8 BOOKS PUBLISHED BY DAVID DOUGLAS. 



FORBES Kalendars of Scottish Saints, with Per- 

 sonal Notices of those of Alba, etc. By ALEXANDER PENROSE 

 FORBES, D.C.L., Bishop of Brechin. 1 vol. 4to, price 3, 3s. 

 A few copies for sale on large paper, 5, 15s. 6d. 



"A truly valuable contribution to the archaeology of Scotland." Guardian. 



"We must not forget to thank the author for the great amount of informa- 

 tion he has put together, and for the labour he has bestowed on a work which 

 can never be remunerative. " Saturday Review. 



"His laborious and very interesting work on the early Saints of Alba, 

 Laudonia, and Strathclyde." Quarterly Review. 



G-AIRDNER On Medicine and Medical Education. 

 By W. T. GAIRDNER, Professor of the Practice of Medicine in 

 the University of Glasgow. Three Lectures, with Notes and an 

 Appendix. 8vo, 3s. 6d. 



GAIRDNER Clinical and Pathological Notes on 

 Pericarditis. By W. T. GAIRDNER, Professor of the Practice of 

 Medicine in the University of Glasgow. 8vo, sewed, Is. 



GIBSON, C. P. Cheerfulness. 



By CHARLES P. GIBSON. In 1 vol. fcap., 3s. 6d. 



"It depicts, in very graphic and glowing terms, much of the scenery of 

 this northern district of England, and is therefore sure to be prized very 

 highly by those Northumbrians into whose hands it may happen to fall. 

 Apart, however, from its local interest, it has peculiar merits of its own, 

 and no one can read it without feeling that his own spirit has been en- 

 livened and elevated by so doing. Its pictures remind us very forcibly of 

 those of Thomson, Cowper, and Burns. In fact, since Thomson wrote his 

 'Seasons,' no poem has appeared in this country that so graphically and 

 beautifully describes the pursuits of rural industry. ' His Muse,' writes Dr. 

 John Cairns of Berwick, 'at home amidst every glimpse of rural beauty and 

 sweetness, gilds the living processes of husbandry and sheep-tending rather 

 than the raids and sieges of other days, and turns away from the death-scenes 

 of romance to pour the blessed light of a pure and loving sympathy over the 

 humble abodes scattered all up and down the lovely borderland.' These 

 words truthfully describe the nature of the poem." Newcastle Daily Journal. 



