Great Reductions in this Catalogue 



MONSEIGNEUR BESS ON. 



Frederick Francis Xavier de Merode, Minister and Almoner to Pius 

 IX. His Life and Works. Translated by Lady Herbert. Crown 

 8vo, 7s. 6d, 



"The book is most interesting, not only to Catholics, but to all who care for 

 adventurous lives and also to historical inquirers. De Merode's career as an officer of 

 the Belgian army, as a volunteer in Algeria with the French, and afterwards at the 

 Papal Court, is described with much spirit by Monseigneur Besson, and Bishop of 

 Nimes, who is the author of the original work. The book, which is now translated, 

 was written with permission of the present Pope, and is, of course, a work agreeable 

 to the authorities of the Vatican, but at the same time its tone leaves nothing to be 

 desired by those who are members of the communions." — AtJiencexim. 



SIR GEORGE BIRDWOOD, M.D., K.CJ.E., dfc. 



Report on the Old Records of the India Office, with Maps and 

 Illustrations. Royal 8vo, I2s. 6d. 



" No one knows better than Sir George Birdwood how to make ' a bare and short- 

 hand' index of documents attractive, instructive and entertaining, by means of the 

 notes and elucidatory comments which he supplies so liberally, and so pleasantly 

 withal, from his own inexhaustible stores of information concerning the early relations 

 of India with Europe." — Timex. 



" The wonderful story (of the rise of the British Indian Empire) has never been 

 better told. ... A better piece of work is very rarely met with." — The Anti-Jacobin. 



"Offlcial publications have not as a rule any general interest; but as there are 

 ' fagots and fagots' so there are reports and reports, and Sir George Bird wood's Report 

 on the Old Eecords of the India Office is one of the most interesting that could be read." 

 — Journal des Debats. 



HENRY BLACKBURN, Editor of ''Academy Notes.'' 



The Art of Illustration. A Popular Treatise on Drawing for the Press. 

 Description of the Processes, &c. Second edition. With 95 Illustra- 

 tions by Sir John Gilbert, R.A., H. S. Marks, R.A., G. D. 

 Leslie, R.A., Sir John Millais, R.A., Walter Crane, R. W. Mac- 

 beth, A.R.A., G. H. Boughton, A.R.A., H. Railton, Alfred East, 

 Hume Nisbet, and other well-known Artists. 7s. 6d. 



A capital handbook for Students. 



" We thoroughly commend his book to all whom it may concern, and chiefly to the 

 proprietors of the popular journals and magazines which, for cheapness rather than 

 for art's sake, employ any of the numerous processes which are now in vogue." — 

 AthencBum. 



"Let us conclude with one of the axioms in a fascinating volume : ' Be an artist 

 first, and an illustrator afterwards.'" — Spectator. 



" ' The Art of Illustration ' is a brightly written account, by a man who has had 

 large experience of the waj's in which books and newspapers are illustrated nowadays. 

 ... As a collection of typical illustrations by artists of the day, Mr Blackburn's book 

 is very attractive." — The Times. 



"Mr Blackburn explains the processes— line, half-tone, and so forth— exemplifying 

 each by the drawings ot artists more or less skilled in the modern work of illustra- 

 tion. They are well chosen as a whole, to show the possibilities of process work in 

 trained hands."— Saturday Review. 



" Mr Blackburn's volume should be very welcome to artists, editors, and pub- 

 lishers." — The Artist. 



" A most useful book." — Studio. 



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