56 TRUBNER & CO.’S MONTHLY LIST. 
NOW READY. 
Crown 8vo, pp. 112, cloth, price 3s. 
THE RECENT DEPRESSION OF TRADE: 
ITS NATURE, ITS CAUSES, AND THE REMEDIES 
WHICH HAVE BEEN SUGGESTED FOR IT. 
By WALTER E. SMITH. 
Being the Oxford Cobden Prize Essay for 1879. 
‘‘ This essay is ably and sensibly written. Asa political economist the author has con- 
densed this much-vexed question into a nut-shell.” —Examner. 
Demy 8vo, pp. xvi.—468, cloth, with Maps and Illustrations, price 18s. 
RECOLLECTIONS OF TRAVEL IN NEW ZEALAND 
AND AUSTRALIA. 
By JAMES COUTTS CRAWFORD, F.G.S., 
Late Member of the Legislative Council of New Zealand; Resident Magistrate, Wellington; President 
of the Wellington Philosophical Institute; and a Governor of the New Zealand Institute. 
The Author was for seven years a Member of the Legislateve Council, and for twelve-and-a-half 
years filled the office of Resident Magistrate at Wellington. This will show that his opportunities 
for observation in regard to the state of the colony were considerable, and his experience, therefore, 
zs entitled to some weight. 
Mr. Crawford probably has as thorough an acquaintance with the history, politics, economic 
and social conditions of New Zealand as any man now living. . . . There is a good deal 
to be learned from its pages about the early struggles of the New Zealand colonists, and about 
the characteristics, ethnological and social, of the Maories. His volume is enriched by two or 
three maps and several wood-engravings.”—Scotsman. 
NEW VOLUME OF THE ARCHAIC CLASSICS. 
Crown 4to, pp. 52, cloth, price 
ASSYRIAN TEXTS. 
Selected and Arranged, with Philological Notes, 
By ERNEST A. BU DiGE, IM hea... 
Assyrian Exhibitioner, Christ’s College, Cambridge, &c. 
The want of a selection of Assyrian texts in the form of a Reading Book has been felt and often 
expressed by Students, the mare so on account of many of the Assyrian Books that have been published 
in England being out of print. This selection (which is based upon the proposals made by Mr, 
Boscawen to Messrs. Bagster) has been made to include specimens of the best historical texts, and 
these have been annotated in a similar manner to the valuable pages in Professor Sayce's Assyrian 
Grammar. Lach character has been carefully compared with the original texts preserved in the 
British Museum, and it is therefore hoped that they will be found free from error. 
London: TRUBNER & CO., Ludgate Hill. 
