MR. MURRAY’S LIST OF NEW WORKS. Wd 
A METHODICAL, ANALYTICAL, & HISTORICAL 
GRAMMAR OF THE ENGLISH TONGUE. 
BY PROFESSOR MAETZNER, of Berlin. 
Transtatep By CLAIR J. GRECE, LL.B. 
8 vols. 8vo. 36s. 
“A stupendously elaborate work, which only the patience of a German professor could have 
brought to completion. It is an exhaustive treatise, from every conceivable point of view, on 
the grammar of our language. We cannot but appreciate it as a high national compliment ; 
at the same time we must confess to some astonishment that an English grammar should be 
carried to a far greater length than any Greek grammar with which we are acquainted. One 
would suppose that our tongue was not so complex and intricate as to require for its discussion 
three closely-printed octavo-volumes averaging each 500 pages.”’—SPECTATOR. 
THE LAND OF MOAB, 
BY CANON TRISTRAM, M.A.; LLD., F.RBS., 
Author of ‘‘ The Land of Israel,” ‘* Natural History of the Bible.” 
Second Edition. With Map and Plates. Post 8vo. 15s. 
“ Canon Tristram carries a pen, and a very deft and ready pen, and when there is anything 
to tell he knows how to tell it ; and so Moab has been reft from the domain of the unknown and 
unknowable, and lies all mapped out and photographed and described. Altogether the book is 
a@ very interesting one, and we can only hope future explorers will imitate Mr. Tristram’s 
part in the zeal and thoroughness of his research.”’—SatuRDAY REVIEW. 
“Mr. Tristram’s volume is a very pleasant and readable story of travel told by one who is 
an old hand at the work, who keeps las ears and eyes open, and has the art of skilfully 
describing what he observes.’’—SPECTATOR. 
THE NATURALIST IN NICARAGUA. 
A NARRATIVE OF A RESIDENCE AT THE GOLD MINES OF CHONTALES 
AND OF JOURNEYS IN THE SAVANNAHS AND FORESTS ; 
WITH OBSERVATIONS ON ANIMALS AND PLANTS. 
BY THOMAS BELT, F.GS. 
With Illustrations. Post 8vo. 12s, 
“ An excellent attempt to deal with the natural history of one of the finest and most Mgt lion 
countries of the globe. Mr. Belt has taken for his model Mr. Bates’s * Naturalist on the River 
Amazon,’ and to that gentleman he dedicates his work. We may say, in the first place, that 
the present book is well worthy of that on which it was formed, and, in the second, that we can 
bear personal testimony to the fidelity of the first four chapters, and we can therefore trust 
the remainder, which we have also read with deep wnterest.”’—STANDARD. 
PERILS OF THE POLAR SEAS: 
‘TRUE STORIES OF ARCTIC ADVENTURE AND DISCOVERY. : 
BY MRS. CHISHOLM, 
Author of “ Rana, or the Story of a Little Frog,” ‘‘ Little Plays for Little People,” &c. 
With 2 Maps and 18 Illustrations. Post 8vo. 6s. 
“ Those who desire to read tales of adventures in the Polar Seas, while at the same time they 
obtain a connected account of geographical discovery in the Arctic regions, should procure Mrs. 
Chisholm’s charming volume. The authoress has consulted all the best authorities, and culled 
from them facts which she has weaved into one harmonious narrative of sustained interest, 
while the leading events are admirably ilustrated.”’—JoHN BuLL- 
