WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. 



Sporting Days. 



By Jolin Colqniionn, Author of 'The Moor and the Loch,' &o. Crown 

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Rocks and Rivers ; 



Or, Highland Wanderings over Crag and Correi, "Flood and Fell." By 

 Jolm Colquhotm, Author of ' Sporting Days.' 8vo, 6s. fid. 



Salmon-Casts and Stray Shots. 



Being Fly-leaves from the Note-Book of John Colqnlioiin, Esq., Author of 

 'The Moor and the Loch,' &c. Second Edition, fcap. 8vo, 5s. 



The Coming Race. 



Ninth Edition, crown Svo, 6s. 



"Language, literature, and the arts, all touched on with admirable veri- 

 similitude, are impressed into the service of his thesis ; and' often, in reading of 

 the delights of this underground Utopia, have we sighed for the refreshing 

 tranquillity of that lamp-lit land." — Athmeeum. 



" Its kindly satire, its gentle moralisings, its healthy humour, and its extensive 

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 pubhcations, and give evidence of literary skill very rarely to be met with in 

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" The book is well written, and ingeniously worked out." — Saturday Review. 



Venus and Psyche, 



With other Poems. By Eichard Crawley; Fcap. Svo, ss. 



" Mr Crawley writes verses through which there runs an abundant vein ot 

 genuine poetry. . . , Much, very much, of Mr Crawley's poetry is per- 

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 the vision and the faculty divine, and is equally powerful in painting scenes of 

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 of them exquisite pieces of piercing satire." — Evening Standard. 



The Genesis of the Church. 



By the Eight Eev. Henry Cotterill, D.D., Bishop of Edinburgh. 

 Demy Svo, ifis. 



"The book is strikingly original, and this originality is one of its great 

 charms — the views of an able and cultivated man whom long study has made 

 fully master of his subject." — Scottish Guardian. 



" In Dr Cotterill's volume a book of great ability has been presented to the 

 world. " — Edinburgh Courant. 



"His book breathes the spirit and is stamped with the character of the 

 present age. It requires, and will amply repay, the most careful and attentive 

 reading ; and it is likely to carry conviction to many a mind which has been 

 merely repelled by the ordinary quoting of texts or appeals to Church History 

 to prove tue existence of the three Orders, and the necessity of the apostolical 

 succession." — Literary Churchman. 



