22 MACMILLAN'S CATALOGUE OF WORKS IN 



enlarged immigration, settlement, and foreign trade. The volume contains 

 many valuable and reliable details as to the condition of the Negro popula- 

 tion, the state of Education and Religion, of Cotton, Sugar, and Tobacco 

 Cultivation, of Agriculture generally, of Coal and Iron Mining, Manu- 

 factures, Trade, Means of Locomotion, and the condition of Towns and oj 

 Society. A large map of the Southern States by Messrs. W. and A. K. 

 Johnston is appended, which shows with great clearness the Cotton, Coal, 

 andiron districts, the railways completed and projected, the State boundaries, 

 and other important details. " Full of interesting and valuable informa- 

 tion.'" SATURDAY REVIEW. 



Smith (Professor Goldwin). THREE ENGLISH 



STATESMEN. See p. 37 of this Catalogue. 



Streets and Lanes of a City. See DUTTON (AMY) p. 31 

 of this Catalogue. 



TacitUS. THE HISTORY OF TACITUS, translated into 

 English. By A. J. CHURCH, M.A. and W. J. BROURIBB, M.A. 

 With a Map and Notes. 8vo. icxr. 6d. 



The translators have endeavoured to adhere as closely to the original as 

 was thought consistent with a proper observance of English idiom. At 

 the same time it has been their aim to reproduce the precise expressions of 

 the author. This work is characterised by the SPECTATOR as " a scholarly 

 and faithful translation. " 



THE AGRICOLA AND GERMANIA. Translated into English by 

 A. J. CHURCH, M.A. and W. J. BRODRIBB, M.A. With Maps 

 and Notes. Extra fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d. 



77ie translators have sought to produce such a version as may satisfy 

 scholars who demand a faithful rendering of the original, and English 

 readers who are offended by the baldness and frigidity which commonly 

 disfigure translations. The treatises are accompanied by Introductions, 

 Notes, Maps, and a chronological Summary. The ATHEN^UM says of 

 this work that it is " a version at once readable and exact, which may be 

 perused with pleasure by all, and consulted with advantage by the classical 

 student;" and the PALL MALL GAZETTE says, " What the editors have 

 attempted to do, it is not, we think probable that any living scholars could 

 Jiave done better." 



