8 Mr. Edward Arnold's Spring Announcements. 



RECENTLY PUBLISHED. 



THE LIFE OF 

 HORACE BENEDICT DE SAUSSURE. 



By DOUGLAS W. FRESHFIELD. D.C.L.. 



LATE PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, AND OF THE ALPINE CLUB. 



With numerous Illustrations and Maps. 8vo. 25s. net. 



' ' Mr. Freshfield has not only given us the picture of a blameless life, rich in varied achievement, 

 and brought together treasures of Alpine lore scarcely accessible elsewhere, but he has also made 

 to history a contribution of permanent value, worthy of his own long-established reputation as a 

 mountaineer and a man of letters."— Lord PSryce in the A anchester Guardian. _ 



" We have enjoyed very thoroughly wandering over Mr. Freshfield's spacious narrative. 

 Saussure was philosopher, scientist, and aristocrat, with the great gesture in everything. He 

 has found the right biographer in Mr. Freshfield, who gives us a large and vivid picture of 

 a Man, a Mountain, and a '^^xxoA."— Observer. 



A PIONEER IN THE HIGH ALPS. 



Diaries and Letters of F. F. TUCKETT, 1856-1874. 

 With Illustrations, i Vol. 2 is. net. 



" All Alpine climbers will revel in the record of Mr. Tuckett's eighteen years of climbing." 

 JEvenitig Standard. 



" I can conceive no more interestirg book for lovers of the sport, for it gives his own detailed 

 account of practically every expedition that he made." — IVestuiinstsr Gazette. 



SPIRITUALISM AND THE NEW 

 PSYCHOLOGY. 



An explanation of Spiritualist Phenomena and Beliefs in terms of 

 Modern Knowledge. 



By M. CULPIN. 



6s. net. 



" We cordially recommend this book as a searching investigation of an interesting phase in the 

 evolution of Western psychology." — Athenceum. 



GALLIPOLI DIARY. 



By General Sir IAN HAMILTON, G.C.B. 

 With Maps and Illustrations. 2 Vols. 36s. net. 



" The interest of the book is in the personality of the writer and in his judgments on men and 

 affairs. Certainly there is no book that has yet appeared in the war that gives so intimate a 

 picture of what its organization was, seen from the inside." — The Times. 



THE MARCH ON PARIS AND THE 

 BATTLE OF THE MARNE, 1914. 



By ALEXANDER VON KLUCK, Generaloberst. 



With Portrait and Maps [including a large and elaborate coloured map giving in detail 

 the routes of the imits of the First German Army). Demy 8vo. I OS. 6d. net. 

 "Should be read by everyone who wishes to know why we escaped from Mons."— Major- 



General Sir F. Maurice in the Observer. 



LONDON : EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET, W. i. 



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