MJSCELLANE US. 



Science Primers — continued. 



PRIMER OF PHYSIOLOGY. By Michael Foster, M.D., 

 F.R.S. With numerous Illustrations. i8mo. IJ'. 



In preparation : — 



INTRODUCTORY. By Professor Huxley. 

 PRIMER OF BOTANY. By Dr. Hooker, C.B., F.R.S. 

 PRIMER OF ASTRONOMY. By J. Norman Lockyer, F.R.S. 



&=€. &'C. 



. MISCELLANEOUS. 



Abbott. — A SHAKESPEARIAN GRAMMAR. An Attempt to 



Illustrate some of the Differences between Elizabethan and Modern 



English. By the Rev. E. A. Abbott, M.A., Head Master of the 



City of London School. For the Use of Schools. New and 



Enlarged Edition. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s. 



"A critical inquiry, conducted with great skill and knowledge, and 



with all the appliances of modern philology .... We venture to believe 



that those who consider themselves most proficient as Shakespearians 



will find something to learn from its pages."— Vmjl Mall Gazette. 



" Valuable not only as an aid to the critical study of Shakespeare, but 



as tending to familiarize the reader with Elizabethan English in 



general" — Athenaeum. 



Barker.— FIRST LESSONS IN THE PRINCIPLES OF 

 COOKING. By Lady Barker. i8mo. is. 

 "An unpretending but invaluable little work .... The plan is 

 admirable in its completeness and simplicity ; it is hardly possible that 

 anyone who can read at all can fail to understand the practical lessons on 

 bread and beef, fish and vegetables ; while the explanation of the chemical 

 composition of our food must be intelligible to all who possess sufficient 

 education to follow the argument, in which the fewest possible technical 

 terms are used." — Spectator. 

 Berners.— FIRST LESSONS ON health. By J. Ber- 



NERS. i8mo. IS. Third Edition. 

 Besant.— STUDIES IN EARLY FRENCH POETRY. By 

 Walter Besant, M. A. Crown Svo. 8.r. bd. 

 " In one moderately sized volume he has contrived to introduce us to the 

 very best, if not to all of the early French poets. "—KTYi-mxuu. " In- 

 dustry, the insight of a scholar, and a genuine enthusmsm for his subject, 

 combine to muke it of very considerable z/a&f."— Spectator. 

 Breymann.— A FRENCH GRAMMAR BASED ON PHI- 

 LOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES. By Hermann Breymann, 

 Ph.D., Lecturer on French Language and Literature at Owens 

 College, Manchester. Extra fcap. Svo. 4J. 6d. 

 " We dismiss the work with ruery expression of satisfaction. It can- 

 not fail to be taken into use by all schools which endeavour to make the 



