HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, Sr TRAVELS. 5 



Cox (G. V., M.A.). RECOLLECTIONS OF OXFORD. 

 By G. V. Cox, M.A., New College, Late Esquire Bedel and 

 Coroner in the University of Oxford. Second Edition. Crown Svo. 



" An a musing farrago of anecdote, and will pleasantly recall in many 

 a country parsonage the memory of youthful days." TIMES. 



"Daily News." THE WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF 



THE DAILY NEWS, 1870. Edited, with Notes and Com- 

 ments, forming a Continuous Narrative of the War between 

 Germany and France. With Maps. Third Edition, revised. 

 Crown Svo. 'js. bd. 



TJiis volume brings before the public in a convenient and portable form 

 ike record of the momentous events which have marked the last six months 



The spicial value of letters from camps and battle-fields consists in the 

 vividness with which they reproduce the life and spirit of the scenes and 

 transactions in the midst of which they are written. In the letters which 

 have appeared in the DAILY NEWS since the Franco-Prussian War, the 

 public has recognized this quality as present in. an eminent degree. 



The book begins with a chronology of the war from July Ajh, when ihe 

 French government called ont the army reserves, to December ^th ; the 

 detailes of the campaign are illustrated by four maps representing I. The 

 ba'tlcs of Weissenburg and Worth. 2. The battles of Saarbriicken and 

 Speiechercn. 3. The battle-field before Sedan. 4. A plan of Metz and its 

 vicinity. 



THE WAR CORRESPONDENCE OF THE DAILY NEIVS 

 continued to the Peace. Edited, with Notes and Comments. 

 Second Edition, Crown Svo. with Map, Js. 6d. 



Dicey (Edward). THE MORNING LAND. By EDWARD 



DICEY. Two vols. crown Svo. i6j-. 



"An invitation to be present at the opening of the Suez Canal was the 

 immediate cause of my journey. But I made it my object also to see as 

 much of the Morning Land, of whose marvels the canal across the 

 Isthmus is only the least and latest, as time and opportunity would permit. 

 The result of my observations was communicated to the journal I then 

 represented, in a series of letters, which I now give to the public in a 

 collected form." Extract from AUTHOR'S PREFACE. 



