TWO WORKS ON HERBERT SPENCER. 



APHORISMS FROM THE WRITINGS OF HERBERT 



SPENCER. Selected by Julia Raymond Gingell. Second 

 Edition. "With a Photogravure Portrait of Herbert Spencer. Crown 

 8vo, 35. 

 The limes says:— "The selections ... are many of them very pithy and 



The St. James's Gasette saye : — " The volume is full of information. . . . A useful 

 and adequate little volume." 



Tiie Globe says :—" A volume which ought to appeal successfully to a large class." 



Nature says : — "The selections are well arranged and to the point, and illustrate 

 the scope of the synthetic philosophy.'* 



The Star says: — "The passages are chosen with judgment. They are evenly 

 characteristic, fair to the autlior, and pregnant with suggest! veness." 



TJie Scotsman says :— "The choice which has been made is representative of all 

 departments of the thinker's activity. . . . The hook is done adniirahly, and witli 

 uncommon intelligence of the works from which it is drawn." 



The Birmingham Post says: — "The selections are so well chosen, and are so 

 pregnant with characteristic thought, that many readers who do not know Mr. 

 Spencer's works will be led to study in its completeness the philosophy of one of 

 the most fearless, original, and profound English thinkers aud teachers. We 

 strongly recommend the volume." 



The Midland Counties Herald says : — "A most interesting and useful book." 



Watts' Idterarif Guide says : — " An attractive little work." 



The Herts Advej-tiser says : — " We advise all earnest, thoughtful readers to acquire 

 Miss Gingell's volume, if only to gain an insight into the wonderfiil clearness and 

 precision with which the greatest philosopher of the Victorian Era expresses his 

 opinions upon some of the most abstruse social questions of the day." 



The Saturday Review says : — "Much care and consideration has been expended 

 upon the volume .... has been executed with much discernment." 



The Birmingham Gazette says: — "This little volume should be fruitful, for it 

 contains nothing but seeds of wisdom that sink into the mind and there take root." 



THE PHILOSOPHY OF HERBERT SPENCER (An 



Introduction to). With a BiograpMoal Sketch by Professor W. H. 

 Hudson. Crown 8vo, 5s. 



*^* In this volume an attempt is made: to meet a very healthy pqp^tlar 

 demand on the part of students of broad outlook hut limited leisure, to 

 know more of the personality and philosophical writings of Herbert 

 Spencer, by furnishing a sort of outlvwe map for the student to follow, 

 noting the principal natural features likely to be encountered, thus 

 makimg the course of study easier and lighter, and better equipping the 

 student to grapple with Mr. Spencer's arguments. 



Tlie Daily News saj's :— "A book of a kind for which there has long been a 

 demand." 



The Scotsman says:— " h real want is well met by Mr. Hudson's modest but 

 masterly little volume. ... It Is clear, intelligible, and adequate." 



OTie Qlasgow Herald says : — " This is an extremely clear and very readable accoimt 

 of the main principles of the Speucerian philosophy." 



r/ie afam/iesfer OitarrfiaH says :—"Tliis pleasantly written little book. . . . The 

 biographical sketch is roally interesting and valuable. . . . Mr. Hudson is a clear 

 expositor." 



liONDON : CHAPMAN & HALL, Limited. 



