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zi ‘D POPULAR POEM ON 
SDITION OF MR. ARNOLD’S NEW AN. 
cece BUDDHA AND BUDDHISM. 
Crown 8yvo, pp. xvi.—238, illustrated paper boards, or limp parchment wrapper, price 2s. 6d. 
THE LIGHT OF ASIA; 
Or, The Great Renunciation. | 
Being the Life and Teaching of Gautama, Prince of India and Founder of Buddhism, | 
| 
TOLD IN VERSE BY AN INDIAN BUDDHIST. 
By EDWIN ARNOLD, C.S.]., 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, Hea and other tenets a | 
precepts of Buddhism, They will be found summed up in neal, 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.” —7Zzmes. 
Copies of the Library Edition still on Sale, cloth, 7s. 6d.3 paper covers, 65. 
Demy 4to, pp. xvi.-93 and 62, cloth, price 10s. 6d. 
GULSHAN I RAZ: 
The Mystic Rose Garden of Sad-ud-Din Mahmud Shabéistare. 
The Persian Text, with an English Translation and Notes, chiefly from the Commentary of 
Muhammad Ben Yahya Lahiji. 
By E. H. WHINFIEI Di MEA 
Barrister-at-Law, late of H.M. Bengal Civil Service. 
The Gulshan % Raz was composed in AH. 717 (A.D. 1317), 27% answer to fifteen questions on the 
doctrines of the Sufis, or Muhammadan Mystics, propounded by Amir Syad Hosaini, a celebrated 
doctor of Herat. The author was born at Shabistar, a village near Tabriz, about the middle of the 
Seventh century of the Hejira (A.D. 1250), and died at Tabriz, where he had passed the greater part of 
his life, in AH. 720. 
Crown 8vo, cloth, price 2s. 6d. 
WHAT IS CHRISTIANITY? 
A Sketch of its Development. 
With a Coloured Historical Chart. 
By THOMAS LUMISDEN STRANGE, 
Author of ‘The Bible: Is it the Word of God?” “The Sources and Development of Christianity,” &c. 
Vol. II. Post 8vo, pp. viii.—400, cloth, price Ios. 6d. 
AN ACCOUNT OF THE POLYNESIAN RACE: 
lis Origin and Migrations. 
By A. FORNANDER. 
_ _ “Itis so seldom that a private settler in the Polynesian Islands takes an intelligent interest 
in local ethnology and archeology, and makes use of the advantage he possesses, that we feel 
especially thankful to Mr. Fornander for his labours in this comparatively little-known field of 
research.”—Academ SIP 
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