D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



n^HE HIS TOR Y OF ANCIENT CI VI LIZA TION. 



J- A Hand-book based upon M. Gustave Ducoudray's " Histoire 

 Sommaire de la Civilisation." Edited by the Rev. J. Ver- 

 SCHOYLE, M. A. With numerous Illustrations. Large i2mo. 

 Cloth, $1.75. 



"With M. Ducoudray's work as a basis, many additions having been made, derived 

 from special writers, Mr. Verschoyle has produced an excellent work, which gives a 

 comprehensive view of early civilization. . . . As to the world of the past, the volume 

 under notice treats of Egypt, Assyria, the Far East, of Greece and Rome in the most 

 comprehensive manner. It is not the arts alone which are fully illustrated, but the 

 literature, laws, manners, and customs, the beliefs of all these countries are contrasted. 

 If the book gave alone the history of the monuments of the past it would be valuable, 

 but it is its all-around character which renders it so useful. A great many volumes 

 have been produced treating of a past civilization, but we have seen none which in the 

 same space gives such varied information." — The New York Times. 



/^REAT LEADERS: Historic Portraits from the 

 ^<J Great Historians. Selected, with Notes and Brief Biographical 



Sketches, by G. T. Ferris. With sixteen engraved Portraits. 



i2mo. Cloth, $1.75. 



The Historic Portraits of this work are eighty in number, drawn from the writings 

 of Plutarch, Gkote, Gibbon, Curtius, Mommsen, Froude, Hume, Macaulay, 

 Lecky, Green, Thiers, Taine, Prescott, Motley, and other historians. The sub- 

 jects extend from Themistocles to Wellington. 



" Every one perusing the pages of the historians must have been impressed with 

 the graphic and singularly penetrative character of many of the sketches of the distin- 

 guished persons whose doings form the staple of history. These pen-portraits often 

 stand out from the narrative with luminous and vivid effect, the writers seeming to have 

 concentrated upon them all their powers of penetration and all their skill in graphic 

 delineation. Few things in literature are marked by analysis so close, discernment so 

 keen, or effects so brilliant and dramatic." — From the Pre/ace. 



J IFE OF THE GREEKS AND ROMANS, de- 



J— ' scribed from Ancient Monuments. By E. Guhl and W. 

 Koner. Translated from the third German edition by F. 

 Hueffer. With 543 Illustrations. 8vo. Cloth, $2.50. 



" The result of careful and unwearied research in every nook and cranny of ancient 

 learning. Nowhere else can the student find so many facts in illustration of Greek 

 and Roman methods and manners." — Dr. C. K. Adams's Manual 0/ Historical 

 Literature. 



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



