Mr. Murray's List of New Publications. 1 1 



BOUND THE WORLD IN A YACHT. 



The Voyage of the Marchesa 



TO 



Kamschatka and New Guinea. 



WITH NOTICES OF FORMOSA, LIU-KIU, AND THE 

 ISLANDS OF THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO. 



By F. H. H. GXriLLEMARD, F.L.S. 



Second and Cheaper Edition. Maps and Illustrations. Medium %vo. 2is, 



" Mr. Guillemard has done well in publishing a cheaper edition of that admirable book of 

 travel TAe Cruise of the Marchesa, in which he showed to so much advantage both as a nar- 

 rator of his various experiences on his different voyages, and as a keen observer of the natural 

 history of the strange lands which he visited during the cruise. The present edition has the 

 merit of being cheaper than the original, while the merit has not been attained by any sub- 

 stantive sacrifice of attrartive matter." — John Bull, 



WORKS BY MR, SYDNEY BTJXTON, M.P 



Finance and Politics ; 



A Handbook to Politi- 

 cal Questions of the 

 Day, 



AND THE 



ARGUMENTS ON EITHER SIDE. 



AN HISTORICAL STUDY, 

 1783-1885. 



By SYDNEY BTXXTON, M.P. 



2 Vols. %vo. 26s. 



" A couple of extremely interesting and 

 readable volumes." — Spectator. | With AN INTRODUCTION. 



"Taken as a whole, the book presents 

 us with an exhaustive and accurate political 

 history of our own tim.es." ^Guardian. 



" Likely to have a considerable influence 

 upon pohtical thought." — Daily News. ' Zvo. 8j 



By SYDNEY BUXTON, M.P. 



Seventh Edition, revised attd enlarged. 



The Holy Places of Jerusalem. 



By J. HAYTER LEWIS, E.S.A., 



Vice-President of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and Emeritus Professor of Architecture, 

 University College, London. 



With Illustrations. Svo. los. 6d. 



" By far the most important contribution to the discussion respecting the holy places of 

 Jerusalem that has appeared since 1878, when Mr. Fergusson published his ' Temples of the 

 Jews.' , . . . A book which should be read and studied by every one who takes an interest in 

 the sacred shrines of the Holy City. " — Athenisum . 



