REEVE AND BENHAM, HENRIETTA STREET. 
13 
truth is poetical, and may be regarded as a popular treatise on Natural Philo- 
sophy, Chemistry, and Geology, similar in its nature and object to the ‘ Kosmos 5 
of Humboldt.” — North British Review. 
“ We know of no work upon science which is so well calculated to lift the 
mind from the admiration of the wondrous works of creation to the belief in, and 
worship of, a Eirst Great Cause. * * One of the most readable epitomes of 
the present state and progress of science we have yet perused.” — Morning Herald. 
“ The design of Mr. Hunt’s volume is striking and good. The subject is very 
ably dealt with and the object very well attained ; it displays a fund of knowledge, 
and is the work of an eloquent and earnest man.” — Examiner. 
*** One vol. 8 vo. Price 12$. 
PANTPIEA, THE SPIRIT OF NATURE. By Robert Hunt, 
Author of 4 The Poetry of Science. 5 One vol. 8vo. 10$. 6 d. 
“ A work of very peculiar character, in which Philosophy and Poetry are finely 
blended, and where great truths and noble sentiments are expressed in language 
full of beauty and eloquence.” — North British Review. 
“Ample opportunities are afforded for conveying scientific information in a popular 
form, and these have been liberally and well embraced by the author.” — Athenceum. 
“ There is, throughout, the closeness of matter and eloquence of style which 
distinguished the ‘Poetry of Science.’ ” — Spectator. 
“The chief praise of this work consists in its conveying, through the medium 
of a novel-like fiction, the splendid discoveries of nature made by sedulous philo- 
sophy to the popular mind, and in having deduced therefrom, in the progress of 
the story, many important practical truths. The whole work, studied and 
thought upon, conveys many oracles in its course, of great worth and impressive 
beauty.” — Penzance Journal. 
“ It would be impossible to express in a few words the exquisite and sustained 
pleasure which our study of this work has procured for us. The charm of it 
does not exclusively lie in the witching scenes and incidents which the wand of 
the poet is ever conjuring up before the eyes of the reader. The poet himself 
(for this is a work of poetry, though written in prose) steals in upon you, and, 
by the new suggested interest, communicates a deeper power to the work than it 
could have had if it indicated nothing beyond itself. The soft and delicate light 
of Christianity, too, falls with its sweet glow on the page.” — Hogg’s Instructor. 
THE 
PLANETARY AND STELLAR UNIVERSE. By 
Robert James Mann. 
1 “ A brief abstract of the discoveries of Newton clearly explained, and elegantly 
illustrated.” — Westminster and Foreign Quarterly Review. 
j *** In one vol. 8vo, with 50 astronomical Diagrams and Map 
\ of the Circumpolar Constellations. Price 5$. cloth. 
