HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, & TRAVELS. 23 



Taylor (Rev. Isaac). WORDS AND PLACES. See 



p. 44 of this Catalogue. 



Trench (Archbishop). For other Works by the same Author, 

 see THEOLOGICAL and BELLES LETTRES CATALOGUES, and p. 45 

 of this Catalogue. 



GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS : Social Aspects of the Thirty Years' 

 War. By R. CHENEVIX TRENCH, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin. 

 Fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d. 



" Clear and lucid in style, these lectures will be a treasure to many to 

 whom the subject is unfamiliar." DUBLIN EVENING MAIL. " These 

 Lectures are vivid and graphic sketches: the first treats of the great 

 King of Sweden, and of his character rather than of his actions ; the 

 second describes the condition of Germany in that dreadful time when 

 famine, battles, and pestilence, though they exterminated three-fourths of the 

 population, were less terrible than the fiend-like cruelty, the utter lawless- 

 ness and depravity, bred of long anarchy and suffering. The substance of 

 the lectures is drawn from contemporary accounts, which give to them 

 especial freshness and life." LITERARY CHURCHMAN. 



Trench (Mrs. R.). Remains of the late MRS. RICHARD 

 TRENCH. Bsing Selections from her Journals, Letters, and 

 other Papers. Edited by ARCHBISHOP TRENCH. New and 

 Cheaper Issue, with Portrait. 8vo. 6s. 



Contains Notices and A necdotes illustrating the social life of the period 

 extending over a quarter of a century (1799 1827). It includes also 

 Poems and other miscellaneous pieces by Mrs. Trench. 



Wallace. Works by ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE. For other 

 Works by same Author, see SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



Dr. Hooker, in his address to the British Association, spoke thus oj the 

 author : " Of Mr. Wallace and his many contributions to philosophical- 

 biology it is not easy to speak without enthusiasm ; for, putting aside theii 

 great merits, he, throughout his writings, with a modesty as rare as 1 

 believe it to be unconscious, forgets his own unquestioned claim to the honour- 

 of having originated, independently of Mr. Darwin tlie theories which 

 he so ably defends. " 



