2 2 Mr. Murray's List of Forthcoming Works. 



FOUR YEARS' TRAVELS IN AUSTRALIA 



AMONG THE LITTLE KNOWN SAVAGE TRIBES IN 



THE NORTH-EAST PART OF QUEENSLAND. 



By CARL LUMHOLTZ, M.A., 



Member of the Scientific Academy of Christiania. 

 With Maps and upwards of loo Illustrations. Medimu %vo. 



^l\e L(ife of MexcLi^def i^ope. 



By W. J. COURTHOPE, M.A. 



With Portrait of the Bust by Rotthiliac. Hvo. 



%* Being the COMPLETING VOLUME of the Works Edited by 

 Croker, Elwin, and Courthope, with Copious Index. 



"The excellent edition of Pope, which is now approaching completion, not only supersedes 

 all its predecessors, but to a study of Pope's life and works is absolutely indispensable 



" AH that is valuable in the notes of previous editors is preserved ; the superfluities and 

 errors only are omitted. . . . 



" The new Prefaces and Notes contain an extraordinary amount of information, much of 

 which appears for the first time. It is impossible to praise too highly the patient care and 

 painstaking industry with which facts are sifted, omissions supplied, errors corrected. Equally 

 admirable is the ingenuity, combined with wide reading, that has elucidated many passages in 

 the life of the poet and contemporary allusions in his poetry, which were formerly regarded as 

 hopelessly obscure. , . , 



"Mr. Elwin's chief contribution to the work was his treatment of the questions raised by 

 Pope's correspondence. In this edition are collected more than Four Hundred and Thirty new 

 letters, including letters from Caryll, Oxford, Orrery, Bolingbroke, Bathurst, Broome and 

 Fenton. The size and importance of this new collection would alone rank this edition above 

 its predecessors." — Edinburgh Review. 



>i 



Tl|e tv^ii^A f^ooi-. 



A SKETCH OF THEIR SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY; 



AND AN ATTEMPT TO ESTIMATE THE INFLUENCE OF 

 PRIVATE PROPERTY ON CHARACTER AND HABIT. 



By THOMAS MACKAY, B.A. 



Crown iivo. 



Contents : — Property — Primitive forms of Society — The Village Community — 

 English Villenage — The Black Death, and the Divorce of the Labourer from the Land — 

 The Increase of Sheep P'arming, and Growth of the Proletariate — Town Life and the 

 Trade Gilds — Social Legislation and the Poor Law — The Industrial Revolution of the 

 XVIII. Century — The Theory of 'VS'^ages — Private Property and Population — The 

 Modern Aspect of the Poor Law — Insurance a Substitute for the Poor Law — Some 

 Forms of Socialistic Legislation— The Ethical Aspect of the Question. 



