MR. MURRAY’S LIST OF NEW WORKS. 6 
AN ATLAS OF ANCIENT GEOGRAPHY. 
BIBLICAL AND CLASSICAL. 
Intended to illustrate Smith’s Classical Dictionaries, and especially the ‘‘ Dictionary 
of the Bible.” Compiled under the superintendence of 
DR. WM. SMITH and MR. GEORGE GROVE. 
With Descriptive Text, giving the Sources and Authorities, Indices, &e. 
43 Maps. Folio, half-bound. £6 6s. [Ready. 
“The students of Dr. Wm. Smith's admirable Dictionaries must have felt themselves 
again andagain brought up short for want of an Atlas constructed on the same scale of precise 
and minute information with the article they were reading. This want has been supplied by 
the superb work before us. The indices are full, the engraving is exquisite, and the delineation 
of the natural features very minute and beautiful.» It may safely be pronounced—and higher 
praise can scarcely be bestowed—to be a worthy companion of the series of familiar volumes 
which it is intended to illustrate.’ —THE GUARDIAN. 
THE NICENE AND APOSTLES’ CREEDS, 
THEIR LITERARY HISTORY; TOGETHER WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF THE 
GROWTH AND RECEPTION OF THE SERMON ON THE FAITH, 
COMMONLY CALLED “‘7HE CREED OF ST. ATHANASIUS.” 
BY C. A. SWAINSON, D.D., 
Canon of Chichester and Norrisian Professor of Divinity at Cambridge. 
8yo. 16s. 
eee 
WORSHIP IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. 
BY A. J. B. BERESFORD HOPE, M_.P., 
Author of “ The English Cathedral of the Nineteenth Century.” 
Second Edition. S8vo. 9s. 
“Wr. Beresford Hope's book is calm, temperate, and to any fair mind, convineing ; and bt 
is excellently well arranged. The chapters have, each of them, a completeness of their own, 
and having very accurate tables of contents prefixed, you can find what you want in a moment. 
Thus it is not only a book to read, but also one to refer to; and will be as useable as it is 
useful. In fact, vt is hard to say too much in its commendation, look at it in what way you 
will,’ —LITERARY CHURCHMAN. 
DIARY OF THE SHAH OF PERSIA, 
DURING HIS TOUR THROUGH EUROPE ww _ 1873. 
TRANSLATED BY J. W. REDHOUSE, F.R.A.S, 
With Portrait and Coloured Title. Crown 8vo. 12s. 
“The Diary describes the impressions made upon an Eastern potentate by” Western 
civilization. It proves the Shah to be an intelligent and observant man, with no tendency to 
condemn that which, being strange, he does not understand. His book is simply written; he 
describes what he saw in plain, wtelligible language, and again and again gives evidence of 
singular shrewdness. Nobody can read the book withaut finding in it a great amount of 
shrewd observation and of good information. It is curious in many respects ; it is interesting 
in all.” —SCOTSMAN- 
