12 Mr. Murray's Recent Publications. 



The Land of Manfred. 



RAI\IBLES IN APULIA AND OTHER REMOTE PARTS OF 



SOUTHERN ITALY, 



WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THEIR HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS. 



By JANET ROSS. 



With Map and Illustrations. Crown Svo. los. 6d. 



"We welcome with the more heartiness Mrs. Ross's boo]<, whicli is as brightly written as 

 it is reliable, as hearty and full of sympathy witli the people as it is exact and learned — the 

 result of close and loving observation. Mrs. Ross has a lightness of touch and a power of 

 conveying much in little, which is admirable." — Nonconformist. 



" Wherever the footsteps passed, the author made it a labour of love, not only to note 

 with accuracy and discrimination tlie features and habits of places and people as they exist 

 to-day, but to dive deep into the past, and to bring to light for the pleasure and instruction 

 of future readers, many a long-buried legend, many a quaint tradition, many an historical fact 

 .and association, long relegated to the limbo of the forgotten. A host of pretty little sketches 

 rincrease the interest of Mrs. Ross's charming book." — Court Journal. 



"A charming little volume. Many of the towns along the coast were visited by Mrs. 

 Ross, and the leading events connected with their history are very graphically described. 

 These pages of Mrs. Ross's will undoubtedly tempt many of liar compatriots to visit this fair 

 •unknown land, to its and the traveller's benefit." — Nature. 



-♦♦- 



An Historical Introduction to the 

 Study of the New Testament. 



.BEING AN EXPANSION OF THE LECTURES DELIVERED IN THE 

 DIVINITY SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF DUBLIN. 



By GEORGE SALMON, D.D., F.R.S., 



Provost of Trinity College, Dublin. 



^th Revised and Cheaper Edition. Crown Svo. gs. 

 ♦•♦ 



The Invisible Powers of Nature. 



HEAT, LIGHT, SOUND, GRAVITATION, SOLIDS, FLUIDS, 

 ELECTRICITY, MAGNETISM, &c. 



By E. M, CAILLARD. 



Fost Svo. 6i, 



"The book is one which will bear good fruit in the hands of the young, and we congratulate 

 the authoress on having produced a very readable little vo\\ime."—/ournal of Education. 



"We admire the lucidity and easy power with which the most recondite or compHcated 

 matters are treated, and the manner in which common matters are made illustrative."— iVo«- 

 ■cenformist. 



'• We have rarely met with a work of the kind in which so much information is so clearly 

 ■*nd so accurately set forth." — Gardeners' Chronicle. 



