D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S PUBLICATIONS. 



piONEERS OF FA'0/MT/OJV, from T hales to Huxley. 

 "* By Edward Ci.ODD, President oi the Folk-Lore Society; Au- 

 thor of "The Story of Creation," "The Story of 'Primitive' 

 Man," etc. With I'ortraiis. i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



"The mass of interesting material which Mr. Clodd has got together and woven 

 into a symmetrical ^tory of the progress from ignorance and theorj- to knowledge and 

 the intelligent recording of fact is prodigious. . . . The 'goal' to which Mr. Clodd 

 leads us in so masterly a fashion is but the starting point of fresh achievements, and, 

 in due course, fresh theories. His b(X)k furnishes an important contribution to a lib- 

 eral education." — London Daily Chronicle. 



" We are always glad to meet Mr. Clodd. He is never dull ; he is always well 

 informed, and he says what he has to say with clearness and precision. . . . The in- 

 terest intensifies as Mr. Clodd attempts to show the part really played in the growth 

 of the doctrine of evolution by men like Wallace, Da^^vin, Huxley, and Spencer. . . . 

 We commend the bo,)k to those who want to know what evolution really means." — 

 Landon Times. 



" This is a book which was needed. . . . Altogether, the book could hardly be 

 better done. It is luminous, lucid, orderly, and temperate. Above all, it is entirely 

 free from personal partisanship. Each chief actor is sympathetically treated, and 

 friendship is seldom or never allowed to overweight sound judgment."— Z.^wj'o/i 

 Academy. 



" We can assure the reader that he will find in this work a very useful guide to the 

 lives and labors of leading evolutionists of the past and present. Especially service- 

 able is the account of Mr. Herbert Spencer, and his share in rediscovering evolution 

 and illustrating its relations to the whole field of human knowledge. His forcible 

 style and wealth of metaphor make all that Mr. Clodd writes arrestive and interesting." 

 — London Literary World. 



" Can not but prove welcome to fair-minded men. ... To read it is to have an 

 object lesson in the meaning of evolution. . . . There is no belter book on the sub- 

 ject for the general reader. . . . No one could go through the book without being 

 both refreshed and newly instructed by its masterly survey of the growth of the most 

 powerful idea of modem times." — The Scotsman. 



" An extremely convenient summary of the history of idca.s pertaining to evolu- 

 tion." — Boston Herald. 



"This book will be found an interesting, if not an extremely valuable, addition to 

 the literature of the subject." — Chicaf^o Times-Herald. 



" Mr. Clodl has made an extremely valuable contribution to a contcm[)orar)- un- 

 derstanding of the development as well as the present status of the evolution idea. 

 He has written earnestly, entertainingly, and lucidly, and for its accurate presenUtion, 

 harmonious treatment, and graphif portrayal it leaves a very definite impress. . . . 

 The Ixiok will surely have a wide vi>gue among those who are already prejudiced in 

 its favor N-cause of the attitude it maintains, and, undoubteilly, it will lead into a 

 turthcr under-.tanding of some of the complex problems of modem thought."— ^«(^a/ff 

 L'n^uirer. 



V. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 



