2 5 & 34 G forge IV. Bridge, Edinburgh. 



Works on the Highlands of Scotland : 

 Disruption Worthies of the Highlands, a Series of Bio- 



Saphics of Eminent Free church Ministers who Suffered in the 

 orth of Scotland in 1843"*. >r the Cause of Religious Liberty, 

 enlarged edition, with additional Biographies, and an Introduc- 

 tion by the Rev. Dr Duff, illustrated with 24 full-page portraits 

 and facsimiles of the autographs of eminent Free Churchmen, 

 4to, handsomely bound in cloth, gilt (pub ,\ is), 8s 6d. 

 Gaelic Names of Plants, Scottish and Irish, Collected and 

 Arranged in Scientific Order, with Notes on the Etymology, 

 their Uses, Plant Superstitions, &c., among the Celts, with 

 Copious Gaelic, English, and Scientific Indices, by John Came- 

 ron, 8vo, cloth (pub 75 6d), 35 6d. Blackwood & Sons. 

 " It is impossible to withhold a tribute of admiration from a work on which 

 the author -.pent ten year* of his life, and which necessitated not only vojuminou* 

 reading in Gaelic and Irish, but long journey-, through the Highlands in search 

 of Gaelic names for plants, or rather, in this case, plants for names already 

 ex ist ing. ~Sc oilman. 



Grant (Mrs, of Laggari) Letters from the Mountains, 

 edited, with Notes and Additions, by her son, J. P. Grant, best 

 edition, 2 vols, post 8vo, cloth (pub 2 is), 45 6d. London. 

 Lord Jeffrey says: " Her 'Letters from the Mountains ' are among the 

 most interesting collections of real letters that have been given to the public : 

 and being indebted for no part of their interest to the celebrity of the names 

 they contain, or the importance of the events they narrate, afford, in their suc- 

 cess, a more honourable testimony of the talents of the author. The great 

 charm of the correspondence indeed is its perfect independence of artitic ial 

 helps, and the air of fearlessness and originality which it has consequently 

 assumed. " 



Historical Sketches of the Highland Clans of Scotland, 

 containing a concise account of the origin, &c., of the Scottish 

 Clans, with twenty-two illustrative coloured plates of the Tartan 

 worn by each, post 8vo, cloth, 2s 6d. 

 " The object of this treatise is to give a concise account of the origin, teat, 



and characteristics of the Scottish Clans, together with .1 representation of the 



distinguishing tartan worn by each." t'rt/tue. 



Keltie (John S.)A History of the Scottish Highlands, 

 Highland Clans, and Highland Regiments, with an Account of 

 the Gaelic Literature and Music l>y I)r M'Lauchlan, and an 

 Essay on Highland Scenery by Profess,. r \Vilx>n, coloured illus- 

 trations of the Tartans of Scotland, also many steel engravings, 1 

 v<ils, impei ial 8vo, half morocco, gilt top (pub $ tos), \ 175 6d 

 Mackenzie (Alexander) The History of the Highland 

 Clearances, containing a reprint of Donald Nlacleod's " Gloomy 

 Memories of the Highlands," " Isle <>f Skye in 1882," and a 

 Verbatim Report of the Trial of the lir.ie C'rnftcr>, thick vol, 



i 8vo. cloth (pul> 7s 6d), 3s 6d.- lim . 



" Some people may ask. Why rake up all this iniquity just now? We answer, 

 That the same laws which permitted the cruellies, the inhuman atrocities, 

 described in this hook, arc still the laws of the country, and any tyrant who may 

 be indifferent to the healthier pulilic opinion which now prevails, may U--ally 

 repeat the same proceedings whenever he may take it into his head to do so." 



irfs (Gtneral Darid, of Garth) Sketches of the 



. Institutions, an</ ( 'interns of the //ighlanJtrs of Scot- 

 land, < r\sii SM>, cluth (|<ul) 5~>), 2s. In\r:: 



nents are worthy to 



rank \- Mand works thy, fur 



facts a; have the book in his 



hands ass... U- to read. 



