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THE BOOK BUYER.

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GOTHIC AND ANGLO-SAXON GOSPELS, in pa-
rallel columns, with the versions of Wycliffe
and Tyndall, arranged with Preface and
Notes, by BOSWORTH WARING. Second and
cheaper edition, 1 vol., 8vo....

GOUFFE (ALP.) THE ROYAL BOOK OF PAS-
TRY AND CONFECTIONERY. 1 very hand-
some vol., royal 8vo, with ten fine chromos,
and 137 very superior wood-cuts, extra cloth,
gilt side and edges...

GR.ANT (JAMES.) HISTORY OF THE NEWSPA-
PER PRESS. Vol. 3. The Metropolitan and
Provincial Press, completing the work. Large
8vo......

GREG (W. R.) THE CREED OF CHRISTEN-
DOM; Its Foundations Contrasted with its
Superstructure. Third edition, with a new
Introduction. 2 vols., 12mo.....

GUIZOT (M.) HISTORY OF FRANCE, from the
Earliest Times to the Year 1789. Trans-
lated by R. BLACK, M.A. 2 vols. royal 8vo,
with exquisite wood engravings,

cloth.....

$6.25

17 50

5 00

7 50

extra

24.00

HANDBOOK FOR FICTITIOUS NAMES: Being
a Guide to Authors, chiefly in the lighter liter-
ature of the XIX Century, who have written
under assumed names; and to Literary For-
gers, Imposters, Plagiarists, and Imitators.
By OLPHAR HAMS (i. e. Ralph Thomas). 1 vol.,

8vo.....

HINTON (JAMES.) PHYSIOLOGY FOR PRACTI-
CAL USE, by various writers. 2 vols., 12mo,
engravings....

HOOPER (MARY) LITTLE DINNERS: How to
Serve Them with Elegance and Economy.
12mo..

HUGO (VICTOR.) LES MISERABLES.

and complete English Translation.
in 5 vols., 12mo.) Vol. 1, Fantine.

boards.....

375

625

250

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HUNTER (W. W.) ANNALS OF RURAL BEN-
GAL Fifth edition. 1 vol., large 8vo....... 9 00

ORISSA; or, the Vicissitudes of an Indian Province under Native and British Rule. vols., large 8vo......

2

16 00

HYMNS OF PRAISE AND PRAYER. Collected and
edited by JAMES MARTINEAU, LL. D. 1 thick
vol., 12mo

225

8.00

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375

10 50

600

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or, the beautiful illustrated edition, by
GEORGE CRUIKSHANK and others, in 1 hand-
some vol., 4to, extra cloth, gilt sides and
edges..

JAMESON (MRS.) MEMOIRS OF EARLY ITAL-
IAN PAINTERS, AND OF THE PROGRESS
1 vol., cr. 8vo,
OF PAINTING IN ITALY.
with 58 portraits....

KANT'S CRITICAL PHILOSOPHY FOR ENGLISH READERS. By the Rev. J. P. MAHAFFY, M. A., Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, and Professor of Ancient History in the University of Dublin. Vol. 1, 8vo., price $6. cloth: or in THREE PARTS:

VOL. I. PART I. A Critical Commentary on Kant's Aesthetic, with a Controversial Chapter on Mr. J. S. Mill's Empirical Derivation of Space......

177 These bosks sent, post-paid, on receipt of the price, by Scribner, Welford & Armstrong, 654 Broadway, N. Y.

250

Par. Lost.

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LYTTON (BULWER.) KENELM CHILLINGLY, His Anventures and Opinions. 2 vols., small 12mo....

MACKAY (R. W.) THE TUBINGEN SCHOOL AND ITS ANTECEDENTS. A Review of the History and Present Condition of Modern Theology, (1863)..

5 00

5 25

MACLEAR (G. F.) A MANUAL OF INSTRUC-
TION FOR CONFIRMATION AND FIRST
COMMUNION, WITH PRAYERS AND DE-
VOTIONS. 32mo, extra cloth, red edges..... 1 00
MACLEOD (H. D.) THE PRINCIPLES OF ECO-
NOMIC PHILOSOPHY. Second edition, re-
vised. Vol. 1, large 8vo...

OLD ENGLISH PLAYS.

A SELECT COLLECTION OF OLD ENGLISH PLAYS. Originally published by Robert Dodsley in the year 1744. Fourth edition, now first chronologically arranged, revised. and enlarged, with the notes of all the commentators, and new notes by W. CAREW HAZLITT. Vol. 2, small 8vo.....

OLIPHANT (LAURENCE.) PICADILLY; A Fragment of Contemporary Biography. Fifth and very cheap edition. 12mo, printed boards... 1. Love: 2. Madness: 3. Suicide: 4., 5. The World: 6. The Flesh: 7. The ". 8. Conclusion-Moral.

O'SHAUGHNESSEY (A.) MUSIC AND MOONLIGHT. Poems and Songs. 1 vol., 16mo.... PAGET (JOHN.) PARADOXES AND PUZZLES; Historical, Judicial, and Literary. 1 vol., 8vo...

525

125

3.75

750

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600

DICTIONARY OF POLITICAL ECONOMY; Biographical, Bibliographical, Historical and Practical. Vol. 1, very large 8vo.......

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21 00

525

3. THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND.

4. LORD MACAULAY AND DUNDEE.

5. LORD MACAULAY AND WILLIAM PENN.

6. NELSON AND CARACCIOLO.

7. LADY HAMILTON.

8. THE WIGTOWN MARTYRS.

9. RECOLLECTIONS OF LORD BYRON.

10. LORD BYRON AND HIS CALUMNIATORS.

11. JUDICIAL PUZZLES.

12. ELIZABETH CANNING.

13. THE CAMDEN WONDER.

14. THE AINESLEY CASE.

15. ELIZA FENNING..

17. ESSAYS ON ART.

16. SPENCER COWPER'S CASE.

18. A DAY AT ANTWERP.

19. GEORGE CRUIKSHANK.

2 50

20. JOHN LEECH.

These books sent, post-paid, on receipt of the price, by Scribner, Welford & Armstrong, 654 Broadway, N. Y.

178

-$5.25

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OF ENGLISH WORDS AND PHRASES, Classified and Ar1 thick vol., ranged. Thirty-first edition. cr. 8vo....

ROGET (DR.) THESAURUS

SALMON (GEO) TREATISE ON THE ANALYTIC GEOMETRY OF THREE DIMENSIONS. Third edition, revised and improved. 1 large vol., 8vo....

SCOTT (SIR WALTER.) QUENTIN DURWARD. Being Vol. 16 of the very cheap and pretty edition of his novels and tales, (to be in 25 vols)

PAVY (F. W.) A TREATISE ON FOOD AND DIETETICS, Physiologically and Therapeutically Considered. 1 vol., large 8vo.......... PAXTON'S BOTANICAL DICTIONARY; Comprising the Names, History, and Culture of all Plants known in Britain; with a full explanation of technical terms. 1 large vol., royal 8vo.......

PEROWNE (J. J. STEWART.) THE BOOK OF PSALMS: A new Translation, with explanaNew and tory notes for English Readers. cheap edition. 1 thick vol., crown 8vo......

PIKE (L. O.) A HISTORY OF CRIME IN ENGLAND; Illustrating the changes of the Laws in the progress of civilization. Vol. 1. From the Roman Invasion to the accession of Henry VII. Large 8vo......

POLE (W.) THEORY OF THE MODERN SCIENTIFIC GAME OF WHIST. Sixth edition, 18mo....

POOLE (R, S.) CATALOGUE OF THE GREEK COINS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Italy. 1 vol., 8vo, engraved coins.. PORCELAIN AND POTTERY.-Nouveaux Dictionaire des Marques, et Monogrammes des Faiences, Poteries, Gres, Terre de Pipe, Terre Cuite, Porcelaines, etc., anciennes et modernes, par Bis-Paguot. 12mo., Paris, 1873, serried.

*The Monograms are printed in various colors, which causes the high price.

PRICE (PROF. BOURING.) THE PRINCIPLES OF CURRENCY. 1 vol., 8vo...... PRIMITIVE AND UNIVERSAL LAWS OF THE FORMATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF LANGUAGE. A Rational and Inductive System founded on the natural basis of Onomatops, by C. A. COUNT DE GODDES-LIANCOURT and F. PRINCOTT. 1 vol., 8vo......

7600

75

8 00

SISMONDI (M. DE) HISTORY OF THE ITALIAN REPUBLICS. 12mo..

2.00

12 50

625

9.00

1 25

12 50

5 25

(Bampton Lec

250

SMITH (I. GREGORY.) CHARACTERISTICS OF CHRISTIAN MORALITY. tures for 1873.) 1 vol., 8vo...... SPAIN AND THE SPANIARDS. By N. L. THIEBLIN, (Azamat-Batuk). 2 vols., 12mo.......... SPORTING.-The Forest and the Field. A series of sporting sketches, chiefly in Africa. New and cheap edition, richly illustrated. 8 vols. 12mo, extra cloth..

STEVENSON (T.) THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF HARBOURS. A Treatise on Maritime Engineering. 1 vol., royal 8vo, with engravings..

10 50

3

50

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3 75

SYMONDS (J. A.) STUDIES OF THE GREEK POETS. 1 vol., cr. 8vo.....

5 25

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TEUFFEL (PROF. W. S.) A HISTORY OF ROMAN LITERATURE. Translated by Dr. W. Wagner. 2 vols., 8vo.....

THORNTON (W. T.) A PLEA FOR PEASANT PROPRIETORS, with the Outlines of a Plan for their Establishment in Ireland. New edition, searchingly revised, in part re-written, and new chapters added. 12mo... TRAVERS (1.) THE PURE BENEVOLENCE OF CREATION. Letters to a Friend in Perple ity. 12mo....

TREASURY OF LANGUAGES A Rudimentary Dictionary of Universal Philology. 12mo....

books sent, post-paid, on receipt of the price, by Scribner, Welford & Armstrong, 654 Broadway, N.

10 50

22

25

25

The Book Buyer.

THE BOOK BUYER will be published Monthly, and will be forwarded for One Year to all who may send their names and addresses to the Publishers, with Twenty-five Cents. Librarians who may send us their names shall ressive it free.

Any of the works named in the BOOK BUYER will be sent post-paid to any address upon receipt of the price. The prices of the respective works may be learned from our advertising columns.

Catalogues of the publications of SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO., and of the importations of SCRIBNER, WELFORD & ARMSTRONG, will be sent to any address upon application.

SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO., SCRIBNER, WELFORD & ARMSTRONG, 654 Broadway, New York.

NEW YORK, MAY 15th, 1874.

FOUR GREAT BOOKS.

THE very term, "apologetic" literature, is distasteful and repellent. What is there in Christianity that need to be apologized for? To whom are apologies due on its own account? Who has a right to expect or to demand apologies for Christianity? To be sure, taken in its primitive sense, the term, "apologetic," is rather that of defense than excuse; but the derivation of the word has been lost sight of, especially of late years, and the appellation conveys to most minds the idea of apology. What could be more unjust than to connect with this misinterpretation such noble volumes as Christlieb's Modern Doubt, Rogers' Superhuman Origin of the Bible, and Hodge's Darwinism.

Each one of these so far from being merely negative or defensive in the positions it assumes, is powerfully aggressive as against infidelity or disbelief; and if many more such books make their appearance, the doubters will be thrown on the defensive, and their literature will become "apologetic," as it ought to have been long ago.

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The Presbyterian calls Dr. Christlieb's book one of the most valuable that has been published in our day." The Watchman and Reflector says that Dr. Christlieb shows himself "to be abundantly able to cope with the enemy," and adds that his book is "as finely a tempered weapon for the defense of the truth as has been forged in our day." The Congre gationalist concludes a long and highly commendatory notice of the book with this valuable piece of advice: "Somebody, at least, ought

to see that every pastor, and every theological student in the land, has a copy."

Mr. Rogers' new work, The Superhuman Origin of the Bible, has attracted considerable attention, and elicited many warm expressions of praise from the religious press. The Christian Advocate says that "it is certainly a most valuable book, pleasant to read, and of very wholesome tendencies. Its reading cannot fail of great good." The Christian Era calls it "an able work," and ends by saying: "We commend the book for its ability, its suggestiveness, and its stimulating power." The Episcopal Register considers that it deserves the highest commendation that can be given," and remarks in closing, that "the work is a grand addition in the department of Apologetics." The Presbyterian says: 'It is a book that every student of the Bible should read; and in the great contest with Infidelity which is upon us, it furnishes arguments for Revelation which are fresh and pertinent."

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Dr. Hodge's What is Darwinism? has also been the object of a good deal of attention from the critics. The N. Y. Tribune, in a careful review of more than a column in length, assures its readers of the value of the work in the following language: "The true friends of science should accordingly welcome every criticism that tends to elucidate its relation with religion. They should especially rejoice when the subject falls into such competent hands as those of the author of the present volume. His style is a model of lucid simplicity; his manner is free from passion and effeminate excitement; his arguments are set out with the skill of an experienced controversialist, and their force is not impaired by any greater infusion of theological bitterness than may serve as a wholesome tonic to the reader." No less strong in its expressions of commendation is the Watchman and Reflector: "We cannot see,' says that paper, "how Christian scholars, after a calm review of this presentation of the subject, can any longer be found speaking favorably of Mr. Darwin's theory." The Chicago Inter-Ocean believes it to be "one of the most able and conclusive arguments yet brought forward upon this prominent and anti-scriptural doctrine;" and the N. Y. Christian Advocate expresses the belief that "this little volume may aid to a better understanding of the subject, for which it is well adapted."

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Whether these important works may technically be classed as "apologetic" or not, Dr.

THE BOOK BUYER.

Bushnell's latest work, Forgiveness and Law, certainly cannot be so regarded. This is one of those fresh, forcible, vigorous expositions of the scriptural doctrine of the atonement which could not be produced by any other theologian. It it sure to attract wide attention in this country and in England.

BRIC-A-BRAC.

The BRIC-A-BRAC series has met with a very

gratifying reception. Doubtless the odd and
attractive cover has had a good deal to do with
this. A good appearance, says Lord Chester-
field, is a constant letter of recommendation.
But the contents are no less curious and at-
tractive than the cover. This first volume of the
BRIC-A-BRAC series, in fact, has much more than
It is a sort of Pepys' Diary
a passing interest.
of the first half of the present century, giving
vivid pictures of the time, its men and women,
which will not soon lose their interest.

The following extracts from the journals which have been most prompt with their notices indicate the cordial reception in store for the series:

"No more refreshing volume could be carried into the country or to the sea-shore, to fill in the niches of time which intervene between the pleasures of the summer holidays."-Boston Post.

"

Something unique and beautiful, both in design and execution. If this first volume is a fair specimen of his [Mr. Stoddard's] judgment and skill, the series will prove first-class and popular among lovers of pure literature."-Providence Press.

"A well-dressed book, in a light May suit, with a None more entertaining for Spring overcoat. the odd hour of leisure, and especially for the afterdinner breathing time of day, has for a long time been We commend the book to the sumpublished mer tourist who can be content with anything better than a novel, and will condescend to be amused."Worcester Gazette.

....

"The book of the week."-N. Y. Evening Mail.

SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY IN ENGLAND.

Opinions of the British Press.

SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY has been most cordially received, and unreservedly recommended by the press of England, where an edition of it is now published by F. WARNE & Co., London. As mere indications of the general tone of criticism we quote the following: The "that SCRIBNER'S Plymouth Mercury asserts MONTHLY, both in quantity and quality, excels any of the English magazines." The Hastings News says: "For neatness of illustration, and fullness and variety of matter, we have no English magazine to compare with it." The Nonconformist, after declaring that "there is no English magazine that, in some respects, can compare with it," asks "is there one which

either could or would produce such a series of illustrated papers as those on 'The Great South?"" According to the Huddersfield Examiner, the engravings in "The Great South" "are marked by unusual excellence, and are really artistic productions; very different from many of the engravings which, by courtesy, are called 'illustrations' in English publications." Another journal says: "The printing is perfect, and must excite the envy of many a London publisher, who has had his choicest cuts turned into mere blurs by his printer. Of the literary value of the contents we can speak scarcely less highly."

The Exeter Gazette says that in respect to illustration, SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY "sets an example to English magazines. Its engravings are descriptive and instructive, illustrative of the letter-press, and not mere representations, for the most part meaningless, of two or three people in a wood or a room, 'spooning' lovers The Bergenerally, or tragic attitudinisers.”

* *

wick Journal says the wood engravings "are not
one whit inferior to those of the Art Journal,
when that journal was at its best, some years
We know of no magazine that
ago.
can compete with the MONTHLY of our American
The Norwich
cousins in its own peculiar walk."
Mercury says: "Not a few of the bits of wood
engravings in this month's SCRIBNER Would do
credit to our very best book-work; they fairly
distance anything we have provided for a much
larger sum on this side of the Atlantic.'

As to the general conduct of the MONTHLY the Islington Times says: "The great point of recommendation of the magazine to ordinary readers is its inclusiveness. It is not easy for any person of moderate intelligence to pronounce the magazine wholly uninteresting, as are far too many of our own high-class periodicals-written apparently by the contributors for themselves, and certainly not for the great mass of the reading and thinking public outside the pale of their narrow circle. Occasionally we find in SCRIBNER's a remarkably fine handling of some known author, presenting the fruits of earnest thought so forcibly, that if this species of writing were commonly in vogue in America, whatever might be said in depreciation of its native authorship, its criticism would certainly be exceptionably good in its power of analysis and facility of expression."

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