4 MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



THE 



Student's Geography of British India- 

 Political and Physical. 



By GEORGE SMITH, LL.D., 



Author of the " Lives of Dr. Wilson — Dr. Duff,' &c. 

 Jl/afs. Post ?sVo. "js. dd. 



Raphael : 



HIS LIFE AND WORKS. 



WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO RECENTLY DISCOVERED RECORDS, AND AN 

 EXHAUSTIVE STUDY OF EXTANT DRAWIN(;S AND PICTURES. 



By J. A. CROWE, and G. B. CAVALCASELLE, 



Authors of " Painting in North Italy," " Flemish Painters," " Life of Titian," &c 

 Vol. I. Svo. I5.r. 



Uniform with "Crowe's Life and Times of Titian." 



" This is a book for those who take art, and art history seriously, as a subject worth carefu 

 thought and study. The number of tliese in proportion to the mass of readers, has un- 

 doubtedly increased of late, and to all these Messrs. Crowe and Cavalcaselles Raphael is a 

 necessity, a book which their library cannot be without. We have seen few books of biography 

 containing sucli an amount of .solid information . . . the book is not only clearly arranged, but 

 remarkably readable. " — T/ie Builder. 



♦♦ 



Asiatic Studies— Religious and Social 



By Sir ALFRED C LYALL, K.C.B. 



Svo. 12S. 



Religion of an Inoian Province. i Relations bf.tween the State and 



Origin of Divine Mvths in India. ' Religion in China. 



Influence upon Religion of a Rise Formation of some Clans and Castes 



IN Morality. in India. 



Witchcraft and Non-Christian Re- Rajput States in India. 



ligions. Islam in India. 



Missionary and Non-Missionauy Re- Our Religious Policy in India. 



ligions. Religious Situation in India. 



"The value of these essays consists in this ; they embody observations made on a living 

 society, which is still, e.xcept for the superficial influence of European civilization, in a 

 thoroughly arcliaic stage, and made by one who not only has exceptionally good oppor- 

 tunities, but an exceptionally clear iubiyht into the manner in which the lacts which come 



before him illustrate or correct the theories of Western aiuhors Sir A. Lyall's work has that 



rare quality more easily felt than described, which when it is perceived and recognized, we call 

 genius." — Pail Mall Uazettc. 



1 



