go LIST OF BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



Handbook of Hardy Herbaceous and Alpine 



Flowers, FOR GENERAL GARDEN DECORATION. Containing Descrip- 

 tions, in Plain Language, of upwards of looo Species of Ornamental 

 Hardy Perennial and Alpine Plants, adapted to all classes of Flower-Gar- 

 dens, Rockwork, and Waters ; along with Concise and Plain InstructioriS 

 for their Propagation and Culture. By William Sutherland, Gardener to 

 the Earl of Minto ; formerly Manager of the Herbaceous Department at 

 Kew. Crown 8vo, 7s. 6d. 



"This is an unpretending but valuable work, well adapted to furnish infor- 

 mation respecting a class of plants certainly rising in popular estimation. . . , 

 We cordially recommend his book to the notice of our readers, as likely to be, 

 from a gardening point of view, the standard work on Herbaceous Plants." — 

 Gardeners' Chronicle. 



"The best book of its class available for EngUsh readers." — Gardeners' 

 Magazine. 



Lays of the Deer Forest. 



With Sketches of Olden and Modern Deer-Hunting, &c. By Jobn 

 SobiesU and Charles Edward Stuart. 2 vols, post Svo, 21s. 



The Jerusalem Delivered of Torquato Tasso. 



Translated by Col. Alex. Cnimingliam Eohertson. Crown Svo, los. 6d. 



Tara : A Mahratta Tale. 



By Captain Meadows Taylor. 3 vols, post Svo, £1, iis. 6d. 



"A picture of Indian life which it is impossible not to admire. We have no 

 hesitation in saying, that a more perfect knowledge of India is to be acquired 

 from an attentive perusal and study of this work, than could be gleaned from a 

 whole library." — Press. 



The Greek Grammar of Thiersch. 



Translated from the German, with brief Remarks. By Sir Daniel K. 

 Sandford, M.A. Professor of Greek in the University of Glasgow. Svo, 

 i6s. 



Hours of Christian Devotion. 



Translated from the German of A. Tholuck, D.D., Professor of Theology 

 in the University of Halle, and Councillor of the Supreme Consistory, 

 Prussia. By the Eev. Eobert Menzies, D.D. With a Preface written 

 for this Translation by the Author. Crown Svo, gs. 



"To many of these meditations four or five great texts are prefixed, and 

 the reader feels that the gentle pressure of a powerful hand has crushed these 

 sacred fruits, and handed him the fragrant wine of the kingdom in a golden 

 goblet. . . . The abundance and vaneiy of the material furnished in this 

 volume for quiet pondering render farther characterisation difficult. We are 

 thankful for the introduction of this wise, thoughtful, helpful book in this dark, 

 6ad •ab'S^azi." ~ BHtish Quarterly Review. 



