The Essays or Counsels Civil and Moral of Francis Bacon. 



First published in 1597, and as he left them newly written and pub- 

 lished in 1635. Including also his Apophthegms, Elegant Sentences, 

 and Wisdom of the Ancients. With an introduction by Hbnky 

 MORLET, LL.D., Professor of English Literature at University Col- 

 lege, London. Portrait. 13mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



They (Bacon's Essays) contain the condensed wisdom gathered during the 

 ■whole long life-time of one of the mightiest minds of modern times.— JranH 

 Parsom. 



Vanity Fair. A Novel Without a Hero. By William Make- 

 PBAca Thackekat. Portrait, 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



As a whole the book is full of quiet sarcasm and severe rebuke. It is replete 

 with humor and morality, and rivets attention to the end by the vivid reality 

 of all the persons and scenes.— i^V'om "A Manual o/Hnglish Literature " by T. B. 

 SJiaw. 



Other Worlds Than Ours. The plurality of worlds studied 

 under the light of recent scientific researches. By Richakd A. 

 Pkoctob. With an introductory note by Fkank Paksons. Portrait. 

 Cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



Like Huxley and Tyndall, Mr. Proctor sees the poetry of his subject and 

 knows how to bring the largest truths within the comprehension of a child, 

 and make the deepest researches as interesting to the general reader as a 

 TioYel.— Frank Parsons. 



The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World, from Marathon to 

 Waterloo. By E. S. Creasy, M.A., Professor of Ancient and Mod- 

 ern History in University College, London; late Fellow of King's 

 College, Cambridge. With an introductory note by Frank Par- 

 sons. Portrait. 13mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



So vivid are his descriptions that one feels as though he were present at the 

 scene himself, listening to the counsels of the generals, hearing the tread of 

 marching columns, watching the gleaming spears and bayonets, armies of in- 

 fantry, charging cavalry, breach, rally and retreat, deafened with the roar of 

 batteries, saddened by the death of friends, and flushed with triumph ; and at 

 last the reader lays the book away exhausted with the rush of feeling through 

 his heart.— J'Van* Parsons. 



The Essays of Elia. By Charles Lamb. With an introduc- 

 tion and notes by Alfred Ainger, and a Biographical Sketch of 

 Charles Lamb, by Henry Morley. Portrait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, 

 $1.00. 



The Essays of Elia have been characterized as the " finest things for humor, 

 taste, penetration and vivaoitj^ which have appeared since the days of Mon- 

 taigne." In his bits of criticism Charles Lamb shows a most delicate and 

 acute critical faculty ; in his tew poems, much grace and sweetness, but first 

 and foremost, he is an essayist of rare power. The refined wit, genuine pleas- 

 antry, deep and tender pathos, and subtle discrimination of his essays, are un- 

 excelled by any compositions In the language.— 5o6c?'< Tlvorne. 



Essays. By Ralph Waldo Emerson. First and second series. 

 Portrait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



He exercised a great power over men ; he brought them wide comfort, and 

 to him more than to any man of his time belongs the glory of having taught 

 them that life was worth the living.— .?Vom tlie " Optimism of Emerson." by W. 

 F. Dana. 



For sale by all Booksellers, or loUl be sent post-paid on receipt qf price, by the jroj. 

 lis!ier,.d., X. BVRX, 66 Meade Street, Ifeyi York. 



