1 2 Mr. Murray's List of New Publications. 



Early Adventures in Persia, 

 Susiana, and Babylonia. 



BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF NINEVEH. 



INCLUDING AN ASCENT OF THE KARUN AND A RESIDENCE 

 AMONG THE BAKHTIYARI AND OTHER WILD TRIBES. 



By Sir HENRY LAYARD, G.C.B. 



With Portrait and Illustrations, 2 Vols. 8ve. 2/[s, 



' ' Whatever may be the claims of other publications, with very many readers these two 

 volumes will be considered the most entertaining of the season's issues — they are full of the 

 deepest interest from cover to cover." — Field. 



' ' II est impossible de lire cet ouvrage sans Sprouver un sentiment de juste admiration envers 

 Sir H. Layard." — Revue Nouvelle. 



1r\ 



[UNIFORM WITH THE "SPEAKER'S COMMENTARY."] 



The Apocrypha, 



WITH A COMMENTARY, EXPLANATORY AND CRITICAL, 

 AND A REVISION OF THE TRANSLATION. 



By the following Clergy of the Anglican Church. 



Introduction .... George Salmon, Provost Trin. Coll., Dublin. 



Esdras J. H. Lupton, Sur-master of St. Paul's School. 



Tobit & Esther . . . J. M. Fuller, Professor of Ecclesiastical History, 



King's Coll., London, 

 Judith 



Song' of Three Children 

 Susanna 

 Bel and Dragon 

 Hanasses 

 Wisdom 



Eoolesiasticus . . . Dr. Edersheim. 



Baruch & Jeremy . . . Canon Gifford. 

 Uaccabees .... Canon Rawlinson, 



Edited by HENRY WAGE, D.D., 



Preacher of Lincoln's Inn, Prebendary of St. Paul's, and Principal of King's College, London. 



2 Vols, Medium ivo, 50J. 



" We feel that this Commentary on the Apocrypha marks a distinct advance in English 

 theological scholarship. We can hardly imagine that thirty or even twenty years ago any- 

 thing of the kind would have been attempted. We are sure that it would have been executed 

 in a very different spirit." — Record. 



"Dr. Wace and his able coadjutors have done their work in so thorough, scholarly, and 

 workmanlike, luminous, and yet so readable a manner, that they have left httle to be desired. 

 It is far and away the best guide to the study of the Apocrypha yet issued from the English 

 or American press." — Nonconformist, 



C. J. Ball, Chaplain of Lincoln's Inn. 



Archdeacon Farrar. 



