MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW WORKS. 5 



A Descriptive Catalogue of the Etched 

 JYork of Rembrandt Von Rhyu ; preceded by 

 a Life and Genealogy. 



By CHAS. H. MIDDLETON, B.A. 



With 12 Plates. Medium &vo. 31s. 6d. 



"Having for five and twenty years been an earnest admirer of the works of the grent 

 Dutch Master, and having acquainted myself with the well-known Catalogues. I have long 

 been of opinion that there is room for another which, while it presents an accurate account of 

 the various States in which these etched works exist, shall form an index to the large public 

 collections, and by a careful re-arrangement shall give a clearer view of Rembrandt's work as 

 a whole and convey an idea of the order in which the several works were executed." — Author's 



Pre/ace. 



#. 



Lectures on the Rise and Development of 

 Mediceval Architecture. Delivered at the 

 Royal Academy. 



By Sir G. GILBERT SCOTT, R.A. 



CONTENTS : 



The Claims of Mediaeval Architec- 

 ture upon our Study. 



Sketch of the Rise of Medieval 

 Architecture. 



The Transition. 



The XIIIth Century. 

 Rationale of Gothic Architecture. 

 A Digression concerning Windows. 

 The Practical Study of Gothic 

 Architecture. Domes, &c. 



With 450 Illustrations. 2 Vols. Medium %vo. 42s. 



The Witness of the Psalms to Christ 

 and Christianity. 



THE BAMPTON LECTURES, 1876. 



By WILLIAM ALEXANDER, D.D., D.C.L., 



Lord Bishop of Derry and Raphoe. 



Second Edition, Reinsed and greatly Enlarged. 8vo. 14s. 



"The Bishop has chosen a grand and noble subject; one which he is pre-eminently 

 qualified to deal with, and on which we have no hesitation in saying he has given us, not an 

 exhaustive — for when will the fountain of inspired song cease to flow? — but a solid, instructive, 

 and a most charming book."— Jo/in Bull. 



The Temples of the fews, and the other 

 Buildings in the Haram Area at Jerusalem. 



By JAMES FERGUSSON, F.R.S. 



With Plates and Woodcuts. 4/0. 42 .r. 



"Mr. Fergusson's splendid volume, is unquestionably a work that has severely taxed his 

 thought and his time, and reflects great credit on the industry, enthusiasm and ability to 

 which it so amply testifies."— Morning Post. 



