20 MACMILLAWS CATALOGUE OF WORKS IN 



Robinson (H. Crabb) THE DIARY, REMINISCENCES, 



AND CORRESPONDENCE, OF HENRY CRABB ROBIN- 

 SON, Barrister-at-Law. Selected and Edited by THOMAS 

 SADLER, Ph.D. With Portrait. Third and Cheaper Edition. 

 Two Vols. Crown 8vo. i6s. 



The DAILY NEWS says : " The two books which are most likely to 

 survive change of literary taste, and to charm while instructing generation 

 after generation, are the ' Diary' of Pepys and BosweWs ' Life of 

 Johnson. ' The day will come when to these many will add the ' Diary of 

 Henry Crabb Robinson. ' Excellences like those which render the personal 

 revelations of Pepys and the observations of Boswell such pleasant reading 

 abound in this work , ... In it is to be found something to suit every taste 

 and in form every mind. For the general reader it contains much light and 

 amusing matter. To the lover of literature it conveys information ^vhich 

 he will prize highly on account of its accuracy and rarity. The student of 

 social life will gather from it many valuable hints' whereon to base 

 theories as to the effects on English society of the progress of civilization. 

 For these and other reasons this f Diary ' is a work to which a hearty 

 welcome should be accorded. " 



Rogers (James E. Thorold). HISTORICAL GLEAN- 



INGS : A Series of Sketches. Montague, Walpole, Adam Smith, 

 Cobbett. By Prof. ROGERS. Crown 8vo. 4^. 6d. Second Series. 

 Wiklif, Laud, Wilkes, and Home Tooke. Crown 8vo. 6j. 



Professor Rogers' s object in these sketches, which are in the form of 

 Lectures, is to present a set of historical facts, grouped round a principal 

 figure. The author has aimed to state the social facts of the time in 

 which the individual whose history is handled took part in public business. 

 It is from sketches like these of the great men who took a prominent 

 and influential part in the affairs of their time that a clear conception of 

 the social and economical condition of our ancestors can be obtained. 

 History learned in this wayis both instructive and agreeable. "His Essays," 

 the PALL MALL GAZETTE says, "are full of interest, pregnant, thoughtful, 

 and readable" " They rank far above the average of similar perfor- 

 mances, 1 ' 1 says the WESTMINSTER REVIEW. 



Raphael. RAPHAEL OF URBINO AND HIS FATHER 

 GIOVANNI SANTI. By J. D. PASSAVANT, formerly Director 

 of the Museum at Frankfort. With Twenty Permanent Photo- 

 graphs. Royal 8vo, Handsomely bound. 3U. 6d. 



