D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



A STRONG M Y WITH AN OF ERA-GLASS, 



■*-^ A Popular Introduction to the Study of the Starry Heavens 

 with the Simplest of Optical Instruments. By Garreit P. 

 Serviss. 8vo. Cloth, $1.50. 



This is a unique book, quite alone in the field that it occupies. The call for a 

 fourth edition witlun two years after its first publication attests its popularity. As one 

 of its reviewers has said, ** It is the most human book on the subject of the stars.'* 

 It would have supplied Thomas Carlyle'a want when he wrote, " Why did not some- 

 body teach me the stars and make me at home in the starry heavens? " Interest in 

 the geography of the heavens is increasing every year, as the discoveries of astrono- 

 mers with the giant telescopes of our day push back the limits of the known universe, 

 and this book is to those who read of such discoveries like an atlas to the student of 

 history. 



Some of the compliments that the book has received are these: 



** A most interesting and even fascinating book," — Christian Union. 



"The glimpses he allows to be seen of far-stretching vistas opening out on every 

 side of his modest course of observation help to 6x the attention of the negligent, and 

 lighten the toil of the painstaking student. . . . Mr. Serviss writes with freshness and 

 vivacity." — London Saturday Revieiv. 



** We are glad to welcome this, the second edition, of a popular introduction to the 

 study of the heavens. . . . There could hardly be a more pleasant road to astro- 

 nomical knowledge than it afTords. ... A child may understand the text, which reads 

 more like a collgf:tLon of anecdotes than anything else, but this does not mar its sci- 

 entific \a\uQ."— Nature. 



" Mr. Garrett P. Serviss's book, ' Astronomy with an Opera-Glass,* offers us an 

 admirable hand-book and guide in the cultivation of this noble aesthetic discipline (the 

 study of the stars)." — New York Home Journal. 



"The book should belong to every family library." — Boston Home Journal. 



" This book ought to make star-gazing popular." — New York Herald. 



"The author attributes much of the indifference of otherwise well-informed per- 

 sons regarding the wonders of the starry firmament to the fact that telescopes are avail- 

 able to few, and that most people have no idea of the possibilities of the more familiar 

 instrument of almost daily use whose powers he sets forth." — New Orleans Times- 

 Democrat. 



" By its aid thousands of people who ha^e resigned themselves to the ignorance in 

 which they were left at school, by our wretched system of teaching by the book only, 

 will thank Mr. Serviss for the suggestions he has so well carried out" — New York 

 Times. 



"For amateur use this book is easily the best treatise on astronomy yet published "* 

 — Chicago Herald. 



" 'Astronomy with an Opera-Glass' fills along-felt want." — Albany Joitrnal. 



"No intelligent reader of this book but will feel that if the author fails to set his 

 public star-gazmg the fault is not his, for his style is as winning, as graphic, and as 

 clear as the delightful type in which it is printed." — Providence Journal. 



" Mr. Serviss neither talks over the heads of his readers nor ignores the sublime 

 complexity and range of his themes, but unites simplicity with scnolarship, scientific 

 precision with life-long enthusiasm, and a genuine eloquence with rate touches of hu- 

 mor. Considered as a product of the publishing industry, the book is elegance itself." 

 -^T/ie Cfiautauquan. 



New York : D. APPLETON & CO., i, 3, & 5 Bond Street. 



