THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 15 



LAW. 



AN ANALYSIS OF CRIMINAL LIABILITY. 

 By E. C. CLARK, LL.D., Regius Professor of Civil Law in the 

 University of Cambridge, also of Lincoln's Inn, Barrister at Law. 

 Crown 8vo. cloth, js. 6d. 



"Prof Clark's little book is the sub- sanctions"... Students of jurisprudence 



stance of lectures delivered by him upon will find much to interest and instruct them 



those portions of Austin's work on juris- in the work of Prof. Clark." Athenteum. 

 prudence which deal with the "operation of 



A SELECTION OF THE STATE TRIALS. 



By J. W. WILLIS-BUND, M.A., LL.B., Barrister-at-Law, Profess9r of 

 Constitutional Law and History, University College, London. Vol. 1. 

 Trials for Treason (1327 1660). Crown 8vo. cloth, i8.r. 



" A great and good service has been done those of impeachment for treason before Par- 



to all students of history, and especially to liament, which he proposes to treat in a future 



those of them who look to it in a legal aspect, volume under the general head ' Proceedings 



by Prof. J. W.Willis-Bund in the publica- in Parliament. '" The Academy. 

 tion of a Selection of Cases from the State "This is a work of such obvious utility 



Trials. . . . Professor Willis-Bund has been that the only wonder is that no one should 



very careful to give such selections from the have undertaken it before. ... In many 



State Trials as will best illustrate those respects therefore, although the trials are 



points in what may be called the growth of more or less abridged, this is for the ordinary 



the Law of Treason which he wishes to student's purpose not only a more handy, 



bring clearly under the notice of the student, but a more useful work than Howell's." 



and the result is, that there is not a page in Saturday Review. 



the book which has not its own lesson " Within the boards of this useful and 



In all respects, so far as we have been able handy book the student will find everything 



to test it, this book is admirably done." he can desire in the way of lists of cases 



Scotsman. given at length or referred to, and the 



"Mr Willis-Bund has edited 'A Selection statutes bearing on the text arranged chro- 



of Cases from the State Trials' which is nologically. The work of selecting from 



likely to form a very valuable addition to Howell's bulky series of volumes has been 



the standard literature. . . There can done with much judgment, merely curious 



be no doubt, therefore, of the interest that cases being excluded, and all included so 



can be found in the State trials. But they treated as to illustrate some important point 



are large and unwieldy, and it is impossible of constitutional law." Glasgow Herald. 

 for the general reader to come across them. " Mr Bund's object is not the romance, 



Mr Willis-Bund has therefore done good but the constitutional and legal bearings of 



service in making a selection that is in the that great series of causes cetebres which is 



first volume reduced to a commodious form." unfortunately not within easy reach of 



The Examiner. readers not happy enough to possess valua- 



"This work is a very useful contribution ble libraries. . . . Of the importance of this 



to that important branch of the constitutional subject, or of the want of a book of this 



history of England which is concerned with kind, referring not vaguely but precisely to 



the growth and development of the law of the grounds of constitutional doctrines, both 



treason, as it may be gathered from trials be- of past and present times, no reader of his- 



fore the ordinary courts The author has tory can feel any doubt." Daily News. 

 very wisely distinguished these cases from 



VOL. II. In two parts. Price 14^. each. 

 Vol. III. In the Press. 



THE FRAGMENTS OF THE PERPETUAL 



EDICT OF SALVIUS JULIANUS, 

 collected, arranged, and annotated by BRYAN WALKER, M.A. LL.D., 

 Law Lecturer of St John's College, and late Fellow of Corpus Christi 

 College, Cambridge. Crown 8vo., Cloth, Price 6s. 



"This is one of the latest, we believe mentaries and the Institutes . . . Hitherto 



quite the latest, of the contributions made to the Edict has been almost inaccessible to 



legal scholarship by that revived study of the ordinary English student, and such a 



the Roman Law at Cambridge which is now student will be interested as well as perhaps 



so marked a feature in the industrial life surprised to find how abundantly the extant 



of the University. ... In the present book fragments illustrate and clear up points which 



we have the fruits of the same kind of have attracted his attention in the Cornmen- 



thorough and well-ordered study which was taries, or the Institutes, or the Digest." 



brought to bear upon the notes to the Com- Law Times. 



London : Cambridge Warehouse, 1 7 Paternoster Row, 



