WORKS OF HENRY THOMAS BUCKLE. 



L 



The Life and Writings of Henry 

 Thomas Buckle. 



By Alfred Henry Huth. 12mo. Cloth. 



"The book deals with Mr. Buckle less as a philosopher than as a man. . . 

 Mr. Huth h;is done his part well and thoronyiihly.''''— Saturday Review. 



"Mr; Huth has produced a strikin,'^ and aistiiict portrait out ot his materinls, 

 and he has done his work with a siuiplicity and modesty which are highly effec- 

 tive."— Pa// J/a// Gazette. 



"This work, we think, will revolutionize popular opinion about the philoso- 

 pher."— Zow'/art Daily News. 



"Buckle was a man whose story must excite interest and rouse sympathy." 

 Scotsynan. 



II. 



History of Civilization in England. 



2 vols., 8vo. Cloth, $4.00 ; half calf, extra, $8.00. 



" Whoever misses reading this book will miss readintr what is, in various re- 

 Pl)ect3, to the be-^t of our jiidiiment and experience, the most r<niaik:ible book 

 of the day— one, indeed, that no thoughtful, inquiring mind would niiss reading 

 for a good deal. Let the reader be as adverse as he may be to the vvi iter's philcs- 

 ophy, let him be as dt^voted to the obstrut tive as Mr.Buckle is to the progreea 

 p.irtv, let him be as orthodox in church creed as the other is heterodox, as dog- 

 matic as the author is skeptical- let him, In short, find his pnjudicts sl;ocl;ed at 

 ev^ry turn of the argument, and all his pn possess!, ns whistled down the wild 

 — still, there is so much in tliis extraordinary volume to stimulate reflection and 

 excits to inquiry, and provoke to earnest investigation, perliaps (to this < r that 

 reader) on a track hitherto untrodden, and across the virgin seal ol untiiied ficldp, 

 fre-»h woods and pa-^tures new, that we may fnirly defy tie most I oslile spirit, 

 the most mistrustful and least sympathetic, to read it thn.uj;h wil'-out being 

 glad of having done so. or, having be^un it, or even glanced at almost ar;y cne 

 of its pages, to pass away unread."— ZioTarfow. Times. 



" We have read Mr. BLickle's volumes with the deepest interest. We cwc 

 him a profound debt of gratitude. His ii^fluence on the thoupht of the pros, lit 

 a^'i^ can not but be enormous, and if he gives us no more than we nlr(iid> lave 

 in the two volumes of the mannus opus, he will still he classed among the fathers 

 and founders o( the Science of History." — iV'ew Ycrk Time.o. 



"8iiij;iilarlv acut«, possessed of rare analv'ical power, imaginative hut rot- 

 fanciful, nnwearied in research, and dfted with wonderful talent in arranj.iiig 

 and molding his material, the author is as fascinaling us 1 e is learned. His 

 erudition is immense— so immense as not to be cumbersome. It is tlie result 

 of a Ijiig and steady growth— a part of himself."— JBo^/on Journal. 



III. 



Essays. 



With a Biography of the Author. Portrait. 12mo. Cloth, ^.00; 

 half calf, extra, .$2.50. 



D. APPLETON th CO., Publishers, 1, 3, <£• 5 Bond St., Ketv York. 



