HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY, &- TRAVELS. 3 



Baxter (R. Dudley, M.A.) {cotitmued)— 



The First Part of this work, originally read before the Statistical 

 Society of London, deals with the Amount of Taxation ; the Second Pari, 

 which now constitutes the 7nain portion of the work, is almost entirely new, 

 and embraces the important questions of Ratittg, of the relative Taxation 

 of Land, Persoitalty, and Industry, and of the direct effect of Taxes upon 

 Prices. The author trusts that the body of facts here collected 7nay be of 

 permanent value as a record of the past progress and present condition of 

 the population of the United Kingdom, independently of the transitory 

 circumstances of its present Taxation. 



NATIONAL INCOME. With Coloured Diagrams. 8vo. 3^-. 6d. 



Part I. — Classif cation of the Population, Upper, Middle, and Labour 

 Classes. II. — Income of the United Kittgdom. 



" A painstaking and certainly most interesting inquiry." — Pall Mall 

 Gazette. 



Bernard. — FOUR LECTURES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED 

 WITH DIPLOMACY. By Mountague Bernard, M.A., 

 Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, Oxford. 

 8vo. pj. 



Four Lectures, dealing with (i) The Congress of Westphalia ; (2) Systems 

 of Policy ; (3) Diplomacy, Past and Present; (4) The Obligations of 

 Treaties. 



Blake.— THE LIFE OF WILLIAM BLAKE, THE ARTIST. 

 By Alexander Gilchrist. With numerous Illustrations from 

 Blake's designs, and Fac-similes of his studies of the " Book of 

 Job." Two vols, medium 8vo. 32^. 



These volumes contain a Life of Blake ; Selectiojzs from his Writings, 

 including Poems ; Letters ; Annotated Catalogue of Pictures and Drawings, 

 List, with occasional notes, of Blakis Engravings and Writings. There 



a 2 



