BOOKS PUBLISHED BY DAVID DOUGLAS. 13 



lected by R. W. Cochran Patrick of Woodside. Only Two 

 Hundred and Fifty Copies printed. Now ready, in 2 vols. 4to, 

 ■with 16 FuU-page Illustrations, Six Guineas. 



" The future Historians of Scotland will be very fortimate if many parts of 

 their materials are so carefully worked up for tliem and set before them in so 

 complete and taking a form." — Athenrrum. 



" Wlien we say that these two volumes contain more than 770 records, of 

 which more than 550 have never been printed before, and that they are illus- 

 trated by a series of Plates, by the autotj^pe process, of the coins themselves, 

 the reader may judge for himself of the learning, as well as the pains, bestowed 

 on them both by the Author and the Publisher." — Times. 



"The most handsome and complete Work of the kind which has ever 

 been published in this coimtry." — Numismatic Clironicle, Pt. IV., 1876. 



Popular Genealogists ; 



Or, The Art of Pedigree-making. Crown 8vo, 4s. 



" "We have here an agreeable little treatise of a hundred pages, from an anony- 

 mous but evidently competent hand, on the ludicrous and fraudulent sides of 

 genealogy. The subject has a serious and important historical character, 

 when regarded from the point of view of the authors of The Governing 

 Families of England. But it is rich in the materials of comedy also. ... We 

 are glad to see such a step taken in the good work as the publication of 

 the essay which has suggested this article, and which we commend to those 

 who want a bit of instructive and amusing reading."— PaH Mall Gazette. 



RENTON, W.— Oils and Water Colours. 

 By William Renton. 1 vol. fcap. 5s. 



"The book is ob\iously for the Artist and the Poet, and for everyone who 

 shares with them a true love and zeal for nature's beauties. "—Sco^smau. 



"To have obsers-ed such a delicate bit of colouring as this, and to have 

 written so good a sonnet in the ' strict style,' as that we have quoted, shows 

 that our author has no common powers either as an observer or a writer." 

 — Liverpool Albion. 



"To those minds that really hold this joy in beauty, Mr. Kenton's book 

 will undoubtedly give delight."— Northern Ensign. 



ROBERTSON— Historical Essays in connection 

 with the Land and the Church, etc. By E. William Robert- 

 son, Author of "Scotland under her Early Kings." In 1 vol. 

 8vo, 10s. 6d. 



