of Messrs W. H. Allen &- Co.'s Publications. 37 



CAPTAIN JAMES ABBOTT. 

 Narrative of a Journey from Herat to Khiva, Moscow, and St 

 Petersburgh duving the late Russian invasion at Khiva. With Map 

 and Portrait. 2 vols., demy 8vof 24s. 

 The real interest of the work oonsiats in its store ol spirited anecdote, its enter- 

 taining sltatohea ol individual and national character, its graphic pictures ol Eastern 

 lile and manners, its simply told tales ol peril, privation, and suffering encountered and 

 endured with a soldier's courage. Over the whole narrative, the naiveti and Irank- 

 ness ol the writer cast a charm that lar more than covers its occasional eccentricities 

 ol style and language. It has seldom lallen to our lot to read a more interesting 

 narrative of personal adventure. Rarely, indeed, do we find an author whose 

 constant presence, through almost the whole ol two large volumes, is not only 

 tolerable, but welcome. Few readers will rise Irom a perusal ol the narrative 

 without a strong teeling ol personal sympathy and interest in the gallant Major ; even 

 though here and there unable to repress a smile at some burst of ecstasy, some abrupt 

 apostrophe, suoh as would never have been perpetrated by a practical writer, and a 

 man of the world. 



SIR E. C. BAYLEY. 



The Local Muhammadan Dynasties, Gujarat. Forming a Sequel 

 to SirH. M. Elliott's "History of the Muhammadan Empire 

 of India." Demy 8vo, 21s. 



"The value ol the work consists in the light which it serves to throw upon dis- 

 puted dates and obscure transactions. As a work ol reference it is doubtless useful. 

 Regarding the way in which its learned translator and editor has acquitted himself 

 ol his task it is scarcely necessary to write ; a prolound scholar and painstaking in- 

 vestigator, his labours are unusually trustworthy, and the world of letters will doubt- 

 less award him'that meed of praise, which is rarely withheld from arduous and con- 

 scientious toil, by assigning him, in death, a niche in the temple of fame, side by side 

 with his venerated master. Sir Henry Elliott." — Academy. 



" This book may be considered the first of a series designed rather as a supplement 

 than complement to the ' History of India as Told by its own Historians.' Following 

 the Preface, a necessarily brief biographical notice — written in the kindly and appre- 

 ciative spirit which ever characterises the style ol the learned editor ol Marco Polo, 

 whose initials are scarcely needed to confirm his identity— explains how on Professor 

 Dowson's death. Sir Edward Clive Bayley was induced to undertake an editorship for 

 which he was eminently qualified by personal character and acquaintance with the 

 originator of the project which constituted his raison d'etre. But the new editor did 

 not live to see the actual publication of his first volume. Scarcely had he completed 

 it for the press, when his career was brought to a close. A singular fatality seems to 

 have attended the several able men who have taken the leading part in preserving this 

 particular monument of genuine history. Henry Elliott, John Dowson, Edward Clive 

 Bayley, and more recently still (during the current year), Edward Thomas, the high- 

 class numismatist, all have passed away, with hands upon the plough in the very field 

 ol Oriental research. Without asking to whose care the preparation of any future 

 volumes may be entrusted, let us be thankful lor the work, so lar completed and — at 

 this time especially — lor the instalment which has .iust appeared." — Athenceum. 



SIR GEORGE BIRDWOOD, M.D. 



Report on the Old Records of the India Office, with Maps and 

 Illustrations. Royal 8vo, 12s. 6d. 



''Those who are familiar with Sir George Birdwood's literary method will appreciate 

 the interest and the wealth of historical illustration with which he invests these topics." 

 —Times, Feb. 26, 1891. 



'* Sir George Birdwood has performed a Herculean task in exploring, sorting, and 

 describing the masses of old India Office records, which Mr Danvers has now got into 

 a state of admirable arrangement, so that, with the help of Sir George's Index, they 

 may be readily and profitably consulted by students." — Scotsman. 



Any Bookseller at Home and Abroad. 



