20 BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



Demy 8vo, cloth extra, with Maps and Illustrations, l8j. 



Lament's Yachting in the Arctic Seas; 



or, Notes of Five Voyages of Sport and Discovery in the Neigh- 

 bourhood of Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya. By JAMES LAMONT, 

 F. R. G. S. With numerous full-page Illustrations by Dr. LIVESAY. 

 " After wading thr ough numberless volumes of icy fiction, concocted narrative, 

 and spurious biofcraj>hy of Arctic voyagers, it is pleasant to meet with a real and 

 genuine volume, . . He shows much tact in recounting his adventures, and 

 they are so interspersed with anecdotes and information as to make them anything 

 but "wearisome. . . The book, as a whole, is the most important addition 

 made to our Arctic literature for a long time." ATHENAEUM. 



Crown 8vo, cloth, full gilt, 7-r. 6d. 



Latter-Day Lyrics : 



Poems of Sentiment and Reflection by Living Writers ; selected 

 and arranged, with Notes, by W. DAVENPORT ADAMS. With a 

 Note on some Foreign Forms of Verse, by AUSTIN DOBSON. 



"A useful and eminently attractive book." ATHEN/EUM. 



" One of the most attractive drawing-room volumes we have seen for a long 

 time." NONCONFORMIST. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, Ss. 6d. 



Lee's More Glimpses of the IVorld Unseen. 



Edited by the Rev. FREDERICK GEORGE LEE, D.C.L., Vicar of 

 All Saints', Lambeth; Editor of "The Other World; or, 

 Glimpses of the Supernatural," &c. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, "js. 6d. 



Life in London ; 



or, The History of Jerry Hawthorn and Corinthian Tom. With 

 the whole of CRUIKSHANK'S Illustrations, in Colours, after the 

 Originals. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s. 



Lights on the JVay : 



Some Tales within a Tale. By the late J. H. ALEXANDER, B.A. 



Edited, with an Explanatory Note, by H. A. PAGE, Author of 



"Thoreau : a Study." 



" This is a book which has a history For ourselves, we have read 'Lights 



on the Way' with interest S vine of the papers are tales, some are elaborate 



attempts at critical studies, and all are prefaced by short narrative introductions. 

 As for the tales, they are good of their order. .... The book gives one the idea. 

 tJuit the author had an acute and independent mind; end that, had he lived, he 

 might have done something in criticism and fiction. His indication, at such a 

 comparatively early period, of the deteriorating effects oj George Eliot' 's dogma on 

 her style, certainly deserves the attention which Mr, Page draws to it." 

 ACADEMY. 



