108 TRUBNER & CO.’S MONTHLY LIST. 
NOW READY. 
CHEAP EDITION OF Mk. ARNOLD'S NEW AND POPULAR POEM ON 
BUDDHA AND BUDDHISM. 
Crown 8vo, pp. xvi.-238, illustrated paper boards, or limp parchment wrapper, price 2s, 6d. 
THE LIGHT OF ASIA; 
Or, The Great Renunciation. 
aching of Gautama, Prince of India and Founder of Buddhism, 
ToLD IN VERSE BY AN INDIAN BUDDHIST. 
By EDWIN ARNOLD, C.S.J., Author of ‘‘'The Indian Song of Songs.” 
‘‘Mr, Edwin Amold’s poem, the ‘Light of Asia,’ is the most sympathetic account ever 
published in Europe of the life and teaching of the Sakya Saint, Prince Gautama Siddartha, 
the Lord Buddha. . + = It is beyond the scope of the present review to enter into any 
explanation of the Dharma (Law of Righteousness), Karma, Nirvana, and other tenets and 
precepts of Buddhism. They will be found summed up in Buddha’s ‘Sermon on the Mount,’ 
the poetical paraphrase of which in Mr. Arnold’s ‘Light of Asia’ is one of the most interesting 
chapters of his book.” —Zinies. 
Copies of the Library Edition still on Sale, cloth, 7s. 6d.; paper covers, 6s. 
Being the Life and Te 
Demy 8vo, pp. 124, cloth, price 75. 6d. 
THE RACES OF AFGHANISTAN; 
BEING 
A Brief Account of the Principal Nations inhabiting that Country. 
By Surgeon-Major H. W. BELLEW, C.S.I., 
Late on Special Political Duty at Kabul. , 
‘Dr, Bellew’s book, written in the intervals of business at Kabul, contains by far the most 
complete and readable account of the races of Afghanistan that has yet been published. The 
facts set forth suggest two conclusions, the one that there is so little possibility of cohesion 
between the diverse nationalities that make up the population of Afghanistan, as to make the 
subjugation of the country, with proper management, 2 comparatively easy task ; the other that 
the bulk of the population are ready to accept British rule, with contentment, if not alacrity, 
when once our supremacy is fairly established. Of the five principal tribes of Afghanistan, the 
Afghans and Ghilzais are irreconcilably hostile to one another, and the Tajiks and Hazarahs are 
well disposed to the British. Dr. Bellew is a strong advocate of annexation, and he makes out 
a powerful case in favour of such a course.” —Calcutta Review. 
NEW VOLUME OF THE ARCHAIC CLASSICS. 
Crown 4to, pp. 52, cloth, price 7s. 6d. 
ASSYRIAN TEXTS. 
Selected and Arranged, with Philological Notes, 
By ERNEST A. BUDGE, M.R.A.S., 
Assyrian Exhibitioner, Christ’s College, Cambridge. 
« The series inaugurated under the title of ° Archaic Classics’ was intended to effect #ais 
purpose (the study of Assyrian), and my own Llementary Grammar led the way. Mr. Budge 
has followed it with a volume of selected Texts, arranged upon the principle adopted in the short 
reading-book adapted to my Grammar, with copious notes to assist the learner at the end. The 
work has been carefully and conscientiously performed, and wherever possible Assyrian words 
have been compared with cognate ones in the other Semitic Languages. Mr. Budge has gone 
carefully over the original texts in the British Museum, noticing variants, and correcting in a 
few instances the published texts. He may well be congratulated on this his first appearance 
as an author.”—Rev. A. H. SAYCE in the Academy, July 10, 1880. 
London; TRUBNER & CO., Ludgate Hill. 
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