h) ty* lob Ungti 3Hiiltr. 



THE CRUISE OF THE BETSEY ; OR, A SUMMER RAMBLE 



AMONG THE FOSSELIFEROUS DEPOSITS OF THE HEBRIDES : with 



RAMBLES OF A GEOLOGIST ; or, TEN THOUSAND MILES 



OVER THE FOSSILIFEROUS DEPOSITS OF SCOTLAND. Post 8vO, 



price 7s. 6cL 



II. 



THE TESTIMONY OF THE ROCKS ; or, GEOLOGY IN ITS 

 BEARING ON THE TWO THEOLOGIES NATURAL AND REVEALED. 

 Post 8vo. Profusely Illustrated, price 7s. 6d. 



[Twenty-third Thousand. 



" The volume is well worthy of being his last contribution to science, 

 literature, and religion. . . . It is unquestionably his noblest produc- 

 tion. Its comprehensiveness of view, its force of argument, its profusion, 

 beauty, and grandeur of illustration, have often been exemplified in his 

 former writings, but never before so uniformly. With specimens of gra- 

 phic descriptions which he never surpassed, we find sustained generaliza- 

 tions and speculations of a bolder kind than he was wont to attempt. . . . 

 Its intrinsic value is superlative. "We cannot lay down the book without 

 formally assuring readers of the rare entertainment its grandly descriptive, 

 argumentative, reflective, and speculative pages afford, or without repeat- 

 ing our intense regret that we have no more of such works to expect." 

 Edinburgh Weekly Review. 



" Fossil species, however long extinct, live again in Mr Miller's pages. 

 His fossil fishes swim and gambol as though they were creatures of to-day, 

 and were called sharks and rays instead of Pterichthyses and Holopty- 

 chiuses ; whilst his vegetable Cyclopteruses and Didymoclcenas shoot, and 

 blossom, and wave in the wind, as though they were plants of to-day. We 



