14 BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



Demy 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, 211, 



The Life of the Greeks and Romans. 



Described from Antique Monuments. By Ernst Guhl and W. 

 KoNER. Translated from the Third German Edition, and Edited , 

 by Dr. F. Hueffer. With 545 Illustrations. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, with Illustrations, 7-r. 6d. 



Greenwood's Low-Life Deeps: 



An Account of the Strange Fish to be found there ; including 

 " The Man and Dog Fight," with much additional and con- 

 firmatory evidence; "With a Tally-Man," "A Fallen Star," 

 " The- Betting Barber," " A Coal Marriage," &c. By James 

 Greenwood. With Illustrations in tint by Alfred Concanen. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, with Illustrations, "]s. 6d. 



Greenwood's Wilds of London: 



Descriptive Sketches, from Personal Observations and Experience, 

 of Remarkable Scenes, People, and Places in London. By James 

 Greenwood. With 12 Tinted Illustrations by Alfred Concanen. 



'* Mr. fames Greenwood presents himself once more in the character of ' one 

 •whose delight it is to do his humble endeavour towards exposing and extirpating 

 social abuses and those hole-and-corner evils which afflict society' " — Saturday 

 Review. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, with Illustrations, 4s. 6d. 



Guyot 's Earth and Man ; 



or, Physical Geography in its Relation to the History of Mankind. 

 With Additions by Professors Agassiz, Pierce, and Gray. 12 

 Maps and Engravings on Steel, some Coloured, and a copious Index. 



Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s. 



Hake's New Symbols : 



Poems. By Thomas Gordon Hake. 



" The entire book breathes a jure and ennobling influence, shows welcome 

 originality of idea and illustration, and yields the , highest proof of imaginative 

 faculty and mature power of expression."'— Athenaeum. 



Medium 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, with Illustrations, Js. 6d. 



Hall's (Mrs. S. C.J Sketches of Irish 



Character. With numerous Illusts. on Steel and Wood by Daniel 

 Maclise, Sir John Gilbert, W. Harvey, and G. Cruikshank. 



" The Irish Sketches of this lady resemble Miss Mitford's beautiful English 

 Sketches in ,' Our Village,' but they are far more vigorous and picturesque and 

 bright." — Blackwood's Magazine. 



