LATELY PUBLISHED. 
CABINET EDITION. 
MR KINGLAKE’S HISTORY OF THE INVASION OF 
THE CRIMEA, 
The Cabinet Edition will comprise in Six Monthly Volumes, crown 8vo, at SIX 
SHILLINGS each, the contents of the Five octavo volumes of the present Edition, 
revised and prepared for this Edition by the Author. With Maps and other Illus- 
trations. 
The Volumes published contain— 
VOR.“ THE ORIGIN OF THE WA 
WITH NEW PREFACE, 
PARALLELS AND CONTRASTS.—THE YEAR 1853 AND THE YEAR 1876. 
VOL. If. RUSSIA MET AND INVADED: 
WITH NEW PREFACE CONTINUED. 
A New and Cheaper Edition. 
THE ODYSSEY OF HOMER. Translated into English Verse 
in the Spenserian Stanza. By the REv. P. S. WORSLEY, M.A., Fellow of 
Corpus Christi College, Oxford. 2 vols. fcap. 8vo, 12s. 
“*Tf the translator has produced a work which, having caught the spirit of the poem, can de- 
light those to whom the original is a sealed book, he can desire no higher praise; and this 
praise belongs justly to Mr Worsley. . . . He has placed in the hands of English readers a 
poem which deserves to outlive the present generation.” —Ldinburgh Review. 
‘*We assign it, without hesitation, the first place among existing English translations.”— 
Westminster Review. 
Dedicated by Permission to Her Majesty THE QUEEN. ' 
SOME FACTS OF RELIGION AND OF LIFE. Sermons 
Preached before Her Majesty the Queen in Scotland, 1866-76. By JOHN 
TULLOCH, D.D., Principal of St Mary’s College in the University of St 
Andrews ; one of Her Majesty’s Chaplains for Scotland. In 1 vol. crown 8vo, 
7s. 6d. 
“No one will be disappointed with these sermons; no one will fail to find them worthy of 
the author’s high literary and theological reputation ; for in their dignity of tone, their ability 
of thought and expression, their frequent eloquence both of language and feeling, they repre- 
sent to the world a very high order of preaching. . . . ‘That these sermons will be read, 
and widely read, we do not doubt; for teaching which is masculine, eloquent, and earnest, 
which can sympathise with the critical tendency of the present and yet hold fast by the best 
faith of the past, which can receive the results of science and maintain the claims of enlightened 
religion, has a right to be heard.” —Scotsman. 
STUDIES IN ROMAN LAW. With Comparative Views of 
the Laws of France, England, and Scotland. By LorpD MACKENZIE. 
Fourth Edition, Edited by JOHN KIRKPATRICK, Esq., M.A., Cantab.; Dr 
Jur. Heidelb.; LL.B. Edinburgh; Advocate. 8vo, 12s. 
‘* A new edition of Lord Mackenzie’s well-known book calls for little comment upon the bulk 
of the work. Itis the accepted elementary text-book for students of comparative jurisprudence. 
: The contributions to the present edition are of three kinds. First, there is the addition 
of very numerous references to the original authorities of antiquity, in addition to the indirect 
method of referring to modern text-writers, mainly French and German, upon the different 
branches of the Corpus Juris. This is wholly good, and constitutes a distinct addition to the 
value of the book. Secondly, there is a large contribution of additional notes by the present 
editor, filling in to some extent the details of the original sketch. ‘They are most numerous in 
that part of the work which deals with the law of civil procedure—a branch of Roman law upon 
the complex nature of which modern research and discovery have thrown much light.”—PadZ 
Mall Gazette. 
