of Messrs W. H. Allen 6" Co.'s Publications. 



R. RIMMER, F.L.S. 



The Land and Freshwater Shells of the British Isles. Illustrated 

 with 10 Photographs and 3 Lithographs, containing figures of all the 

 principal Species. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, 55. 

 " This handsomely got up little volume supplies a long-felt want in a very ingenious 

 and trustworthy manner. The author is an enthusiastic conchologist, and writes 

 both attractively and well, and in a manner so simple and natural that we have no 

 fear that any ordinarily educated man will easily understand every phrase. But 

 the feature of thia hook which strikes us most is that every species of British land and 

 freshwater shell has been photographed, and here we have all the photographs, natural 

 size in the albertype process, so that the merest tyro will find no difficulty in identi- 

 fying any shell he may find." Science Gossip. 



ALEXANDER ROGERS (Bombay Civil Service, Retired). 

 The Land Revenue of Bombay, a History of its Administration, Rise, 



and Progress, with 18 Maps. 2 vols., demy 8vo, 305. 

 "Mr Rogers has produced a continuous and an authoritative record of the land 

 changes and of the fortunes of the cultivating classes for a full half-century, together 

 with valuable data regarding the condition and burdens of those classes at various 

 periods before the present system of settlement was introduced. Mr Rogers now 

 presents a comprehensive view of the land administration of Bombay as a whole, the 

 history of its rise and progress, and a clear statement of the results which it has 

 attained. It is a narrative of which all patriotic Englishmen may feel proud. The old 

 burdens of native rule have been lightened, the old injustices mitigated, the old fiscal 

 cruelties and exactions abolished. Underlying the story of each district we see a per- 

 ennial struggle going on between the increase of the population and the available 

 means of subsistence derived from the soil. That increase of the population is the 

 direct result of the peace of the country under British rule. But it tends to press 

 more and more severely on the possible limits of local cultivation, a_nd it can only be 

 provided for by the extension of the modern appliances of production and distribu- 

 tion. Mr Rogers very properly confines himself to his own subject. But there is 

 ample evidence that the extension of roads, railways, steam factories, and other 

 industrial enterprises, have played an important part in the solution of the problem, 

 and that during recent years such enterprises have been powerfully aided by an 

 abundant currency." The Times. 



ROBERT SEWELL. 



Analytical History of India, from the earliest times to the Abolition of 

 the East India Company in 1858. Post 8vo, 8s. 



" Much careful labour has been expended on this volume." Athenaeum. 



"The object of the author in compiling the following analytical sketch of Indian 

 history has been to supplv a want felt by most students of the more voluminous 

 standard works of Mill, Elphinstone, Thornton, and Marshman, for a condensed outline 

 in one small volume, which should serve at once to recall the memory and guide the 

 eye. At the same time he has attempted to render it interesting to the general reader 

 by preserving a medium between a bare analysis and a complete history ; so that, 

 without consulting the eminent authorities mentioned above, the mind may readily 

 grasp the principal outlines of the early condition of India, and the rise and progress 

 of the East India Company. For the more full comprehension of these facts the author 

 has provided, in addition to a table of contents and a chronological index, an index to 

 the geographical position of the places to which reference is made in the text, bearing 



latitudes and longitude 



has provided, in addition to a table of contents and a chronological index, an index to 

 the geographical position of the places to which reference is made in the text, bearing 

 the latitudes and longitude as given in Thornton's ' Gazetteer of India.' This will be 

 ound not only to aid the student who is but partially acquainted with the map of 

 India, but also by means of occasional accents to guide him in the ordinary pro- 

 nunciation of the name?." Preface. 



Any Bookseller at Home and Abroad. 



