24 George Redway's Publications. 



/kindred spirit, Edward Maitland, survived her to perform her literary obse- 

 quies with affection and fidelity. . . . Not merely is it claimed for the writer 

 of this extraordinary volume that she beheld with supersensuous vision the 

 arcana covered by the timal conception of the Now, but that the Past lay be- 

 fore her as an open book, and that on its pages she could trace clearly the 

 evolutionary history of her own previous existence on all the plains of purga- 

 torial Karma. Such a claim was, perhaps, never before so gravely made by 

 any human being. A writer who claims to definitely trace back the egoism 

 of her own ego through all the countless aeons of cosmogenesis, at the bare 

 contemplation of which the brain absolutely reels, is certainly endowed with 

 faculties possibly denied to every other individual of the human race. " 

 Agnostic Journal. 



Vols I. and II., 4*0, Cloth, 2 is. each. Vol. III. in preparation. 

 Subscribers' names are now being received. 



Devonshire Parishes. 



BY CHARLES WORTHY, ESQ. 



" A very painstaking and pleasant volume [Vol. I.] which will be read with 

 great interest by the topographer and genealogist." Vanity Fair. 



" In this volume [Vol. II.] Mr Worthy has given us the rest of his account 

 of certain parishes in the Archdeaconry of Totnes, and the work, as a whole, 

 forms a respectable addition to the number of our local histories. Records 

 of this kind are often the means of ensuring the preservation of valuable 

 objects. Mr Worthy has devoted considerable space to tracing the descents 

 of manors and to the genealogies of the families which held them." Saturday 

 Review ; July 6th, 1889. 



With 8 illustrations^ Cloth, price "js. 6d. 



The Light of Egypt ; 



Or, the Science of the Soul and the Stars. 



This anonymous work is of American origin. It has been the subject of 

 some controversy owing to the fact that it contains all the teaching which its 

 author formerly imparted to pupils for a fee of 100 dollars. The pupils now 

 complain that it is placed before the public for a few shillings. The author 

 alleges that he has felt bound to try and check, by the publication of this 

 book, the spread of " the subtle, delusive dogmas of Karma and Re-incarna- 

 tion as taught by the sacerdotalisms of the decaying Orient." 



