ME. MURRAY'S LIST. 



A POETRAIT OF THE PEIMITIVE OHTJECH. 



By Eev. E. D. CREE, M.A. 



Fcap. 8vo. Is. 



" This little work fully justifies its title, and 

 may very usefully be distributed at a time 

 when, notwithstanding much talk on Church 

 matters, great ignorance really prevails." — 

 John Bull. 



" In Mr. Cree's little book there is much of 

 valuable matter. He has written with the 



sincere intention of being impartial, and we 

 regi-et that we have not room for some ex- 

 tracts which would show how much interesting 

 information he has brought together in a 

 very clear and concise manner." — Church- 

 man's Companion. 



HISTORY OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF 



ENGLAND. 



FROM THE DEATH OF CHAULES I. TO THE EXPULSION OF THE LONG 

 PARLIAMENT BY CROMWELL. 



BEING OMITTED CHAPTERS OF THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND. 



By ANDREW BISSET. 



From MSS. in the State Paper Office, &c. 

 2 Vols. Svo, 30.9. 



" Mr. Bisset has chosen for his theme the 

 most heroic age of English histoi-y. The vin- 

 dication of the Council of State from the 

 charge of cowardice on the invasion of the 

 Scots is complete ; and the exposure of some of 

 Mrs. Hutchinson's mistakes— mistakes made 

 in the partiality of a wife writing history when 

 her husband was an actor in it— is quite suc- 

 cessful. Mr. Bisset has ample knowledge of 



the times of which he writes, and complete 

 sympathy with the motives of the great party, 

 which during its short lease of power, governed 

 England so well, though he is not blind to its 

 mistakes. He has made a valuable addition 

 to the literature of his subject, and the future 

 historian will find it needful to consult his 

 volumes." — Daily News. 



THE CORRESPONDENCE OF 



EAEL GREY AND KING WILLIAM IVTH. 



FROM THE BEGINNING OF HIS ADMINISTRATION TO 1832. 



EDITED BY HIS SON. 



2 Vols. Svo. 30s. 



"The model of what such a correspondence 

 ought to be. The King's letters are dignified 

 without reserve, and temperate without inde- 

 cision. He unbosoms himself fi-eely to his 

 Minister, recommends conciliation, disguises 

 not his alarm at the growing spirit of revolu- 

 tion. But through it all he maintains the 

 character of a king and a gentleman, of a man 



of honour and a man of spirit. The calm and 

 lofty tone of these letters, never shrinking 

 from the assertion of the writer's own opinions, 

 yet never condescending to personalities at 

 the expense of his opponents, will raise higher 

 than it stood before even the reputation of 

 Earl Grey."— P«;; Mall Gazette. 



