34 George Redway's Publications. 



4/0, //. 37, Cloth extra, 3*. 6d. The woodcuts coloured by hand, $s. 

 Issue limited to 400 copies plain and 60 coloured. 



The Dance of Death, 



In Painting and in Print. 



BY T. TYNDALL WILDRIDGE. 

 WITH WOODCUTS. 



Probably few subjects have excited more conjecture or given rise to more 

 mistakes than the " Dance of Death." The earliest painting of the Dance is 

 said to be that at Basel in 1431. The first printed edition was published about 

 1485. The blocks illustrating Mr Wildndge's work are a series found in a 

 northern printing office many years ago. They seem to be of considerable 

 age, and are somewhat close copies of Holbein's designs so far as they go, 

 but in which of the hundred editions they originally appeared has not to the 

 present been ascertained. 



Fcap. Svo, pp. 40, Cloth limp, is. 6d. 



Light on the Path. 



A TREATISE WRITTEN FOR THE PERSONAL USE OF THOSE WHO 



ARE IGNORANT OF THE EASTERN WISDOM, AND WHO 



DESIRE TO ENTER WITHIN ITS INFLUENCE. 



WRITTEN DOWN BY M. C. 



NEW EDITION, WITH NOTES BY THE AUTHOR. 



" So far as we can gather from the mystic language in which it is couched, 

 ' Light on the Path ' is intended to guide the footsteps of those who have dis- 

 carded the forms of religion while retaining the moral principle to its fullest 

 extent. It is in harmony with much that was said by Socrates and Plato, 

 although the author does not use the phraseology of those philosophers, but 

 rather the language of Buddhism, easily understood by esoteric Buddhists, 

 but difficult to grasp by those without the pale. * Light on the Path ' may, we 

 think, be said to be THE ONLY ATTEMPT IN THIS LANGUAGE AND IN THIS 

 CENTURY TO PUT PRACTICAL OCCULTISM INTO WORDS ; and it may be added, 

 by way of further explanation, that the character of Gautama Buddha, as 

 shown in Sir Edwin Arnolds' ' Light of Asia,' is the perfect type of the be- 

 ing who has reached the threshold of Divinity by this road. That it has 

 reached a third edition speaks favourably for this inultum in parvo of the 

 science of occultism ; and * M. C.' may be expected to gather fresh laurels in 

 future." Saturday Review. 



