George Redway's Publications. 



subject, for in addition to a long and general practical experience, he held 

 the position of principal Assistant to the late Somerset Herald." Western 

 Antiquary. 



" The book takes the form of a handy volume of about 250 well printed 

 pages, and is one that by arrangement and index is rendered easy for consul- 

 tation." 7*^ Field. 



" Mr Worthy introduces a host of historical matter as to the origin of vari- 

 ous coats of arms, seals, liveries, and the like, and by thus investing his sub- 

 ject with the elements of personal history, he has rendered his volume as 

 interesting as it is useful." Court Journal. 



" Meets in a very efficient and satisfactory manner the long felt need of a 

 simple, trustworthy, and readable treatise on the subject. Of Mr Worthy's 

 qualifications for the task, nothing need be said : himself a member of a very 

 ancient family, claiming descent from the Dukes of Normandy and from 

 Charlemagne, he is a thorough master of his subject, and he may be accepted 

 not only as a competent but a very agreeable Mentor." -John Bull. 



"A lucid and very interesting introduction to one of the most fascinating 

 of antiquarian sciences. " The Sun (New York). 



2 Vols. Demy 8vo, Cloth, 25^. 



The Philosophy of Mysticism 



(PHILOSOPHIE DER MYSTJK). 



BY DR CARL DU PREL. 

 TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN BY C. C. MASSEY. 



CONTENTS : Introduction Science : Its Capability of Development On the Scientific 

 Importance of Dream Dream a Dramatist Somnambulism Dream a Physician The 

 Faculty of Memory The Monistic Doctrine of the Soul. 



Extracts from a lengthy notice (over two columns) in the Spectator, Sept. 

 14: "The book, we may say at once, has been thoroughly well translated 

 by Mr C. C. Massey whose version of a good many passages we have 

 compared pretty closely with the original and the English reader will find 

 in it abundant subject for thought. . . . Taken for what it is, and with 

 the reserves already indicated, this TRULY ORIGINAL, TRULY ATTRACTIVE 

 book may with a good conscience be recommended to an English public. 

 Not the least of its merits is its fertility of suggestion of practical problems in 

 introspective psychology observations which the reader may make upon the 

 one thing namely, consciousness which is always with him in waking hours, 

 and of which he can infuse more than he perhaps supposes into the dim 

 experiences of sleep." 



" In the present work, which fills two sturdy volumes, he [Baron Du Prel] 

 ventures into the region of dreams, and carefully and lucidly examines, as far 

 as they can be examined by the light of science, the state of the dreamer, the 

 somnambulist, and the clairvoyant. " Pall Mall Gazette. 



" These volumes, admirably translated, are a most valuable addition to 

 the bibliography of a subject which is now engaging the attention of both 

 scientists and thinkers of all classes." American Bookseller. 



