"-Supplement to NATURE, October ii, 1900.' 



fl Great 

 Book- 



II Great 



Bargain. 





Do pou realise lubat tl)e 



encpclopaeaia Britantiica 1$ ? 



No book exists which is at all to be compared 

 with the Encyclopaedia Britannica, The editors 

 Intended to embrace all knowledge in their Ninth 

 and monumental Edition of the great national! 

 library, and indeed the whole of the world is covered j 

 in its 22,000 pages and illustrated in its 338 full- 

 page plates, its 671 maps and plans, its more than 

 9,000 other illustrations. But this generous ac- 

 ceptance of the magnitude, the merely physical mag- 

 nitude, of their task was not all, was not the best part oV 

 their plan for achieving it. The information contained in 

 the work was to be concise and brilliantly handled, as well as 

 full and universal, and it was also to be the best obtainable, 

 finest fruits of modern scholarship and research, so that the work 

 might be at once a book of reference and a collection of exhaustive 

 and brilliant treatises, so that it might interest and inform the gene- 

 ral reader, and at the same time satisfy the specialist in any branch. 

 The editors gained their end in the only way by which it could 

 reached, by acquiring the services of the highest authorities of the age. 



Even those who know the book well, and are accustomed to the brilli- 

 ance which characterises its articles (they number 16,400), are always" 

 freshly astonished when they are reminded of the world-wide celebrity of 

 1,100 contributors who made the Encyclopaedia Britannica " the Greatest Worr 

 in the world." Wherever one looks one finds the work of men whose authority 

 is acknowledged the world over, men who not only have full knowledge of their'' 

 subjects, but also have themselves furthered by their own original researcher 

 the science or the art of which they treat in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Lore 

 Kelvin, Sir Robert Ball, Lord Rayleigh, Sir William Crookes, Sir Archibald 

 G-eikie, Sir Norman Lockyer. Professor Dewar, Professor Ray Lankester, Sir 

 Frederick Abel in science, Swinburne, Sir Richard Jebb, Sir George Macfarren, 

 Andrew Lang, Austin Dobson, William Morris, John Morley, Mrs. Humphrey War 

 Sir George Reid, W. E. Henley, George Cable, Matthew Arnold, Robert Louis Steven- 

 son, in music, arts, and letters ; such names are not only names for to -day, the words 

 of such writers will always carry with them an authority which no mere expert, how - 

 ever well informed, could claim for his. The work of such contributors is hardly to 

 measured in terms of money, yet one may admire the far-sighted generosity of the 

 publishers who willingly paid away more than £60,000 for the manuscript alone. And if " 

 to this be added the cost of paper, type, illustrations, and binding worthy of such matte: 

 it appears that the Encyclopaedia is the most costly book ever offered to the public, 

 this is the book which you may now have for less than half the regular publishers' price. 



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