CHATTO & WIND US, PICCADILLY. 9 



Parts I. to X. now ready, 2is. each. 



Cussans History of Hertfordshire. 



A County History, got up in a very superior manner, and ranging 

 with the finest works of its class. By JOHN E. CUSSANS. Illus- 

 trated with full -page Plates on Copper and Stone, and a profusion 

 of small Woodcuts. 



" Mr. Cussans has, front sources not accessible to Clutterbuck, m'ad'e most 

 valuable additions to the manorial history of the county, from the earliest period 

 downwards, cleared up m Tny doubtful points, and given original details con- 

 cern ; ng'various subjects untouched or imperfectly treated by that writer. The 

 same may be said as to the lists of incumbents and the monumental inscriptions. 

 ClutterbucKs errors and omissions have been carefully corrected and supplied, 

 and the occurrences of the last fifty years added, so that We have these important 

 features of the -work complete. Particular attention has also been paid to the 

 heraldry of the county. . . . The pedigrees seem to have been constructed 

 with great care, and are a valuable addition to the genealogical history of the 

 county. Mr. Cussans appears to have done his work conscientiously, and to 

 have spared neither time, labour, nor expense to render his volumes worthy of 

 ranking in the highest class of County Histories. The typography is entitled^ to 

 unqualified praise, the paper t type, and illustrations being unexceptionable.*' 

 ACADEMY. 



Demy 8vo, half-bound morocco, &is* 



Dib din's Bibliomania / 



or, Book-Madness : A Bibliographical Romance: With numerous 

 Illustrations. A New Edition, with a Supplement, including a 

 Key to the Assumed Characters in the Drama. 



" I have not yet recovered from the delightful delirium into which your 'Biblio- 

 mania ' has completely thrown me. Your book, to m'y taste, is one of the most ex- 

 traordinary gratifications I have enjoyed for imny years." ISAAC DISRAELI. 



Two Vols., 8vo, cloth extra, 30^ 



Dixons White Conquest: 



America in 1875. By W. HEPWORTH DIXON. 



" TJie best written, most instructive, and most entertaining lock that Mr. 

 Dixon has published since ' New America.'" ATHENAEUM. 



SECOND' EDITION, demy 8vo, cloth gilt, with Illustrations, i8j. 



Dunravens The Great Divide: 



A Narrative of Travels in the Upper Yellowstone in the summer 

 of 1874. By the EARL of DUNRAVEN. With Maps and numerous 

 striking full-page Illustrations by VALENTINE W. BROMLEY. 



" There has not for a long time appeared a better book of travel than Lord 

 Dunraven's-' The Great Divide.' . . . The book is full of clever observation, 

 and both narrative and illustrations are thoroughly good." ATHENAEUM. 



." A jolly, rollicking narrative of adventure an.i sport, mixed up with a great 

 deal of useful information concerning one of the most interesting regions in the 

 American continent. " NATU RE. 



