SMITH, ELDER. & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



BISMARCK: the Man and the Statesman. Being the Reflections and 

 Reminiscences of Otto, Prince von Bismarck, Written and Dictated by himself 

 after his retirement from office. Translated from the German under the supervision 

 of A. J. Butler, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. With 2 Portraits, 

 Young and Old (Young— from a drawing in the possession of the family ; Old — by 

 Yon I.enbach), and a Facsimile of Handwriting. 2 vols. Demy 8vo. price 32.?. 

 TIMES (Leading Article). — ' Of great and enduring interest, and must be read as 



long as the world continues to interest itself in history and its makers.' 



LITER A TURE.— Bismarck's own " Reflections and Recollections" will rank, we 



think, with that small and select row of books, from the "Commentaries" of Caesar 



downwards, in which the chief actors in great affairs have endeavoured to describe their 



deeds or expound their characters. 



RHODESIA AND ITS GOVERNMENT. By H. C. Thomson, Author 



of 'The Chitral Campaign,' and of 'The Outgoing Turk.' With 8 Illustrations 



and a Map. Large crown 8vo. 10s. 6d. 

 SPECTA TOR.— 1 We do not hesitate to say that, however fully a man may think 

 himself informed on South African affairs, he will do well to study Mr. Thomson's book. 

 . . . Mr. Thomson's attitude is eminently judicial, and his views are expressed with 

 great moderation. He is in no sense a " crank " or a " faddist." ' 



THE MUSICIAN'S PILGRIMAGE : a Study in Artistic Development. 

 By J. A. Fuller Maitlanl. Small crown 8vo. $s. 

 SPECTA TOR. — 'We cannot leave this fascinating work without calling attention 

 to the delightful consistency of its construction. The matter of the book is treated with 

 a lucidity and coherence of thought suggestive of the developments of a sonata.' 



OUR PRAYER BOOK : CONFORMITY AND CONSCIENCE. By 



the Rev. W. Page Roberts, M.A., Canon Residentiary of Canterbury, Author of 



' Law and God,' ' Liberalism in Religion,' &c. Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. 



ACADEMY. — ' The Canon of Canterbury shows with humorous ingenuity that 



such stumbling blocks as priestly absolution and the unkind threats of the pseudo- 



Athanasius need constitute no bar to religious communion with the most primitive or the 



most rationalistic of Puritans.' 



INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF THE RENAISSANCE. 



By Mrs. Lilian F. Field. Crown 8vo. 6s. 

 ACADEMY. — ' Mrs. Field seems to us to have accomplished her difficult task very 

 well. The book is capitally ordered and arranged ; the essential is properly kept in the 

 foreground, and the writing is clear, sympathetic, and scholarly.' 



THE SEPOY MUTINY, AS SEEN BY A SUBALTERN FROM 



DELHI TO LUCKNOW. By Col. Edward Vibart. With 2 Portraits, a 

 Plan, and 10 Illustrations. Large crown 8vo. 7s. 6d. 

 ARMY AND NAV) GAZETTE.— ■' A narrative of surpassing interest. It holds 

 the reader spell-bound by its intensity of feeling and narrative power.' 



CHARLES LAMB AND THE LLOYDS. Edited by E. V. Lucas. 



With Portraits and a Facsimile Letter. Small post 8vo. 6s. 

 MANCHESTER GUARDIAN. — 'It is difficult to maintain critical composure 

 and decorum on a discovery' like this, and the difficulty becomes an impossibility when it 

 is found that these additions to the canon of Lamb's writings are not inferior in beauty 

 and interest to the best of his published work.' 



IDLEHURST : a Journal kept in the Country. By John Halsham. 

 Crown 8vo. 8s. 

 PALL MALL GAZETTE.— ' Very charming. . . . The best advice we can give 

 to those who like to read about the country is to get " Idlehurst " for themselves.' 



THE POETICAL WORKS OF ROBERT BRIDGES. Vols. I. and II. 



Small crown 8vo. 6s. each. 

 ACADEMY. — ' In this edition Mr. Bridges at once makes his bow to the general 

 public, and at the same time assumes the honoursof an established and recognised poet.' 



PAGES FROM A PRIVATE DIARY. Reprinted from the Comhill 



Magazine. Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6*. 



.•) I'll l-.NsEUM.— 'Full of happy sayings, of stories, and of pleasant turns of 



observation . . . and amusing from cover to cover. . . . Really a model to modern 



writers of diaries for the public' 





London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S.YV. 



