WORKS OF HENRY THOMAS BOCKLE. 



The Life and Writings of Henry 

 Thomas Buckle. 



By ALFRED HENRY HUTH. 12mo. Cloth. 



"The book deals with Mr. Buckle less as a philosopher than as a man. . . . 

 Mr. Huth has done his part well and thoroughly." Saturday Review. 



"Mr. Hutli has produced a striking and distinct portrait out of his materials, 

 and he has done his work with a simplicity and modesty which are highly effec- 

 tive." Pall Mall Gazette. 



"This work, we think, will revolutionize popular opinion about the philoso- 

 pher." London Daily News. 



"Buckle was a man whose story must excite interest and rouse sympathy." 

 Scotsman. 



II. 



History of Civilization in England. 



2 vols., 8vo. Cloth, $4.00 ; half calf, extra, $8.00. 



"Whoever misses reading this book will miss reading what is, in various re- 

 Bpects, to the best of our judgment and experience, the most remarkable book 

 of the day one, indeed, that no thoughtful, inquiring mind would rmss reading 

 for a good deal. Let the reader be as adverse as he may be to the water's philos- 

 ophy, let lii:n be as devoted to the obstructive as Mr. Buckle is> to the progress 

 party, let him be as orthodox in church creed as the other is heterodox, as dog- 

 matic as the author is skeptical let him, in short, find his prejudices shocked at 

 every turn of the argument, and all his prepossessions whistled down the wind 

 still, there is so much in this extraordinary volume to stimulate reflection and 

 excite to inquiry, and provoke to earnest investigation, perhaps (to this or that 

 reader) on a track hitherto untrodden, and across the virgin soil of unfilled fields, 

 fresh woods and pastures new, that we may fairly defy tte most hostile spirit, 

 the most mistrustful and least sympathetic, to read 'it through without being 

 glad of having done so, or, having begun it, or even glanced at almost any one 

 of its pages, to pass away unread." London Times. 



k ' We have read Mr. Buckle's volumes with the deepest interest We owe 

 him a profound debt of gratitude. His irfluence on the thought of the present 

 age can not but be enormous, and if he gives us no more than we already have 

 in the two volumes of the maynus opus, he will still he classed among the fathers 

 and founders of the Science of History.' 1 New York Times. 



"Singularly acut, possessed of rare analytical power, imaginative but not 

 fanciful, unwearied in research, and gifted wkh wonderful talent in arranging 

 and molding his material, the author is as fascinating as he is learned. His 

 erudition is immense so immense as not to be cumbersome. It is the result 

 of a long and steady growtha part of himself." bestow Journal. 



IT m> 



Essays, 



With a Biography of the Author. Portrait. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00 ; 

 half calf, extra, $2.50. 



D. APPLETON & CO,, Publishers, 1, 3, & 5 Bond St., New York. 



