spiritual and vivified by earthly love....In this book Mr. Buchanan affords his readers a most complete view of his many gifts.'-ACADEMY.

When you come to poems of real passion or humour. there is no sign of the decay of that power which was so remarkable in Mr. Buchanan's earlier volumes. "The Lights of Leith" has much lurid power. "The Wedding of Shon Maclean" and " O'Connor's Wake" are as good as poems of that sort could possibly be.'-SPECTATOR. "There is much poetry of a high class in this volume. The poem called "The Churchyard" is absolutely faultless in its quiet beauty.'-VANITY FAIR.

'It is no small thing to be able to say of a poet, what can be justly said of Mr. Buchanan, that his works are uniformly good, finished, and artistic; not thin and meagre, but full-bodied and vigorous.'-DUNDEE ADVERTISER. SELECTED POEMS of ROBERT BUCHANAN. With a Frontispiece by THOMAS DALZIEL. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 63.

UNDERTONES. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 68.
LONDON POEMS. Crown Svo. cloth extra, 6s.

The BOOK of ORM. Crown Svo. cloth extra, 68.

IDYLS and LEGENDS of INVERBURN.

Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.

ST. ABE and his SEVEN WIVES: a Tale of Salt Lake City. With a Frontispiece by A. B. HOUGHTON. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 5s. WHITE ROSE and RED: a Love Story.

Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.

The SHADOW of the SWORD: a Romance.
Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 3s. 6d.; post 8vo. illustrated boards, 2s.

A CHILD of NATURE: a Romance.

Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

GOD and the MAN: a Romance.

With Illustrations by FRED. Barnard. Crown Svo. cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

The HEBRID ISLES: Wanderings in the Land of Lorne and the Outer Hebrides. With Frontispiece by WILLIAM SMALL. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 6s.

This beautiful volume is altogether worthy of a poet with Mr. Robert Buchanan's high aspirations and descriptive powers. It is equally skilful in portraying human character, social habits, and living creatures.'

TABLET.

Many brilliant romances have familiarised southern readers with some of the scenes described in his Highland wanderings, and it is equally certain that in none of these romances shall we find the fidelity to nature, the knowledge of the character and temperament of the people, or indeed the intimate familiarity with the aspects of sea and shore, and the sights and sounds of the vegetable and animal world, that are authentically recorded in these pages. No surer test of this judgment could be applied than a comparison of the romances referred to with the story of "Eiradh of Canna" which is contained in this volume. In view of the agitation among the Skye crofters those portions of the book which deal with the inhabitants of that island will possess a special interest and value at the present moment.'-GLASGOW HERALD.

'Not even Mr. Black knows the Highlands better than Mr. Buchanan does, and the latter's description of "The Land of Lorne" will always be admired for its vivid thoroughness. Moreover, Mr. Buchanan extends his purview to the " Hebrid Isles, set far amid the melancholy main," which have not yet been made so familiar to the Southron; and it is Mr. Buchanan's references to these which will be read with special interest. The volume is one which will be acceptable to all lovers of the picturesque, not only in style but in nature.'-NOTTINGHAM GUARDIAN.

'Out of sight the finest book on the Western Highlands.'-CHRISTIAN LEADER.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.

LIBRAIRIE DE L'ART.

LONDON: 134 New Bond Street. PARIS: 33 Avenue de l'Opéra.

BIBLIOTHÈQUE INTERNATIONALE DE L'ART.

Under the Direction of M. EUGÈNE MÜNTZ,

Superintendent of the Library, Archives, and Museum of the National School of Fine Arts.
FIRST SERIES.

NOW READY.

The Amateurs of Ancient France.-Le Surintendant Foucquet. By EDMOND BONNAFFÉ. In paper cover, 8s. 6d.; bound in cloth, 12s. 6d. Twenty-five copies on Dutch paper and numbered, £1. The Forerunners of the Renaissance. By EUGÈNE MUNTZ. With more than 60 Illustrations. In paper cover, 178.; bound in cloth, £1. Twenty-five copies on Dutch paper and numbered, £2.

The Early History of Porcelain in Europe from the Fifteenth to the Seventeenth Century. By Baron DAVILLIER.

The Della Robbia. By J. CAVALLUCCI.

TO APPEAR SHORTLY.

Artistic Education in France.-Government Schools of Art. New Edition, Revised and
Enlarged. By LOUIS COURAJOD.
History of the Gobelins Tapestry, from its Commencement to the Present Day.
By ALFRED DARCEL.

History of Byzantine Miniature, By N. KONDAKOFF.

The Museums of Germany. By MILE MICHEL.

The Correspondents of Michael-Angelo. A Collection of Unpublished Letters, addressed to Michael-
Angelo by the Principal Artists and Literary Men of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries.
Claude Lorrain. From Unpublished Documents. By Mrs. PATTISON.

Ghiberti and his School. By CHARLES PERKINS.

Tapestry in Olden Times.-The Peplos of Athene Parthenos. New Edition, completely The Historic Tapestries of Brussels and their Marks. By ALPHONSE WAUTERS.

Revised. By LOUIS DE RONCHAUD.

[blocks in formation]

FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM (INCLUDING POSTAGE).-One Year, £5. 5s.; Six Months, £2. 12s. 6d.; Three Months, £1. 78. FOR THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA (INCLUDING POSTAGE).-One Year, £6. 3s.; Six Months, £3. 28.; Three Months, £1. 11s.

FOR INDIA AND THE COLONIES (INCLUDING POSTAGE).-One Year, £7. 5s.; Six Months, £3. 123. 6d.; Three Months, £1. 178. Single Numbers, with One Etching, 2s.; with Two Etchings, 4s. Subscribers can, at their option, receive the Journal either in Weekly Numbers or Quarterly Volumes. Single Volumes purchased after publication, £1. 15s.; in boards, with gilt tops, £2; with gilt edges, £2. 28. Subscriptions may commence from 1st January, 1st April, 1st July, and 1st October.

The Annual Subscribers to L'ART have the exclusive right to the large Presentation Plates published every year. EDITIONS OF EXTRA QUALITY.

L'ART publishes two Editions of superior quality: the first, limited to 100 copies, with the text upon Dutch paper, is accompanied by two series of Plates, the one with letters and the other a proof before letters on Japanese paper; the second, limited to five copies, has four series of Plates, viz., upon Dutch paper with letters, upon Japanese paper before letters, upon vellum before letters, upon Whatman before letters. These Editions are numbered, and the proofs before letters bear the Artist's signature.

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.-For the Edition of 100 copies, £16 a year; for the Edition of five copies. £48 a year. Subscriptions for these Editions are not received for less than a year, All Subscriptions are payable in advance.

L'ART for 1875.

The original Edition of L'ART has been completely exhausted, and a Second Edition, limited to 500 copies, has now been published, and can be purchased at the following prices:

TO SUBSCRIBERS.

[ocr errors]

Paper Covers

£6 0 0 Cloth, gilt tops.. 6 16 0

10 0 0 L'ART for 1878, Paper Covers .. £5 10 0| Cloth, gilt edges £6 14 0

TO NON-SUBSCRIBERS.
Paper Covers .. £5 10 0 Cloth, gilt edges £6 8 0 Paper Covers .. £7 0 0
Cloth, gilt tops.. 6 2 0 Half calf
810 0 Cloth, gilt tops.. 7 12
L'ART for 1876 and 1877.
Cloth, gilt edges £7 4 0
Half calf

0

[ocr errors]

Cloth, gilt edges €7 18 0
Half calf
10 0 0

..

Paper Covers £7 10
Cloth, gilt tops.. 8 6
1879, and 1880.

0

0

[ocr errors]

Cloth, gilt edges £8 14 0
Half calf
11 10 0

..

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

All Cheques to be crossed London and Westminster Bank,' and Post-Office Orders to be made payable to Remington & Co., at the Bond Street Post-Office.

LONDON OFFICE:-134 NEW BOND STREET.

Advertisements are also received for the Covers of L'ART, full particulars given on application

Crown 8vo. cloth extra, for the Library, 3s. 6d. each.

THE PICCADILLY NOVELS.

Popular Stories by the Best Authors.

BY MRS. ALEXANDER.
Maid, Wife, or Widow ?

BY WALTER BESANT AND JAMES RICE.
Ready-Money Mor-

tiboy.

My Little Girl.
The Case of Mr. Lu-
craft.

This Son of Vulcan.
With Harp & Crown.
The Golden Butter-
fly.

BY ROBERT

A Child of Nature.
The Shadow of the
Sword.

Antonina.

Basil.

By Celia's Arbour.
Monks of Thelema.
"Twas in Trafalgar's
Bay.

The Seamy Side.

The Ten Years'
Tenant.

The Chaplain of the
Fleet.
BUCHANAN.

God and the Man.
The Martyrdom of

Madeline.

BY WILKE COLLINS.

[blocks in formation]

Poor Miss Finch.
Miss or Mrs?
The New Magdalen.
The Frozen Deep.
The Law and the
Lady.

The Two Destinies.
The Haunted Hotel.
The Fallen Leaves.
Jezebel's Daughter.

The Black Robe.

BY MRS. H. L. CAMERON.

Deceivers Ever.

Olympia.

Juliet's Guardian.

BY WILLIAM CYPLES.
Hearts of Gold.

BY M. BETHAM-EDWARDS.

Felicia.

BY MRS. ANNIE EDWARDES.

Archie Lovell.

BY R. E. FRANCILLON.
Queen Cophetua.
BY EDWARD GARRETT,
The Capel Girls.
BY CHARLES

Robin Gray.

For Lack of Gold.

[blocks in formation]

GIBBON.

Queen of the Mea-
dow.

In Pastures Green.
A Heart's Problem.
The Flower of the
Forest.

HARDY.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

BY MRS. J. H. RIDDELL.

Her Mother's Darling.

Prince of Wales's Garden Party.

BY JOHN

Bound to the Wheel.
One Against the
World.

BY T. W.

SAUNDERS.

Guy Waterman.
The Lion in the Path
The Two Dreamers.
SPEIGHT.

The Mysteries of Heron Dyke.
BY BERTHA THOMAS.
Proud Maisie.

The Violin-player.

Cressida.

BY SARAH TYTLER.

What She Came
Through.

BY ANTHONY
Way We Live Now.
American Senator.
Frau Frohmann.

The Bride's Pass.

TROLLOPE.

Diamond Cut Dia-
mond.
Marion Fay.

BY J. S. WINTER.
Cavalry Life.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.

SECOND EDITION NOW READY OF

DR. ANDREW WILSON'S NEW WORK.
Crown 8vo. cloth extra, with 259 Illustrations, 7s. 6d.

CHAPTERS ON EVOLUTION.

A Popular History of the Darwinian and Allied Theories of Development.

By ANDREW WILSON, Ph.D., F.R.S. Edin., &c.

'Dr. Wilson stands in the first rank of those scientific writers who are doing their best to popularise the theory of evolution, and his present volume is an excellent sample of his careful and accurate handiwork. It deals succinctly and popularly with the evidences of evolution, mainly in the animal world, as furnished by rudimentary organs, by tails, limbs, and lungs, by homologies, by connecting links, existing or extinct, by embryological development and by degeneration. Among the best of these chapters is that on colonial organisms, which contains an excellent and philosophical account of a part of the subject never yet placed in plain language before the wider public. The illustrations are admirably selected, and include all the best examples of intermediate forms or serial development. We should be ungrateful to Dr. Wilson for a very excellent book if we did not add that it may be read with pleasure even by the most unlearned, and that its own illustrations are usually amply sufficient to enable one to follow all its reasoning.'-PALL MALL GAZETTE.

A book eminently deserving of careful study. The chief aid of the work," says Dr. Wilson," is to present, in a popular and readily understood form, the chief evidences of the evolution of living beings. In this view, whilst I have been content to assume the reality of that process, I have also endeavoured to marshall the more prominent facts of zoology and botany, which serve to prove that evolution, broadly considered, is not merely a name for an unknown tendency in nature, but is an actual factor in the work of moulding the life with which the universe teems." It would be extremely difficult to state in a shorter manner the object and the character of the work. But it must be added that Dr. Wilson has marshalled his facts in an extremely able manner, that he has sought all through animate nature for the evidence of the process that is constantly going on, and that he has put this evidence before his reader with great skill and in a most attractive manner. The volume contains nearly 400 pages of closely-printed matter, and is studded with illustrations. It has an admirable index, and altogether it bears evidence not merely of the industry of its author, but of the extent to which he has studied the questions with which it deals.'-SCOTSMAN.

1Le author's aim has been to present, "in a popular and readily understood form, the chief evidences of the evolution of living beings." With this view the more prominent facts of zoology and botany have been adduced, to show that evolution is not merely an unknown tendency in nature, but an actual factor in the work of moulding the life with which the universe teems." The work, which will be read with interest by all for whom the subject has any attraction, contains upwards of 250 illustrations.'-CHRISTIAN WORLD.

As a comprehensive guide to the general scope of the subject of biology with especial reference to the established theory of evolution, no better book has yet been published than the one now under review. The mass of facts and their effective marshalling sufficiently explain the delay which has occurred in the issuing of the volume. Dr. Wilson, moreover, combines with a brilliant mastery of his subject a literary style which is only too rare an accompaniment of great acquirements in science. In this he fairly ranks with Huxley and Lubbock, to the latter of whom he dedicates his work.'-INQUIRER.

Dr. Wilson is not only at all times a bright and attractive writer, but he has in these pages brought together a more complete summary of the different aspects of the evolution theory than can as yet be found anywhere else in the same popular form. The reader who has got through his pages-and they are very easy to get through-will carry with him ever after a grasp of the general relations between all the realms of living nature which he will feel to be worth a great deal. This is a high praise, and it is a pleasure to be able to bestow it heartily.'-NONCONFORMIST.

'Dr. Wilson's very remarkable volume; his elaborate work.'-TABLET.

Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s.

AMERICAN HUMORISTS.

Including WASHINGTON IRVING, OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, ARTEMUS WARD, MARK TWAIN, and BRET HARTE.

By the Rev. H. R. HAWEIS, M.A.

Mr. Haweis's book is written in a form which exactly suits the subject. Six leading humorists are treated of, in as many chapters, and Mr. Haweis has distilled the essence of their wit, and encased it in delightfully rambling, illustrative, anecdotal remarks of his own, which make a good foil for the numerous sparks of wit quoted from the American writers. A series of essays so light and so enjoyable have not appeared for a long time.'-DUNDEE ADVERTISER.

Last year the Rev. H. R. Haweis delivered a series of lectures at the Royal Institution, London, on "American Humorists." The lectures were very much relished, and Mr. Haweis thought that they would be welcome to many readers. We are inclined to think that he is right. There will be general satisfaction that he has published criticisms on men like Washington Irving, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Artemus Ward, Mark Twain, and Bret Harte. There can be no doubt that his criticisms are all suggestive, and that he brings out, for the benefit of those who have not read much of American literature, a good deal of that humour which runs through the productions of some of the American humorists, and thus adds to the general stock of human knowledge. Mr. Haweis has unquestionably taken the greatest of the American humorists, but he might have found others to add to them of scarcely less interest. The volume is well got up, and is sure to be widely read.'-SCOTSMAN.

A good deal may be learned from these lectures. He quotes well and effectively, and it is not impossible tl.at not a few may date their first acquaintance with a suggestive and amusing field of literature from the perusal of these lectures.'-NONCONFORMIST.

'These six lectures comprise a keen Lut very appreciative analysis of the writings of the half-dozen Americans who have in great part revolutionised our ideas of humour.. The extracts furnished by Mr. Haweis are thoroughly typical, and his criticisms are unusually clear and sometimes exhaustive.'-WORLD.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.

« ПредыдущаяПродолжить »