16 BOOKS PUBLISHED BY MR. MACLEHOSE. 
VEITCH—LUCRETIUS AND THE ATOMIC THEORY. By PRO- 
FESSOR VEITCH. Crown 8yo. 3s. 6d. 
‘* We have read this little volume with no ordinary delight. We warmly 
recommend it.’’—-Nonconformist, 
VEITCH—HILLSIDE RHYMES : 
“ Among the rocks he went, 
And still looked up to sun and cloud 
And listened to the wind.” 
Iextra feap. 8vo. 5s. 
‘“Let any one who cares for fine reflective poetry read for himself and 
judge. Next to an autumn day among the hills themselves, commend us 
to poems like these, in which so much of the finer breath and spirit of those 
pathetic hills is distilled into melody." —Scotsman. 
VEITCH—THE TWEED, AND OTHER POEMS. Extra fcap. 8vo. 
6s. 6d. 
‘‘Every page bears witness to a highly cultivated mind: every page is 
also marked by originality and a deep love for nature.'’— Westminster 
Review, 
VILLAGE LIFE—A Poem. 
‘He seems to be a stranger ; but his present is 
A withered branch, that’s only green at top.” 
Extra feap 8vo. 6s. 6d. 
‘« These are siniply the ripest notes that have appeared in Scotland for 
a time too long to calculate.” — Examiner. 
‘“A remarkable volume of poetry, which will be read by all who have 
any keen interest in the progress of English literature.""—Standard. 
WADDELL—OSSIAN AND THE CLYDE, FINGAL IN IRELAND, 
OSCAR IN ICELAND; or, Ossian Historical and Authentic. 
By P. HATELY WADDELL, LL.D. 4to. 12s, 6d. 
WATSON—KANT AND HIS ENGLISH CRITICS, a comparison 
of Critical and Empirical Philosophy. By JoHN WaTSON, 
M.A., LL.D., Professor of Moral Philosophy in Queen’s 
University, Kingston, Canada. 8vo. [Zu the Press. 
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