CLARENDON PRESS, OXFORD. 13 



Vol. XVIII. Pahlavi Texts. Translated by E. W. West. 



Part II. The Dsufistan-i Dinik and The Epistles of Mindr/Khar. i aj. 6d. 



Vol. XIX. The Fo-sho-hing-tsan-king. A Life of Buddha 



by Ajvaghosha Bodhisattva, translated from Sanskrit into Chinese by Dhar- 

 maraksha, A.D. 420, and from Chinese into English by Samuel Beal. los. 6d. 



Vol. XX. Vinaya Texts. Translated from the Pali by T. W. 



Rhys Davids and Hermann Oldenberg. Part III. The Aullavagga, IV-XII. 

 los. 6d. 



Vol. XXI. The Saddharma-pu#^arika ; or, the Lotus of the 



True Law. Translated by H. Kern. 123. 6d. 



Vol. XXII. Gaina-Sutras; Translated from Prakrit by Her- 

 mann Jacobi. Part I. The A^arahga-Sutra. The Kalpa-Sutra. los. 6d. 



Vol. XXIII. The Zend-Avesta. Translated by James Dar- 



mesteter. Part II. The Slrozahs, Yajis, and Nyayij-. los. 6d. 



Vol. XXIV. Pahlavi Texts. Translated by E. W. West. 



Part III. Dina-i Mainog-i Khirad, Sikand-gumanik, and Sad-Dar. io.r. 6d. 



Second Series. 



The following Volumes are in the Press: 



Vol. XXV. Manu. Translated by Georg Biihler. 



Vol. XXVI. The 5atapatha-Brahma;/a. Translated by 



Julius Eggeling. Part II. 



Vols. XXVII and XXVIII. The Sacred Books of China. 



The Texts of Confucianism. Translated by James Legge. Parts III and IV. 

 The Li Ki, or Collection of Treatises on the Rules of Propriety, or Ceremonial 

 Usages. 



Vols. XXIX and XXX. The GrzTiya-sutras, Rules of Vedic 



Domestic Ceremonies. Translated by Hermann Oldenberg. Parts I and II. 



Vol. XXXI. The Zend-Avesta. Part III. The Yazna, 



Visparad, Afrigan, and Gahs. Translated by the Rev. L. H. Mills. 



Vol. XXXII. Vedic Hymns. Translated by F. Max Mullen 



Parti. 



* # * The Second Series will consist of Twenty-Four Volumes in all. 



