ENGLAND AND THE ENGLISH IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 
By W. C. Sydney. 2 vols., 24s. 
“ His book is about the most useful modem book on the life of the last century.” — National Obsemer. 
SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY. By John Ashton. 
Illustrated with Reproductions of Contemporary Sketches. 2 vols., demy 8vo, 30s. 
“ It is because Mr. Ashton’s rich miscellany throws much light upon the inner spirit of a grand generation 
that we commend it to readers who have not time for more elaborate study.” — St. James's Gazette, 
PICTURESQUE LONDON. By Percy Fitzgerald. Extra crown 4to, 
25s., with upwards of loo Illustrations by eminent artists. 
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James's Gazette. 
“ It is all about the curiosities of London, the quaint old houses, and the odds and ends of archaeology and 
street lore.” — The Daily News. 
ANTHROPOLOGICAL STUDIES. By A. W. Buckland. Crown 8vo, 6s. 
“ Has certainly brought together an immense wealth of facts, and besides giving us his own criticisms, he 
has stated the theories held by our leading authorities in palaeontology, so that his book is a storehouse of in- 
formation and speculation on the obscure beginnings of our race.” — Daily Telegraph. 
“ The book deserves to be widely read.” — Morning Post, 
New and. Cheaper Edition of “The Insanity of Genius.” 
THE INSANITY OF GENIUS AND THE GENERAL INEQUALITY 
OF HUMAN FACULTY PHYSIOLOGICALLY CONSIDERED. By J. F. 
Nisbet. New edition. Crown 8 vo, 6s. 
“ Mr. Nisbet’s recent book on the insanity of genius contains much evidence which appears to show that 
the most distinguished men of each generation have had some morbid element which has crossed, or perhaps 
even constituted, their greatness.” — The Times (Leading Article). 
“ The book is a curious and interesting one.” — The Times. 
“ Open its pages where one will, one is confronted with matter of interest alike to the scientific enquirer 
and the mere seeker of entertainment.” — The Saturday Review. 
“ ‘ The Insanity of Genius’ is a living book.” — Morning Aavertiser. 
In a Letter about this Book Professor HUXLEY writes:— 
“Genius to my mind means innate capacity of any kind above the average mental level. From a bio- 
logical point of ^^e\^', I should say that a genius among men stands in the same position as a ‘ sport ’ among 
animals and plants, and is a product of the variability which is the postulate of selection both natural and arti- 
ficial. On the general ground that a strong and therefore markedly abnormal variety is not likely to be so well 
in harmony with existing conditions as the normal standard (which has been brought to what it is largely 
by the operation of those conditions), I should say that a large proportion of ‘genius sports’ are likely to 
come to grief physically and socially, and that the intensity of feeling w'hich is one of the conditions of what is 
called genius, is especially liable to run into the ‘ fixed ideas’ which are at the bottom of so much insanity.” 
FICTION IN SINGLE VOLUMES. 
Two Books for Children. 
The LITTLE LADY of LAVEN- 
DER. By Theodora Elmslie. 
Illustrated by Edith Scanned. 
3s. 6d. 
“ It is one of the best stories intended for, or at 
least about, children that have appeared since 
‘ Little Lord Fauntleroy.’ ” — Academy. 
“The illustrations to the book are charming, 
and the moral of the story is excellent.” — The 
Speaker. 
TRASH. By Mrs. Blagden. 
3s. 6d. 
“This is an excellent gift-book for young 
people.” — Gentlewoman. 
By Mrs. MACQUOID. 1 
AT AN OLD CHATEAU. By 
Mrs. Macquoid. Crown 8vo, 6s. 
“A gracefully drawm picture of French country 
life.” — Gentlewoman. 
AT THE RED GLOVE. By 
Mrs. Macquoid. Illustrated by j 
C. S. Reinhart. 3s. 6d. 
COSETTE. By Mrs. Macquoid. , 
3s. 6d. i 
WARD & DOWNEY, York Street, Covent Garden, W.C, 
