THE OLD RED SANDSTONE; 



OB 



NEW WALKS IN AN OLD FIELD. 



BY HUGH MILLER. 



BOM THE FOURTH LONDON EDITION ILLUSTRATED 



A writer, in noticing Mr. Miller's "First Impressions of England and the People," la 

 the New Englander, of May, 1850, commences by saying, " We presume It is not naaes 

 Mrj formally to introduce Hugh Miller to our readers; the author of ' The Old Red S&nd- 

 tone ' placed himself, by that production, which was first, among the most successful 

 geologists, and the best writers of the age. We well remember with what mingled emotioB 

 *nd delight we first read that work. Rarely has a more remarkable book come from tha 

 press. . . . For, besides the important contributions which it makes to the science of Geol- 

 ogy, it is written in a style which places the author at once among the most accomplished 

 writers of the age. . . . He proves himself to be in prose what Burns has been in poetry. 

 We are not extravagant in saying that there is no geologist living who, in the descriptions 

 of the phenomena of the science, has united such accuracy of statement with so much 

 poetic beauty of expression. What Dr. Buckland said was not a mere compliment, that 

 ' he had never been so much astonished in his life, by the powers of any man, as he had 

 been by the geological descriptions of Mr. Miller. That wonderful man described these 

 objects with a felicity which made him ashamed of the comparative meagreness and pov- 

 erty of his own descriptions, in the Bridgewater Treatise, which had cost him hours and 

 days of labor.' For our own part we do not hesitate to place Mr. Miller in the front rai.k 

 of English prose writers. Without mannerism, without those extravagances which give a 

 factitious reputation to so many writers of the day, his style has a classic purity and ele- 

 gance, which remind one of Goldsmith and Irving, while there is an ease and a naturalness 

 In the illustrations of the imagination, which belong only to men of true genius." 



"The excellent and lively work of our meritorious, self-taught counti rman, Mr. Miller, 

 is as admirable for the clearness of its descriptions, and the sweetness of its composition, 

 as for the purity and gracefulness wnich pervade it." Edinburgh Review. 



41 A geological work, small in size, unpretending in spirit and manner; itj contents, lh 

 lonscientious narration of fact; its style, the beautiful simplicity of truth ; and altogedei 

 possessing, for a rational reader, an interest superior to that of a nove* ' ~Dr. J. Pye Smith. 



" This admirable work evinces talent of the highest order, a deep and healthful mora. 

 feeling, a perfect command of the finest language, and a beautiful union of philosophy and 

 poetry. No geologist can peruse this volume without instruction and delight." Silli- 

 tnan's American Journal of Science. 



"Mr. Miller's exceedingly interesting book on this formation is just the sort of work t 

 render any subject popular. It is written in a remarkably pleasing stj'le, and ccnla 1 ** a 

 wonderful amount of information." Westminster Review. 



" IT. Mr. Miller's charming little work will be found a very graphic description of the Old 

 Redflshes. I know not of a more fascinating volume on any branch of British geology," 

 Manteir* Medals of Creation. 



SIB RODERICK MURCHISON, giving an account of the investigations of Mr. Miller, gpoka 

 In the highest terms of his perseverance and ingenuity as a geologist. With no other advan 

 tages than a common education, by a careful use of his means, he had been able to 

 himself an excellent education, and to elevate himself to a position which any man, in 

 tphere fff life, might well envy. He had seen some of his papers on geology, written 

 tyle so beautiful and poetical as to throw plain geologists, like himself, In tne shade. 



GOULD AND LINCOLN, PUBLISHERS. BOSTON. 



