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8 



SCIENTIFIC CATALOGUE. 



considered themselves to be addressing a higher class of students • 

 and they have there tried to lay a good foundation on which to 

 build, if any reader should wish to pursue the science beyond the 

 limits to which the work extends. 



Godfray. — w 



by Hugh Godfray, M.A., Mathematical 



Lecturer at Pembroke College, Cambridge : 



A TREATISE ON ASTRONOMY, for the Use of Colleges and 

 Schools. 8vo. cloth. i2j-. 6^. 



This book embraces all those branches of Astro7tomy which havejrom 

 time to time, been recommended by the Cambridge Board of Mathe- 

 matical Studies: but by far the larger and easier portion, adapted 

 to the first three days of the Examination for Honours, may be read 

 by the more advanced pupil s in many of our schools. The author's 

 aim has been to convey clear ajzd distinct ideas of the celestial i>he- 

 ''It is ^. - -^ ^ 



nomena. 



a 



working book,'' says the Guardian, 



takhtcr 



Math ematical 



It is a book which is not likely to begot up unintelligently ." 



AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON THE LUNAR 

 THEORY, with a Brief Sketch of the Problem up to the time of 

 Newton. Second Edition, revised. Crown 8vo. cloth. 5^-. 6d. 



These pages will, it is hoped, form an introduction to jnore recondite 



works, Diffictilties 



'ethod followed 



The 



/ 



which is the same as that of Airy, Herschell, etc., tvas made on 

 account of its simplicity ; it is, moreover, the method which has 

 obtained in the University of Cambridge. ''As an elementary 

 treatise and introduction to the subject, we think it may justly claim 

 to supersede all former ^/^^j-."— London, Edinburgh, and Dublin 

 Phil. Magazine. 



Green (George).— mathematical papers OF THE 



LATE GEORGE GREEN, Fellow of Gonville and Caius 

 College, Cambridge. Edited by N. M. Ferrers, M.A., Fellow 

 and Tutor of Gonville and Caius College. 8vo. 15^-. 



The publication of this book may be opportune at present, as seve^-al 

 of the subjects zmth which they are directly or indirectly concerned 

 have recently been introduced into the cozirse of mathematical 



/ 





II 



III 



sill 



', '^ /''!''::. 



^^'-Analr^ ^' 





/. 



nd 



,s of the 



\,finCrystalli^-f 

 iilms in Fluid .* 

 jjnitGrun^' :■ 



— r c 



( 



sming— AX ELI 



'JFFEREXTIAL AX 

 iof Colleges and b 

 iwof St. John's Cv. 

 Sections and Additioi 



Ikri is no book in , , 

 '"^'dge of the frin. 

 -Literary Gaa 



;..',. . f )1 



"i* 



( 



''°I1-GE0.METRI 

 "^ Treatise in whic 



,f^<:tionsoraCune 



ri. 



^^' Crown 8vo. 



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