MR. EDWARD ARNOLD'S 



^electetr WBovk^ for tlje ^Ctirarp, 



ANIMAL LIFE AND INTELLIGENCE. By C. Lloyd Morgan, F.G.S., 

 Professor of Biology in University College, Bristol, Author of " The 

 Springs of Conduct," fete. With 40 Illustrations and a Photo-etched 

 Frontispiece. 512 pages. Demy 8vo. Cloth. 16s. 



" Whether we look to the first half of the treatise, which is concerned with animal life, or 

 to the second half, which is devoted to a consideration of animal inttlligence, we must equally 

 congratulate the author on the character of his achievement. He has succeeded in the diflicult 

 task of furnishing in a manner as interesting to the general reader as' to the special student, 

 an almost exhaustive review of the facts and theories which at the present time are of the most 

 general importance to the sciences of biology and psychology. Moreover, he has done this in 

 a spirit of scientific precision, expressed in a clear literary style, and everywhere free from the 

 partisanship which, especially where Darwinian questions are concerned, is becoming almost 

 as marked a feature in science as it is in politics. In short, « Animal Life and Intelligence ' 

 deserves to be regarded as a noticeable book, because it sets forth the reasoned conclusions of a 

 well-instructed and a thoroughly impartial thinker upon the topics wliich are now of highest 

 moment to the sciences both of life and of mind." — Professor G. J. Romanes, in the Nineteenth 

 Century Review. 



"The work will prove a boon to all who desire to gain a general knowledge of the 

 more interesting problems of modem biology and psychology by the perusal of a single com- 

 pact, luminous, and very readable volume."— Professor A. R. Wallace, in Nature. 



" Professor Lloyd Morgan is emphatically a popular writer. He has the art of selecting 

 interesting facts, and of arranging them suggestively. He uses simple language, and can be 

 read without weariness by the busy and unlearned." — The Leeds Mercury. 



" A learned and elaborate work. . . . Professor Lloyd Morgan is eminently qualified, and 

 his book is one which no serious student can neglect." — The Times. 



'* Perhaps one of the finest passages in the whole treatise is that in which the object and 

 system of evolution is described. One of the most interesting parts of the book to the general 

 reader is that which is devoted to the faculties of animals. . . . All will agree in admiring the 

 masterly handling, the impartiality, and the absence of dogmatism which characterize Pro- 

 fessor Morgan's work." — The Daily News. 



A BOOK ABOUT ROSES.— By the Very Kev. S. Reynolds Hole, Dean 



of Rochester. Eleventh and cheaper edition. Small crown 8vo. Cloth. 



28. 6d. 



" The tenth edition of ' A Book about Roses' has long been out of print, and I thought it 



would gradually vanish out of sight and out of mind ; but I continue to receive so many kind 



appeals for a further publication, that I am constrained to comply, chiefly by assurances that 



the book has promoted in the past, and therefore by the hope that it may quicken in the 



future, that love of the beautiful which adds so graciously to the happiness of life."— From the 



Preface. 



THAT FIDDLER FELLOW : A Tale of St. Andrews. By Horace 

 G. Hutchinson, Author of " My Wife's Politics," " Golf," " Creatures of 

 Circumstance," etc. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 6s. 

 " A singularly ingenious and interesting tale." — Spectator. 

 "What Mr. Hutchinson writes is always pleasant to read." — The World. 

 " A strange history of hypnotism and crime, which will delight any lover of the grim and 

 terrible." — The Guardian. 



THE MODERN MALADY. By Cyril Bennett, Author of " The Massage 

 Case," " The Cloud on St. Angelo," etc. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 6s. 



This Work deals in a popular manner with the Nineteenth-century 

 disease commonly known as " Nerves." It gives Hints as to the reasonable 

 Treatment of Sufferers by their friends and relations, and points out what is 

 to be avoided as well as what is to be aimed at, in order to effect the speediest 

 recovery. 



" Common sense speaks from every page, and a perusal of the book will not prove unprofit- 

 able to any reader, whether he suffer from ' Nerves ' or not."— Manchester Examiner. . 



London : EDWARD ARNOLD, 37, Bedford Street, Strand, W.C. 



