12 PUBLICATIONS OF 



M. TULLII CICERONIS DE NATURA DEORUM 



Libri Tres, with Introduction and Commentary by JOSEPH B. MAYOR, 

 M.A., Professor of Moral Philosophy at King's College, London, 

 formerly Fellow and Tutor of St John's College, Cambridge, together 

 with a new collation of several of the English MSS. by J. H.SWAINSON, 

 M. A., formerly Fellow of Trinity Coll., Cambridge. Vol.1. DemySvo. 

 los. 6d. [Vol. II. In the Press. 



" Such editions as that of which Prof. that all points of syntax or of Ciceronian 



Mayor has given us the first instalment will usage which present themselves have been 



doubtless do much to remedy this undeserved treated with full mastery The thanks 



neglect. It is one on which great pains and of many students will doubtless be given to 



much learning have evidently been expended, Prof. Mayor for the amount of historical and 



and is in every way admirably suited to meet biographical information afforded in the 



the needs of the student The notes of commentary, which is, as it should be, sup- 



the editor are all that could be expected plemented and not replaced by references 



from his well-known learning and scholar- to the usual authorities." Academy. 



ship It is needless, therefore, to say 



P. VERGILI MARONIS OPERA 



cum Prolegomenis et Commentario Critico pro Syndicis Preli 

 Academici edidit BENJAMIN HALL KENNEDY, S.T.P., Graecae 

 Linguae Professor Regius. Extra Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 5-r. 



MATHEMATICS, PHYSICAL SCIENCE, &c. 



MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL PAPERS. 

 By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S., Professor of Natural 

 Philosophy, in the University of Glasgow. Collected from different 

 Scientific Periodicals from May 1841, to the present time. 



[Nearly ready. 



MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL PAPERS, 

 By GEORGE GABRIEL STOKES, M.A., D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S., Fellow 

 of Pembroke College, and Lucasian Professor of Mathematics in the 

 University of Cambridge. Reprinted from the Original Journals and 

 Transactions, with Additional Notes by the Author. Vol. I. Demy 

 8vo. cloth. 15-r. 



" The volume of Professor Stokes's papers and still necessary, dissertations. There no- 

 contains much more than his hydrodynamical thing is slurred over, nothing extenuated, 

 papers. The undulatory theory of light is We learn exactly the weaknesses of the 

 treated, and the difficulties connected with theory, and the direction in which the corn- 

 its application to certain phenomena, such as pleter theory of the future must be sought 

 aberration, are carefully examined and re- for. The same spirit pervades the papers 

 solved. Such difficulties are commonly passed on pure mathematics which are included in 

 over with scant notice in the text-books the volume. They have a severe accuracy 

 Those to whom difficulties like these are real of style which well befits the subtle nature 

 stumbling-blocks will still turn for enlighten- of the subjects, and inspires the completest 

 ment to Professor Stokes's old, but still fresh confidence in their author." Tlie Times. 



VOL. II. Nearly ready. 



THE SCIENTIFIC PAPERS OF THE LATE PROF. 

 J. CLERK MAXWELL. Edited by W. D. NIVEN, M.A. In 2 vols. 

 Royal 410. [/ the Press. 



A TREATISE ON NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. 



By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S., Professor of Natural 

 Philosophy in the University of Glasgow, and P. G. TAIT, M.A., 

 Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh. 

 Vol. I. Part I. Demy 8vo. 16*. 



" In this, the second edition, we notice a could form within the time at our disposal 

 large amount of new matter, the importance would be utterly inadequate." Nature. 

 of which is such that any opinion which we 



Part II. /;/ the Press. 



London : Cambridge Warehouse, 1 7 Paternoster Row. 



