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The Manual of the Antiquity of Man, by J. P. MacLean [Robert Clarke & Co., Cincinnati. $1.00], presents in a compact form a pretty full outline of the facts and arguments bearing on this much-vexed question. The writer holds to man's extreme antiquity, dating back to the miocene period, or earlier, when he first appeared in a condition "very little removed from the brute;" and reviews his progress briefly through the various epochs to the present. There are a good many mistakes in the book; the wood-cuts are coarse, and the general appearance is far from attractive. That the eighth edition has been already called for, however, shows the public appreciation of its plain, pointblank way of putting things.

the preeminent position it has held for the come down to us, the spelling appears to be
last.
"Shakspere"; but then, as Mr. Furnivall states,
there are only five of them in all. If there were
more of them, the case might not be so good a
one for the advocates of that orthography. "Are
we to suppose," some one has asked, "that
Shakespeare didn't know how to spell his own
name?" And the question has been answered
by another: "Are we to suppose that he didn't
know how to spell it in more than one way?" That
was the free-and-easy fashion of the time, with
regard to family names as well as other words;
and Shakespeare unquestionably allowed other
people to spell his name as we do, whatever may
have been his personal habit. On more than
fifty title-pages of plays and poems printed
during his life the name is either "Shakespeare"
or "Shake-speare." In the six editions of his
Venus and Adonis published before his death,
the dedication is signed "William Shakespeare";
and the same is true of his Lucrece. We cannot
doubt that this was according to the poet's de-
sire, or at least by his sanction. His personal
friends, including the scholarly Ben Jonson, fol-
low the same orthography. So does Milton, so
does Davenant, who was the poet's godson, and
so does almost every writer of that generation.
Falstaff signs himself "Jack Falstaff with my
familiars, John with my brothers and sisters, and
Sir John with all Europe"; and the dramatist,
his will for his "familiars" and relatives, appears
even if he wrote himself down "Shakspere" in
to have preferred, or at least consented, to be
known as Shakespeare" with all England, as
he now is with nearly all the world.

SHAKESPEARIANA.

[EDITED BY W. J. ROLFE, CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS.] "Shakespeare," or "Shakspere," or What? -Mr. Furnivall sends us the following note of his from a recent number of the London Daily

News:

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founder of Maryland.

If he is a Romanist, he is certainly a "broad one, as the following forcible passage from his comments on King John (which we are glad to have an excuse for quoting) may show:

An important figure in the play of King John is Cardinal Pandulph, the Pope's legate. At that period papal power was paramount. Of Pandulph Shakespeare avails himself to reprethat he is empowered by Heaven to be the sent a typical priest, that is, a man who assumes exclusive, infallible expounder and interpreter of heavenly things, to guide and rule the spirituality of other men -an assumption which, concentratiniquity of despotism, is a blasphemy towards ing in itself the guilt of usurpation with the God and an offense and an insult to man. One wonders at the ignominious moral subjection of show of indignant scorn at its weakness and an age that bowed before such tyranny; but a superstition is checked by the sudden reflection that ourselves live in the shadow of this tyranny, and that, if incorporated sacerdotalism has, through the working of mental emancipation, the strengthening and purifying of the individual conscience, been shorn of much of its authority, its black shadow shortened and thinned, still itself has not foregone a tittle of its inhuman control, political as well as moral, crippling the pretension, and perseveres in grasping at supreme wills of men even to paralysis, that it may sway their minds, ever ravenous of power, its master passion an unholy ambition.

beth, Shakespeare becomes the spokesman of
Writing in the aroused forceful age of Eliza-
English independence, of Protestant manliness,
legate and his chief. Passages like this-of
and, in a passage quivering with eloquent patriot-
ism, makes the King of England defy the papal
which there are others in his works-set forth
the greatest poet and deepest dramatist of the
world as not only the foremost national poet of
England, but as the champion of Protestantism
or free religion. [Then follows an extract from
King John, iii. 1. 147-171, beginning with

What earthly name to interrogatories
Can task the free breath of a sacred king?

and ending with

Yet I, alone, alone, do me oppose

Against the pope, and count his friends my foes.]

It must be confessed that it was "a curious

slip" on our part not to see that the writer of the above, in alluding to "the seventh commandment" on another page of the same book, "evidently" meant the one so numbered in the deca

Toryism and tradition die hard in literature as well as in politics; and for every popular error in possession of men's minds plenty of specious reasons can always be found. The spelling of our great dramatist's name is no exception to the rule. There are two ways to spell it; the one in which he wrote it, and the other the way in which he didn't write it, so far as our evidence extends. "The wisdom of our ancestors" unAmong the "wiseacres" to whom Mr. Furnihappily fixed on the latter way; and our modern vall refers as persisting in spelling Shakespeare wiseacres follow it, and abuse those reformers is Dr. Ingleby, who desired that in the new who think it reasonable to write Shakspere's edition of his Shakespeare's “Centurie of Prayse" name as they can prove he wrote it himself in the majority of the five signatures he has left us. just published by the New Shakspere Society, Anyone who knows even a little of the Eliza- the orthography of the name in the first edition bethan age knows too its fondness for "con- should be retained. Miss Smith, who saw the ceits," especially verbal ones, and it is certain book through the press, did not understand this, that when a poet Shakspere began to write, his name would be turned at once by London and has herself spelt the name "Shakespere." conceit-mongers into "Shake-speare." So, if a She explains in her preface that "the error, if minor poet of our own day, Mr. Swinburne, had any " is her own, and adds: "It is needless here written then, his name would have infallibly to enter into the controversy as to the right been printed" Swineburne " or pigsbrook: AngloSaxon swin-a pig; burne-a brook. This spelling, the evidence afforded by the only manu-logue as arranged by the Latin Church, where London manufacture of the spelling Shake- script signatures that are at present known be speare" is so plain upon the face of it, though ing uncertain, and variously read by the best the spelling is recorded long before, that every experts." one with a feeling for what is genuine, must instinctively reject it; and when one finds that Shakspere did so himself, and that not one of his written signatures is "Shakespeare," while the greater number are Shakspere, and all are written in the latest and maturest period of his life, one is only too glad to get rid of that con- largest liberty in this respect. ceit of his London contemporaries, printers and Mr. Furnivall supposes that the spelling Shakefriends, which even yet has so strong an attrac-speare grew out of the fondness for verbal “ tion for follow-my-leader minds, and makes them ceits" in the Elizabethan age. It may be that it write "Shakespeare." To justify their proceeding, they of course say, "the question is, not how did; but it is curious how few quibbles, compliShakspere signed his name but how his friends mentary or otherwise, upon the name are to be spelt it"; that "if you spell it as Shakspere found among contemporaneous allusions to the wrote it people 'll pronounce it 'Shaxpere,'" &c.; all which is, I humbly submit, sheer gammon. poet. The evidence to decide the question is Shakspere's own signatures, and these (by a large majority) declare for Shakspere, and leave Shake-speare" without any authority at all. For this latter spelling there is nothing but evidence which printers and friends may have tampered with; it is poor second-hand evidence against first-hand, and isn't worth considering.

There are two sides—if not more to this question, even after almost a century of wordy warfare over it. It must be admitted that in the "majority" of the poet's signatures which have

While we personally prefer Shakespeare we have no disposition to quarrel with those who adopt a different spelling. Here in the World, as in our edition of Shakespeare, we allow the

con

the first and second commandments are made one, and the tenth is divided into two; but as it was only a slip-not a willful fracture of the eighth (Roman) or ninth (Protestant) commandment, we hope to be forgiven for it.

Higginson.

BORN.

In Cambridge, Mass., January 29, a daughter to Mr. Thomas Wentworth Higginson.

NECROLOGY.
DeMille. In Halifax, N. S., January 28, Prof. James
DeMille, of Dalhousie College, 48 years; author of The
B. O. W. C." books,
and other works, mostly fiction.
Cryptogram, The Dodge Club, the

Brewer. In Boston, January 23, Dr. Thomas Mayo Brewer, a graduate of the Harvard Medical School in 1836, and a scientific author, especially in ornithology, of high repute.

Frothingham, 68 years; best known by his History of the Frothingham. In Charlestown, Mass., Jan. 29, Richard Siege of Boston, but author also of a number of other valua ble works in American history, among them The Rise of the Republic; The Life and Times of Joseph Warren;

etc.

NEWS AND NOTES.

Mr. Calvert's "Seventh Commandment." In the last number of the World (p. 41), a correspondent, criticising our criticism of Mr. Calvert's reference to the seventh commandment (Dec. 20, p. 437), remarks: "Mr. C. evidently employs the Roman division of the commandments, where the seventh forbids stealing." We - Amateur Theatricals, a pretty little volume were not aware that Mr. C. was a Roman Catho- in the “Art at Home Series,” attracts immediate lic, though we knew him to be a lineal descend-attention by Kate Greenaway's charming illustraant of George Calvert, Lord Baltimore, the tions. It has a frontispiece of a pretty little

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his own observation. It will appear about the
same time. - A new edition of Boyesen's Norse
novel, Gunnar, previously published by Hough-
ton, Osgood & Co., will be brought out by this
house in uniform size and style with his other
books which bear their imprint.

-A new quarterly review has taken its stand among the religious periodicals under the title, The Presbyterian Review. It is to be the vehicle of the highest theology and most profound thought of the Presbyterian church, and comes into being at the request and with the hearty - D. Appleton & Co. have a long list of an- support of leading lights of that denomination. nouncements. In fiction there will be a collec-| A. D. F. Randolph & Co. will be the publishers. tion of Constance Fenimore Woolson's charac

maiden in picturesque theatrical dress, and the
other designs are equally appropriate, including
elaborate initial and tail pieces. The text, by
Walter Herries Pollock and Lady Pollock, is
pleasantly written, and full of apt suggestions.
Macmillan & Co. are the publishers. They will
have this week The Statesman's Year Book for
1880, which is the seventeenth annual issue.-
An interesting medical book, whose subject and
style commend it to readers outside the profes-teristic Southern sketches, under the title, Rod-
sion, is Eyesight, Good and Bad, by Robert
Brudenall Carter, F.R.C.S., an eminent author-
ity. The treatise includes the structure of the
eye, the effect of different kinds of light, near
and distant vision, defects of vision, color and

color blindness, the care of the eyes in infancy and age, contrivances for saving visual effort, practical hints on spectacles, and various other topics connected with eyesight.

ume

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man the Keeper, which story will be remembered by readers of the Atlantic. - New "Handy Vol" books will be The Return of the Princess, by Jacques Vincent, and A Stroke of Diplomacy, by Victor Cherbuliez. - A longer novel, not in any series, though it might naturally be looked for in the charming "Collection of Foreign Authors," is The Romance of an Honest Man, by Edmond About, translated from advance sheets. -The Life and Writings of Henry Thomas A Thousand Flashes of French Wit, Wisdom, Buckle, by Alfred H. Huth, is an exceptionally and Wickedness is the appetizing title of a collecinteresting memoir of the English historian, tion of aphorisms, bons mots, and bright bits sewritten by one who had enjoyed the close asso-lected and arranged by L. G. J. de Finod. – ciation of home life and travel with him, and who Interesting historical and biographical works by inheritance and culture was fitted to enjoy his will be the third volume of the Memoirs of Mme. society. The writer is the son of Henry Huth, de Rémusat, the fourth volume of Theodore whose famous library recently attracted so much Martin's Life of the Prince Consort, Recollections attention, and raised the hopes of bibliomaniacs and Opinions of an Old Pioneer, by Peter G. before it was withdrawn from sale. The work | Burnett, the first governor of the State of Caliin its earlier stages received the revision of the fornia, and the previously announced French Men elder Huth, who was also an intimate friend of of Letters in the "Handy-Volume Series." ForsBuckle. It is largely based upon correspond- ter's Life of Dickens is brought out in the ence, and has much more to do with the life than "Household Edition," making the twenty-second the writings of its subject, though the latter volume, and containing forty illustrations share the title, and have frequent incidental timely issue, since, in the light of the recent mention. It is in two handsome octavo volumes, Letters of Charles Dickens, fresh interest is imported by Scribner & Welford. - This firm awakened in it. A new edition of A Search for now has Burton's valuable historical work, the Winter Sunbeams, by Hon. S. S. Cox, is in Reign of Queen Anne, and a life of Christ, Jesus preparation, and a cheaper single volume edition of Nazareth, by Edward Clodd; which latter of Dr. Cunningham Geikie's Life and Words of views the subject from a purely historical stand- Christ, made from the same plates as the point, and embraces a sketch of Jewish history sive one. - Important works to come later are to the time of the Saviour's birth. the second volumes of Appleton's Cyclopedia of Applied Mechanics and Cooley's Cyclopædia of -A. C. Armstrong & Son, in connection Practical Receipts, the third volume of Roscoe's with Mr. T. Y. Crowell, are to meet the Chemistry, and a number of medical and educademand for cheap standard works with a handsome but inexpensive set of Hallam's Complete Works. They put the previous ten volumes into

six, reducing the price from $17.50 to $7.50 per set. It is reprinted from the last London edi

tion, which contained the author's corrections and revisions. Two volumes each are given to

The Constitutional History of England, The Middle Ages, and The Introduction to the Literature of Europe. The size is crown octavo, averaging nearly eight hundred pages to a volume. The type is large, and the set is in every respect a handsome library edition of an author no library should be without.

- Henry Holt & Co. have nearly ready a new

edition of Rossiter Johnson's Famous Single Poems, under the title, Famous Single and Fugitive Poems, containing a number of additions.

tional books.

-a

CONTENTS OF THE PERIODICALS.

FOR JANUARY.

MAGAZINE OF ART. Our Living Artists: Mar-
eus Stone, A.R.A., by Wiltrid Maynell; Favorite Sketching
Ceres," from Hermitage at St. Petersburg; Wood Engraving,
Grounds: Clovelly, by W. W. Fenn; Rubens' "Homage to
by Stephen Thompson; Antoine Joseph Mertz, the Belgian
No. VI, by Henry Holiday; Italian Monumental Sculpture,
Painter, by E. Belfort Bax; Decorative Art, No. 1, by Lewis
Alarnied. by P. R Morris, A.R.A... Artistic Iron Work. by
F. Day; Pictures in Trains, by Edward Bradbury; Bathers
Pictures of the Year: The Dudley Gallery.
George Wallis, F.S.A.; St. Mark's Venice, by Henry Wallis;

To-Day, Cicero W. Harris; A Vision of Echoes, a poein, Ed-
THE SOUTH-ATLANTIC. Two Questions of
gar Fawcett; Certain Historians of English Social Life,
Philip A. Bruce; Carmelita (continued), W. H. Babcock;
The Havana Commission; Thiers (continued), Th. von Jas-
mund; Dust to Dust (a poem), Appleton Oaksmith; A
Dreani, M. T. Hunter; Editorial; Recent Literature.

NATIONAL

QUARTERLY REVIEW. Rise and Fall of the Bonapartes; The Management of the Indians; The English Classics; The Hygiene of Water; The Working-Classes of Europe; The Nebular Hypothesis; Interstate Extradition; The New Eastern Question; A Southerner's Estimate of the Life and Character of Stephen A. Donglas; Reviews and Criticisms.

broke; The Progress of Taste; Bishop Wilberforce; The Successors of Alexander, and Greek Civilization in the East; Prince Metternich; The Romance of Modern Travel; Mr. Bright and the Duke of Somerset on Monarchy and Democracy; The Credentials of the Opposition.

THE QUARTERLY REVIEW. Lord Boling

THE WESTMINSTER REVIEW. Colonial Aid in War Time; Early Greek Thought; The Grand Dukes of Tuscany; The Organization and Registration of Teachers; Imperium et Libertas; The Relation of Silver to Gold as Coin; Social Philosophy; Russia and Russian Reformers; India and our Colonial Empire; Contemporary Literature 1. Theology; 2, Philosophy; 3. Politics, Sociology, Voyages and Travels; 4, Science; 5, History and Biography; 6, Belles Lettres; 7, Miscellanea.

THE EDINBURGH REVIEW. Agricultural Depression; Hamerton's Life of Turner; Military Relations of Russia and England; Ireland, her Present and her Future; he Persian Miracle Play; British Lighthouse: Russia Bore and After the War; Lord Minto in India; Ilain Whig rinciples.

A

The Roads of England, and Wayfaring Lite in the MiddleAges; Our Public Schools-V, Westminster: The Pilgrimage to Kevlaar (from Heine); The Revival of the Drama; Italian Affairs; Michael and I, by Julian Sturgis; Shelta, the Tinher's Talk; The Treatment of Vagrancy; Middle-Class Eduexpen-cation; The Origin of Poetry; Fucinus: a Lost Lake and a New Found Land; The Anti-Rent Agitation in Ireland; Selected Books.

THE NEW QUARTERLY MAGAZINE.

FOR FEBRUARY.

THE CALIFORNIAN. Sand, Chapter II, J. W. Gally; Washington Territory, James W. Oates; How GarTreasures, B. B. Redding; Frankincense-My Rosary, Kate dens Grow in California, Josephine Clifford; Prehistoric Plattdeutsch Chat, T. H. Rearden; The Solid South and the M. Bishop; The Seven Cities of Cibola, Theo. H. Hittell; A Bloody Shirt. A Young Southerner; A Clerical Tramp, Margaret C. Graham; "On With the Dance!" No. 1, Bashi Inter--Percival and Neal, John V. Cheney; Hoodlums on a HopBazouk; In the Lava Beds, Wm. M. Bunker; Isolated Poets Ranch, Robert D. Milne; Art's Ideals, Edgar Fawcett; Two

-G. P. Putnam's sons have in press The presenting in concise but comprehensive form Oceanic Canal and the Monroe Doctrine, a treatise the historical record of the various plans for a canal across the Isthmus, and showing the responsibilities of the people and the government of the United States in regard to any such enterprise, and especially in connection with the present undertaking of M. de Lesseps.

One of the neatest of calendars for the new
year, and one really useful in a literary way, is
that issued by Hart & Rawlinson, of Toronto,
Canada. The feature of it is a "date card" for
every day in the year, each bearing a quotation

from some well-known writer about books and
reading. That for the day on which we are
writing is this, for example, from Bruyere:
requires more than mere genius to be
author."

"It

an

- Charles Scribner's Sons will bring out, about the first of March, a very interesting work by Sidney Lanier, entitled The Science of English A new History of Boston, of rather gigantic Verse. It is a new departure in the manner of proportions, is under way, with the promise of treating the subject, and will be arranged for use the first of its four volumes some time this next as a text-book. — J. Brander Matthews has writ-fall. Mr. Justin Winsor, Rev. E. E. Hale, and ten in popular style a bright little volume con- Dr. S. A. Green are associated as editors, and cerning the Theatres of Paris and matters per- fhe contributors will include a number of welltaining to them, which is largely the outcome of known antiquaries and other specialists.

California Books; Outcroppings.

KANSAS CITY REVIEW OF SCIENCE vice; Evidence from the Weather Map, by Isaac P. Noyes; AND INDUSTRY. The International Weather Sertion and Creation (concluded), by Prof. G. C. Swallow; Meteorology of Kansas City for 1879, by H. P. Child; EvoluGeographical Distribution of certain Trees and Plants in Missouri and Kansas, by Prof. Geo. C. Broadbead; The Dissemination of Plants, Rev. T. J. Templin; The Benefits of Arctic Exploration, by Rev. J. T. Headley; The Fixation of the Meridian of Paris; Another Northeast Arctic Expedition; African Exploration; Australian Exploration; Arctic Literature; Egyptian Correspondence; Utilization of Blastfurnace Slag: Colorado Gold and Silver Production in 1879; Scientific Miscellany; Book Notices; Editorial Notes.

THE PREACHER AND HOMILETIC MONTHLY. Preaching, by O. H. Tiffany, D.D.; The First Note of my Song, by Rev. C. H. Spurgeon; Without Fruit, by Rev. H. W. Beecher; The Best Told Story, by D. H. Wheeler, D.D; A Solace for Anxious Thoughts, by John Hall, D.D.; The Fruitless Fig-Tree, by Rev. H. B. Hitchings; The Love of God, by Joseph Parker, D.D.; Christian Watchfulness, by Rev. Fred'k Courtney; Personal Consecration, by Rev. E. P. Thwing: The Great Light, by Rev. J. H. Goodell; The Visit of the Shepherds, by George L. Taylor, D.D.; Hindrances, by Rev. John Richardson; Hints at the Meaning of Texts; Brotherly Talks with Young Ministers, No. V, by Theo. L. Cuyler, D.D.; Ministers and Money Matters, Third Paper, by Chas. F. Deems, D.D.; The International s. S. Lessons-Homiletically Considered, by Rev. D. C. Hughes; Prayer-Meeting Service, by Rev. L. O. Thompson; Sermonic Criticisin; Preachers Exchanging Views; L v.ng Issues for Pulpit Treatment; Expository Preaching, No. VI, Wm. M. Taylor, D.D.; Queries and Answers; Helpful Data in Current Literature, by Rev. E. P. Thwing; Illustrations and Similes; Themes and Texts of Leading Sermons Preached during the Month; Suggestive Themes.

MACMILLAN'S MAGAZINE. Cetywayo's Story of the Zulu Nation and the War; He that will not when he may, by Mrs. Oliphant, Chapters XIII-XV; Poultrykeeping as a National Industry, by Jane Chesney; Stage Anomalies, by H. Sutherland Edwards; Some Hints on the Teaching of Latin, by Prof. Geo. G. Rainsay, Glasgow University; A Night Watch; The Halcyon's Nest, by Robert Caird.

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CASSELL'S FAMILY MAGAZINE. Horace McLean, serial story; Hidden Gold, serial story; Three Answers from the Sea, by W. A. Gibbs; My Workshop at Home, by A Practical Man; The Three Alpine Tunnels: The Mont Cenis, by Henry Frith; Our Foundation Schools: Marlborough and Wellington; An Artist's Trip through the Clouds, by W. Bazett Murray; With the Water-Fleas, by Dr. Andrew Wilson, F.R.S.; Winter Soups, by A. G. Payne, M.A.; Gourlay Brothers; "Strike while the Iron's, Hot," a poem, by John F. Waller, LL.D.; Preservation of Health in Middle Age, by a Family Doctor; On the Organization of School-Farms, by the Rev. J. L. Brereton, M.A.; Cradle Song; Last Year's Snow, a poem; The Garden in February;

What to Wear; The Gatherer.

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January 16, 1880. By Norman Carolan Perkins. Chi-
cago: Jameson & Moore. Pamphlet.

SONGS FROM THE PUBLISHED WRITINGS OF ALFRED
TENNYSON. Set to music by various composers. Edited
by W. G. Cusins. With portrait and original illustratio
by Winslow Homer, C. S. Reinhart, A. Fredericks, and
Jessie Curtis. Harper & Brothers.
$5.00
THOU AND I: A Lyric of Human Life; with other
poems. By Theodore Tilton. R. Worthington. $1.75
G. P. Putnam's Sons.
MIDSUMMER DREAMS. By Latham Cornell Strong.

$1.25

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Brentano, The Manliness of Christ.

IOC

SYPHILIS OF THE BRAIN AND SPINAL CORD. By T. S. BY THOMAS HUGHES, author of "Tom Brown at Rugby,"
$3.00
etc. $1.00.
Dowse, M. D. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
RECIPROCITY, BI-METALLISM, AND LAND-TENURE RE-
"One of the most useful and most interesting books lately
published."
FORM. By Alex. J. Wilson. Macmillan & Co.
$2.25

MIND IN THE LOWER ANIMALS, in Health and Disease. Problems of Life and Mind.

By W. Lander Lindsay, M. D., etc. D. Appleton & Co.
Two volumes.
$4.00

KEY TO GHOSTISM. Science and Art Unlock its Mys-
teries. By Rev. Thos. Mitchell. S. R. Wells & Co. $1.50
Travel and Observation.

SUNSHINE AND STORM IN THE EAST. Or Cruises to
Cyprus and Constantinople. By Mrs. Brassey. Illus-
trated. Henry Holt & Co.
$3.50
SPORTING ADVENTURES In The Far West. By J. M.
Murphy. Illustrated. Harper & Brothers.
$1.50
DICKENS'S DICTIONARY OF THE THAMES; from Oxford
1880.
London: Charles Dickens.
to the Nore.

Third Series. By GEORGE H. LEWES. 1 vol., 8vo, $3.00. This volume concludes the great work on "oblems of Life and Mind." which Mr. Lewes planned, but did not live to finish. It has been completed under the very competent supervision of George Eliot.

Labor.

Seventh volume of Boston Monday Lectures. By JOSEPH
COOK. With the Preludes on Current Events. 12mo, $1.50.
A brilliant, comprehensive, suggestive book on a subject of
profound and pressing importance.

An Unconventional Hand-book. Confidence.

Macmil an & Co.

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MRS. BRASSEY'S SUNSHINE AND
STORM IN THE EAST.

With 114 illustrations and two maps. Author's edition, 8vo
$3.50.

"At least as diverting as her earlier voyage, if not even
more so.... The most lively and entertaining book we have
read for many months."-London Saturday Review.

$1.00 COX'S POPULAR ROMANCES OF THE
MIDDLE AGES.

THE ENGRAVED PORTRAITS OF WASHINGTON, with Notices of the Originals, and brief Biographical Sketches of the Painters. By W. S. Baker. Philadelphia: Lindsay & Baker. $4.00

HOW TO EDUCATE THE FEELINGS OR AFFECTIONS. By Charles Bray. Edited, with Notes and Illustrations, from the Third London Edition, by Nelson Sizer. S. R. Wells & Co. $1.50

Fiction.

POPULAR ROMANCES OF The Middle AGES. By Sir
George W. Cox, M. A., Bart., and Eustace H. Jones.
First American, from the second English edition. Henry
Holt & Co.
$2.25

By Sir GEORGE W. Cox and EUSTACE HINTON JONES.
Large 12mo, $2.25.

ESCOTT'S ENGLAND:

A novel. By HENRY JAMES, Jr. $1.50. “A narrative as imponderable, but yet as delightful, to the observer as the tail of Donati's comet. Siena, Baden, the Norman coast, are all brought before the reader with that seemingly light, but really careful touch of which Mr. James more than any living English writer possesses the secret.". London Athenæum.

For sale by Booksellers. Sent, post-paid, on receipt of price by the publishers,

HOUGHTON, OSGOOD & CO., Boston.
EGGLESTON'S FAMOUS AMER-
ICAN INDIANS.

A series illustrative of Early American History. Each in one handsome volume, illustrated with maps and engravHER PEOPLE, POLITY AND PURSUITS. 8vo, $4.00. "To Americans it is nothing less than a revelation... ings. Uniformly bound. 12mo, cloth, per vol., $1.25. Perhaps the strongest part of the book is in its remarks on all social topics.... The work as a whole is the most perfect Tecumseh and the Shawnee Prophet. and satisfactory study in practical sociology now in exist-Red Eagle and Wars with the Creek Indians. ence."-Boston Advertiser.

MATE TO MATE. A novel. By T. K. Sharkey. G. P. HENRY HOLT & CO., New York.

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moiselle de Mersac. A novel. By the author of "Heaps E. J. HALE & SON,

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This remarkable book (of which one bookseller ordered from us FIVE HUNDRED COPIES in advance of publication, and the first edition was sold out within twenty-four hours, and nearly half of the second before it was ready), was first published in London in three volumes at $8.00, and will be issued by us in one volume at 75 cents in paper, and $1.25 in cloth. Liberal discounts to the trade. Sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of the price.

The London Saturday Review says: "It is distinctly an original novel, exceedingly interesting."

London Athenæum: "The incidents are told with remarkable vigor, and are as exciting as the keenest lover of excite ment could wish."

London Herald of Heatth: "It is a long time since we have read so powerful a story, so firmly and strongly written, and of such deep pathos."

New York Sun: "A book that merits more than ordinary attention. A well constructed, spirited and very interesting novel "

St. Louis Post and Dispatch: "The best novel yet pro

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With new Table of Contents and Indexes.
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MANUAL OF GEOLOGY.

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MUSICAL INSTITUTE

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is the most accurate and reliable edition pub-written, and has become enlarged one half, besides receiving THE THE ENGRAVED PORTRAITS

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"Musical Curriculum,

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It goes to work on the plan that pupils should not be made
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The "MUSICAL CURRICULUM'
"early

to pursue their studies in the tedious, mechanical methods 15. Michael

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HOPE MILLS; or, Between Friend and Sweetheart.

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