CHATTO <5r WINDUS, PICCADILLY. u 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, Js. 6d. 



Finger- Ring Lore: 



Historical, Legendary, and Anecdotal. Earliest Notices; Supersti- 

 tions ; Ring Investiture, Secular and Ecclesiastical ; Betrothal and 

 Wedding Rings; Ring-tokens; Memorial and Mortuary Rings; Posy- 

 Rings; Customs and Incidents in Connection with Rings ; Remark- 

 able Rings, &c. By WILLIAM JONES, F.S.A. With Hundreds of 

 Illustrations of Curious Rings of all Ages and Countries. 

 " Enters fully into the wJwle subject, and gives an amount of information 

 and general reading in reference thereto -which is of very high interest. The 

 book is not only a sort of history of finger-rings, but is a collection of anecdotes 

 in connection with them. . . . The volume is admirably illustrated, and 

 altogether affords an amount of amusement and information "which is not other- 

 wise easily accessible." SCOTSMAN. 



" One of those gossiping books which are as full of amusement as of instruc- 

 tion" ATHENAEUM. 



One Shilling Monthly, Illustrated. 



The Gentleman 's Magazine. 



Edited by SYLVANUS URBAN, Gentleman. 



TN seeking to restore the "GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE" to the position 

 * it formerly held, the Publishers do not lose sight of the changed conditions 

 under which it now appears. While maintaining an historical continuity which 

 dates back to the reign of George the Second, there will be no attempt to burden 

 the present with the weight of a distant past, or to adhere slavishly to traditions 

 the application of which is unsuited to the altered conditions of society at the 

 present time. It is sought to render the Magazine to the gentleman of to-day 

 what in earlier times it proved to tJte gentleman of a past generation. New 

 features will be introduced to take the place of those which disappear; in the 

 most important respects, however, the connecting links between the present and 

 the past will be closest. Biography and History, which have always formed a 

 conspicuous portion of the contents, will retain the prominence assigned them, 

 and will be treated with the added breadth that springs from increased jamili- 

 arity with authorities and more exact appreciation of the province of the 

 Biographer and the Historian. Science, which confers upon the age special 

 eminence, "will have its latest conclusions and forecasts presented in a -manner 

 which shall bring them, within the grasp of the general reader. The philo- 

 sophical aspect of Politics, the -matters which affect Imperial interests, will be 

 separated from the rivalries of party , and will receive a due share of attention. 

 Archceology (under which comprehensive head may be included Genealogy, To- 

 pography, and other similar matters), Natural History, Sport and Adventure, 

 Poetry, Belles Lettres, Art in all its manifestations, will constitute a portion 

 cf the contents; and Essays upon social subjects will, as heretofore, be inter- 

 spersed. Under the head of Table Talk matters of current interest will be 

 discussed, and facts of historic value will be preserved. A Work of Fiction by 

 some novelist of highest position will run through the pages of the Magazine, 

 and will be illustrated by artists of known excellence. With a full sense of 

 what is involved in their promise, and with a firm resolution to abide by their 

 pledges, the Publishers undertake to spare no exertion that is necessary to secure 

 the highest class of contributions, to place the Magazine in the first rank of 

 serials, and to fit it to take its place on the table and on the shelves of all classes 

 of cultivated Englishmen. 



%* Now ready, the Volume for July to December, 1876, cloth extra t 

 price 8s. 6d. ; and Cases for binding, price 2s. each. 



