Faust. By JOHANN Wolfgang von Goethe. C!omplete in two 

 parts. Translated by Anna Swanwick. Portrait. Cloth, gilt top, 

 $1.00. 



Deeper meanings are disoovered with every reading, and familiarity does 

 not cause It to grow trite, but ever the more strongly to lay hold on the soul 

 with the Irresistible fascination of an eternal problem and the charm of an 

 endless variety.— -Bo6«r« T/iorjie. 



The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. By Washington 

 Ikving. With an introductory note by Fbank Pabsons. Portrait. 

 Cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



The book is refined, poetical and picturesque, full of quaint humor, exquis- 

 ite feeling, and a thorough knowledge of human nature.— Frank Parsons. 



Lorna Doone. A Romance of Exmoor. By R. D. BiiACEMOBE. 

 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



These wonderfully reproduced scenes, and the men and women with whom 

 they are peopled, and finally the beautiful language in which the narrative is 

 set forth, unite to make a delightful, and, what is more, a wholesome, invigo- 

 rating, inspiring book.— -E S. Uawes. 



Hypatia, or New Foes with an Old Face. By Chablbs Kings- 

 ley, F.S.A., F.L.S. Portrait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



The plot is well developed, the characters are vigorously drawn, and the 

 scenes and incidents show great dramatic power, while the language and 

 word-painting are exquisite. The book holds throughout, with a firm grsisp, 

 our sympathy and interest, Kingsley being one of the very few who have sue 

 ceeded in throwing a strong human interest into a historical novel.— ^oJert 

 Thorne. 



Romola. By Geobgb Eliot. Portrait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, 

 $1.00. 



George Eliot is admitted by thoughtful persons to have been endowed vpith 

 one of the greatest minds of this century. . . . Bomola, which is one of 

 her earlier works, is also one of the most popular. The movement is so rapid, 

 and the situations are so dramatic, that the interest never flags ; . . . the 

 book has nowhere the air of tiresome preaching, but it stands the test of a 

 great novel— it may be read again and again with pleasure.— £ S. Bawes. 



The Data of Ethics. By Hebbebt Spenceb. Portrait. 13mo, 

 cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



Herbert Spencer is the foremost name in the philosophic literature of the 

 world. He is the Shakespeare of science. He has a grander grasp of knowl- 

 edge and more perfect conscious correspondence with the external universe 

 than any other human being who ever looked wonderingly out into the starry 

 depths ; and his few errors flow from an over-anxiety to exert his splendid 

 power of making beautiful generalizations. Plato and Spencer are brothers. 

 Plato would have done what Spencer has had he lived in the nineteenth cen- 

 tury.— JJVom " The World's Best Books," by Frank Parsons. 



The Origin of Species, by Means of Natural Selection, or the 

 Preservation of a Favored Race in the Strugg^le for Life. By 



Chablbs Dabwin, M.A., LL.D., F.K.S. Portrait. 12mo, cloth, 

 gilt top, $1.00. 



This book is the grandest achievement of modern scientific thought and 

 research. It has passed through many editions in English, has been translated 

 into almost all the languages of Europe, and has oeen the subject of more 

 reviews, pamphlets and separate books than any other volume of the age.— 



SCOOBTt J. nX)T7l£, 



For sale hy all Booksellers^ or will be sent post-paid on receipt qf price^ by the pt^ 

 lisher^ A* Ii. BVBT, 66 Meade Street, New Yorh» 



