20 MACMILLAN'S CATALOGUE OF WORKS IN 



Masson ( David), —continued. 

 CllATTERTON : A Story of the Year 1770 By Daviu Masson, 

 LL. D., Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature in the Uni- 

 versity of Edinburgh. Crown 8vo 5^. 



THE THREE DEVILS: Luther's, Goethe's, and Milton's; and 

 other Essays. Crown 8vo. 51. 



WORDSWORTH, SHELLEY, AND KEATS; and other 

 Essays. Crown 8vo. 5^. 



Mathews.— LIFE OF CHARLES J. MATHEWS, Chiefly 



Autobiographical. With Selections from his Correspondence and 



Speeches. Edited by Charles Dickens. 



" One of the pkasantest and most readable Iwoks of the season. From 



first to last these tiuo volumes are alive li'ith the inimitable artist and 



comedian. . . . The whole book is full of life, figojir, and loit, and ez'cn 



through some of the gloomy episodes of volume livo, will repay most careful 



study. So complete, so varied a picture of a man's life is rarely to be met 



-with." — Standard, 



Maurice. — the friendship of books ; and OTHER 

 LECTURES, By the Rev. F. D. Maurice. Edited with Pre- 

 face, by Thomas LIughes, Q.C. Ciowti Svo. los. 6d. 



Mayor (J. E. B.)_WORKS edited by John E. B. Mayor, 

 M.A., Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge : — 



CAMBRIDGE IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. Part II 

 Autobiography of Matthew Robinson. Fcap. Svo. 5^. 6d. 



LIFE OF BISHOP BEDELL. By his Son. Fcap, Svo, 31, ed. 



Melbourne. — memoirs of the rt. hon. william. 



SECOND VISCOUNT MELBOURNE. By W. M, Torrens, 



M. P. With Portrait after Sir. T. La%vrence. Second Edition. 



2 Vols. Svo. 32J. 



" As might be expected, he has p>roduced a book which will commanit 



and rrward attention. It contains a great deal of valuable matter and 



a great deal of animated, elegant writing." — QUARTERLY Review. 



Mendelssohn. — LETTERS and recollections. By 



Ferdinand Hiller. Translated by M. E. Von Glehn. With 

 Portrait from a Drawing by Karl MtJLLER, never before pub- 

 lished. Second Edition. CrowTi Svo. "js. 6d. 

 ' ' This is a very interesting addition to our knowledge of the great 

 German composer. It reveals him to us under a neiv light, as the warm- 

 hearted comrade, the musician 'uhose soul was in his work, and the home- 

 Icving, domestic man." — Standard. 



