14 



MR. MURRAY'S LIST. 



SOME ACCOUNT OF DEER AM) DEER PARKS 



AND THE MANAGEMENT OF DEEB. 



By EVELYN PHILIP SHIKLEY, M.A., F.S.A. 



"With Illustrations. Fcap. 4to. 21s. 



" This veiy attractive Tolume not only 

 challenges at once the attention of sportsmen, 

 natm-aUsts, and country gentlemen, but can- 

 not fail to prove interesting and instructive to 

 every class of reader. Its tendency is to re- 

 vive among us that devotion to the chase 

 vrhich distinguished our ancestors, and to 

 give a new zest to our sport by investing it 

 with historical associations, which invariably 

 command the respect and reverence of English- 

 men. This charming book is quite calculated 

 to stop many an act of Vandalism, and to make 

 the churlish in-coming proprietor pause and 

 reflect before disparking his fair inheritance, 



and converting his time-honoured demesne, 

 hitherto sacred to ' vert and venison,' dating, 

 perhaps, from the Norman Conquest, into a 

 commonplace nursery of wool and mutton. 

 Mr. Shirley has undertaken his task of 

 authorship with an able hand, and his pages 

 abound with proofs of great diligence and re- 

 search. His two first chapters comprise a 

 sketch of the history of deer parks from the 

 Conquest to the present time, and subse- 

 quently the main bulk of his work is taken 

 up by an historical as well as a descriptive 

 account of nearly every deer park in 

 England." — Zand and Water. 



LIFE OF CICERO. 



HIS CHARACTER AS A STATESMAN, ORATOR, AND FRIEND. 



"With a Selection from his Correspondence. 

 By WILLIAM FORSYTH, Q.C. 



New Edition. "With Illustrations. 8vo. 16s. 



"It is in a generous but temperate spirit of 

 commendation that Mr. Forsyth notices the 

 many glorious services which Cicero performed 

 for the cavise of political freedom and good 

 government in a declining republic, as well as 

 the brilliant achievements of his literary and 

 oratorical genius, and the amiable virtues of 



his private life. Mr. Forsyth has used, with 

 skill and judgment, the abundant materials 

 that Cicero's letters and speeches aftbrd us to 

 make up the portrait of the man as he was, in 

 his social and domestic, as well as in Ms poli- 

 tical relations." — London Review. 



BLIND PEOPLE : 



SOME ACCOUNT OF THEIR WORKS AND WAYS, WITH SKETCHES OF 

 THE LIVES OF SOME FAMOUS BLIND MEN, 



By rev. B. G. JOHNS, M.A., 



Chaplam of the Blind School, St. George's Fields. 

 AVith Illustrations. Post 8vo. 7s. 6d. 



" It is 'a strange world to wliich the 

 Eev. B. G. Johns introduces us, full of a 

 most pathetic activity, in which the great ca- 

 lamity seems almost for a time to be forgotten. 

 The industries of the blind arc well known ; 



their music, reading, basket-work, weaving ; 

 but the author, by his picturesque style, has 

 thrown a fresh grace and interest around them 

 all." — Guardian. 



