HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, 6- TRAVELS. 17 



few years, be completely extinct. It was important, therefore, to preserve 

 as far as possible trustworthy records of a state of society which, although 

 venerable from its antiquity, has for Europeans the dawn of novelty ; 

 hence the series oj narratives and legends translated by Mr. Mitford, 

 and in which the Japanese are very judiciously left to tell their own tale. 

 The two volumes comprise not only stories and episodes illustrative of 

 Asiatic superstitions, but also three sermons. The preface, appendices, 

 and notes explain a number of local peculiarities ; the thirty-one woodcuts 

 are the genuine work of a native artist, :vho, unconsciotisly of course, has 

 adopted the process first introduced by the early German masters. " These 

 very original* volumes will always be interesting as memorials of a most 

 exceptional society, while regarded simply as tales, they are sparkling, sensa- 

 tional, and dramatic, and the originality of their ideas and the quaintness 

 of their language give them a most captivating piqtiancy. The illustra- 

 tions are extremely interesting, and for the curious in stich matters have 

 a special and particular value.' 1 ' 1 PALL MALL GAZETTE. 



Morley (John). EDMUND BURKE, a Historical Study. By 

 JOHN MORLEY, B.A. Oxon. Crown 8vo. Js. 6d. 



" The style is terse and incisive, and brilliant with epigram and point. 

 It contains pithy aphoristic sentences which Burke himself would not have 

 disowned. Its sustained pnver of reasoning, its wide sweep of observation 

 and reflection, its elevated ethical and social tone, stamp it as a work of 

 high excellence." SATURDAY REVIEW. "A model of compact conden- 

 sation. We have seldom met with a book in which so much matter was 

 compressed into so limited a space." PALL MALL GAZETTE. " An essay 

 of unusual effort." WESTMINSTER REVIEW. 



Morison. THE LIFE AND TIMES OF SAINT BERNARD, 



Abbot of Clairvaux. By JAMES COTTER MORISON, M.A. Cheaper 

 Edition. Crown 8vo. 4^. 6d. 



The PALL MALL GAZETTE calls this " one of the best contributions in 

 our literature towards a vivid, intelligent, and worthy knowledge of 

 European interests and thoughts and feelings during the twelfth century. 

 A delightful and instructive volume, and one of the best products of the 

 modern historic spirit." "A work," says the NONCONFORMIST, "of 

 great merit and value, dealing most thorougJily with one of the most in- 

 teresting characters, and one of the most interesting periods, in the Church 

 history of the Middle Ages. Mr. Morison is thoroughly master of his subject, 



