434 LITERATURE, AMERICAN, AND LITERARY PROGRESS IN 1875. 



in one Continuous Narrative, printed concurrently 

 with the Readings. By Edward Eggleston. (Ford.) 



Ecclesiology. A Fresh Inquiry as to the Funda- 

 mental Idea and Constitution of the New Testament 

 Church. "With a Supplement on Ordination. By 

 Rev. E. J. Fish, D. D. (Authors' Publishing Co.) 



The Great Revival in the Church of England. By 

 the Rev. J. W. Bonham. (L. Whittaker.) 



The Romance of Missions ; or, Inside Views of 

 Life and Labor in the Land of Ararat. By Maria 

 A. "West. "With an Introduction by Mrs. Charles. 

 (Randolph.) 



Commentary on the New Testament. By D. D. 

 Whedon, D. IX Vol. IV. (Nelson & Phillips.) 



Christians and the Theatre. By Rev. J. M. Buck- 

 ley. (Nelson & Phillips.) 



A Reply to the Liberal Tract Society ; and also to 

 all who interpret the Scriptures from Self-derived 

 Intelligence. (Carter & Pettee, Boston.) 



The Wesleyan Demosthenes. Comprising Select 

 Sermons of R'ev. Joseph Beaumont. "With a Sketch 

 of his Character. By Rev. J. B. Wakely, D. D. 

 (Nelson & Phillips.) 



Methodism and its Methods. By Rev. J. T. Crane, 

 D. D. (Nelson & Phillips.) 



Bible Bulwarks ; or, A Sevenfold Argument in De- 

 fense of the Scriptures. By Rev. Richard Newton, 

 D. D. {American Sunday-School Union.) 



Religion and Progress. An Essay. By Henry C. 

 Pedder. 



ART. Of works on art, including music and 

 engraved copies from celebrated artists, there 

 are a few to be noted : 



Art Life and Theories of Richard Wagner. Se- 

 lected from his Writings, and translated by Edward 

 L|. Burlingame. With a Preface, a Catalogue of 

 Wagner's Published Works, etc. (Holt.) 



The Cultivation of Art, and its Relations to Re- 

 ligious Puritanism and Money-getting. By A. R. 

 Cooper. Read before the Louisville Library Asso- 

 ciation. (Sowerby.) 



Piano and Song : How to Teach, How to Learn, 

 and How to Form a Judgment of Musical Perform- 

 ances. Translated from the German of Friedrich 

 Wieck. (Lockwood, Brooks & Co., Boston.) 



Original Hymn Tunes, Chants, Sentences, and 

 Motets. Composed by Henry K. Oliver. (Ditson, 

 Boston.) 



German Four-part Songs for Mixed Voices. With 

 English Words. Edited by N. H. Allen. (Ditson.) 



A Glimpse of the Art of Japan. By James Jack- 

 son Jarves. (Kurd.) 



Famous Painters and Paintings. By Mrs. J. H. 

 Shedd. Illustrated with Heliotypes of Engravings 

 from Works by Raphael, Correggio, Titian, etc. (Os- 

 good.) 



Child- Lite in Pictures. Containing 24 Heliotype 

 Plates from Correggio, Copley, Reynolds, Greuze, 

 Lawrence, Murillo, Landseer, Raphael, and other 

 Painters. (Osgood.) 



USEFUL ARTS. This is a comprehensive di- 

 vision, covering a wide range, from architect- 

 ure to cookery, and not excluding even the 

 destructive art of war: 



Fret-Sawing and Wood-Carving, for Amateurs. 

 By George A. Sawyer. Illustrated from Numerous 

 Drawings by the Author. (Lee & Shepard.) 



Guillaurae's Interior Architecture. Containing 

 Twelve Folio Plates, showing Twelve Designs and 

 Eight Sections of Doors, Stairs, Window-Finish, 

 Mantels, Wainscoting, etc., and Two Elevations for 

 Dwellings in French and Italian Style. (Bicknell ) 



Graphical Method for the Analysis of Bridge- 

 Trusses : extended to Continuous Girders and Draw- 

 Spans. By Charles E. Greene, A. M., Professor of 

 Civil Engineering, University of Michigan. (Van 

 Nostrand.) 



The Progressive Shipbuilder. By John W. Grif- 

 fiths. Vol. I., with 20 Lithographic Plates and 14 

 Woodcuts. (Published by the Author.) 



Ceramic Art : A Report on Pottery, Porcelain, 

 Tiles, Terra-Cotta, and Brick, with a Table of Marks 

 and Monograms, etc. By William P. Blake, U. S. 

 Centennial Commissioner at Vienna. From the Vol- 

 ume of Reports of the Massachusetts Commission 

 to Vienna, 1873. (Van Nostrand.) 



Narrow-Gauge Railways in America: embracing 

 a Sketch of the Rise, Progress, and Success of the 

 New System, and Valuable Statistics, etc. Also a 

 Directory of Narrow-Gauge Railways in North Amer- 

 ica. By Howard Fleming. Illustrated. (Van Nos- 

 trand.) 



Knight's American Mechanical Dictionary: being 

 a Description of Tools. Instruments, Machines, Pro- 

 cesses, and Engineering ; History of Inventions ; 

 General Technological Vocabulary and Digest of Me- 

 chanical Appliances in Science and the Arts. By 

 Edward H. Knight. Illustrated with upward of 

 5.000 Engravings. In 3 volumes. Vols. I. and II. 

 (Ford.) 



Lahey's Village and Country Mouses ; or, Cheap 

 Homes for All Classes. Comprising 84 Pages of 

 Designs. (Orange Judd Co.) 



Catechism of the Locomotive. By M. N. Forney, 

 Mechanical Engineer. (Railroad Gazette.) 



Breakfast, Luncheon, and Tea. By Marion Har- 

 land. (Scribner.) 



Illustrated Homes. A Series of Papers describing 

 Real Houses and Real People. By E. C. Gardner. 

 (Osgood.) 



Progressive American Architecture: presenting 

 in Illustration an Extensive Collection of Original 

 Studies for Dwellings, Banks, School and Office 

 Buildings, etc. By G. B. Croff, Architect. (Orange 

 Judd & Co.) 



The Manufactories and Manufacturers of Pennsyl- 

 vania of the Nineteenth Century. With 173 Steel 

 Engravings. (Galaxy Publishing Co., Philadel- 

 phia.) 



Mineral Deposits in Essex County, Massachusetts, 

 especially in Newbury and Newburyport. With 

 Map. By Chas. J. Brockway. (Williams, Boston.) 

 A Manual of Architecture for Churches, Parson- 

 ages, and Schoolhouses. (Bicknell.) 



The Origin and Antiquity of Engraving. With 

 Some Remarks on the Utility and Pleasures of Prints. 

 By W. S. Baker. With Heliotype Illustrations. 

 (Osgood.) 



The Pistol as a Weapon of Defense in the House 

 and on the Road. How to choose it and how to use 

 it. (Industrial Publishing Co.) 



Church Decoration. A Practical Manual of Ap- 

 propriate Ornamentation. Edited by a Practical Il- 

 luminator. With 16 Full-page Colored Illustrations. 

 (Dutton.) 



Stereotomy. Problems in Stone-Cutting. By S. 

 Edward Warren, C. E. (J. Wiley.) 



The Amateur Trapper and Trap -Maker's Guide. 

 By Stanley Harding. (Dick & Fitzgerald.) 



How to Make Candy. A Manual of Plain Direc- 

 tions for the more Popular Forms of Confectionery. 

 (Dustin, Gilman & Co., Hartford.) 



Monumental Designs. By C. and W. H. Foggett. 

 (Van Nostrand.) 



Hand-Book for Charcoal-Burners. By G. Svede- 

 Hus. Translated from the Swedish by R. B. An-> 

 derson, A. M. With Notes by W. J. L. Nicodemus, 



Weights, Measures, and Monev. By F. W. Clarke. 

 (D. Appleton & Co.) 



JUVENILE. The mental provender offered to 

 young readers, like that which their seniors 

 enjoy, is good, bad, and indifferent; and se- 

 vere, and deservedly so, as has heen the criticism 

 directed upon it, we are not certain that the 



