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published by Mr. George Redway (1887), by Arthur Edward Waite
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Title: A Catalogue of Remarkable Books published by Mr. George Redway
(1887)
Author: Arthur Edward Waite
Release Date: February 12, 2023 [eBook #70028]
Language: English
Produced by: deaurider, PrimeNumber and the Online Distributed
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CATALOGUE OF REMARKABLE
BOOKS PUBLISHED BY MR. GEORGE REDWAY (1887) ***
A
CATALOGUE
OF
REMARKABLE BOOKS
PUBLISHED BY
MR. GEORGE REDWAY
“_TOLLE, LEGE_”
LONDON
15, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN
1887
[Illustration]
_Handsomely printed and bound in one vol. 8vo., price 10s. 6d._
KABALA DENUDATA.
THE KABBALA UNVEILED.
CONTAINING THE FOLLOWING BOOKS OF THE ZOHAR:--
1. _The Book of Concealed Mystery._
2. _The Greater Holy Assembly._
3. _The Lesser Holy Assembly._
Translated into English from the Latin version of KNORR VON ROSENROTH,
and collated with the original Chaldee and Hebrew Text, by S. L.
MACGREGOR MATHERS.
“We have seen that the Therapeuts listened every Sabbath to
discourses on the traditionary lore which was handed down in secret
amongst themselves. HAS THIS SECRET LORE PASSED AWAY FROM THE EARTH?
Scholars of the calibre of Reuchlin Joel and M. Franck, of the
Institute of France, affirm that we have it still in the ‘Kabbalah.’
This word implies secret tradition. The legend runs that this secret
wisdom was first taught by Jehovah to the seven angels that stand
round his throne. It was then handed down orally through the seven
earthly messengers (Adam, Moses, David, &c.). Finally, the Rabbi
Simon Ben Jochai, in a cavern amid earth rocking and supernatural
coruscations delivered it to the world in a “BOOK OF SPLENDOUR,” THE
“SOHAR.”--Arthur Lillie’s “Buddhism in Christendom” (1887).
Dr. Ginsburg speaks of the Kabbalah as:--“A system of religious
philosophy, or, more properly, of theosophy, which has not only
exercised for hundreds of years an extraordinary influence on the
mental development of so shrewd a people as the Jews, but has
captivated the minds of some of the greatest thinkers of Christendom
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, claims the greatest
attention of both the philosopher and theologian. When it is added
that among its captives were Raymond Lully, the celebrated scholastic
metaphysician and chemist (died 1315); John Reuchlin, the renowned
scholar and reviver of Oriental literature in Europe (born 1455, died
1522); John Picus de Mirandola, the famous philosopher and classical
scholar (1463-1494); Cornelius Henry Agrippa, the distinguished
philosopher, divine, and physician (1577-1644); as well as our own
countrymen, Robert Fludd, the famous physician and philosopher
(1574-1637), and Dr. Henry More (1614-1687); and that these men,
after restlessly searching for a scientific system which should
disclose to them ‘the deepest depths’ of the divine nature, and show
them the real tie which binds all things together, found the cravings
of their minds satisfied by this theosophy, the claims of the
Kabbalah on the attention of students in literature and philosophy
will readily be admitted. The claims of the Kabbalah, however, are
not restricted to the literary man and the philosopher; the poet,
too, will find in it ample materials for the exercise of his lofty
genius.”
_In crown 8vo., cloth, price 7s. 6d._
POSTHUMOUS HUMANITY:
A STUDY OF PHANTOMS.
By ADOLPHE D’ASSIER, Member of the Bordeaux Academy of Sciences.
Translated and annotated by HENRY S. OLCOTT, President of the
Theosophical Society. To which is added an Appendix showing the popular
beliefs current in India respecting the post-mortem vicissitudes of the
human entity.
Contents:--Facts establishing the existence of the posthumous
personality in man--Its various modes of manifestation--Facts
establishing the existence of a second personality in the living
man--Its various modes of manifestation--Facts establishing
the existence of the personality in animals, and concerning a
posthumous animality--Fluidic form of vegetables--Fluidic form
of gross bodies--Character of the posthumous being--Its physical
constitution--Its aversion to light--Its reservoir of living
force--Its ballistic--The nervous fluid--Electric animals--Electric
persons--Electric plants--The mesmeric ether and the personality
which it engenders--The somnambule--The sleep-talker--The seer--The
turning-table--The talking-table--The medium--Miracles of the
ecstatics--Prodigy of magic--The incubus--The obsessing spirit--Causes
of the rarity of the living phantom--Causes of the rarity of the
trans-sepulchral phantom--Resemblance of the spiritistic phenomena
to the phenomena of the posthumous order--Lycanthropy--Glance at the
fauna of the shades--Their pre-occupations--How they prolong their
existence--The posthumous vampire.
_In demy 8vo., cloth, price 10s. 6d._
INCIDENTS IN THE LIFE OF MADAME BLAVATSKY,
Compiled from information supplied by her relatives and friends, and
edited by A. P. SINNETT, with a portrait reproduced from an original
painting by HERMANN SCHMIECHEN.
“Mr. Sinnett’s memoir is fluently written, and is free from
unsympathetic scepticism. Theosophists will find both edification and
interest in the book; and the general student of science will profit
more or less by having his attention called to, &c....”--_Pall Mall
Gazette._
“Mr. Sinnett, however, offers on all the disputed points explanations
which will be perfectly satisfactory to those who do not agree with
the committee of the Psychical Society.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._
“For any credulous friend who revels in such stories I can recommend
‘Incidents in the Life of Madame Blavatsky.’ I READ EVERY LINE OF THE
BOOK WITH MUCH INTEREST.”--_Truth._
_In post 8vo., with numerous plates coloured and plain, cloth, price
7s. 6d._
GEOMETRICAL PSYCHOLOGY;
OR, THE SCIENCE OF REPRESENTATION.
Being the Theories and Diagrams of B. W. BETTS explained by LOUISA S.
COOK.
“His attempt seems to have taken a similar direction to that of
George Boole in logic, with the difference that, whereas Boole’s
expression of the Laws of Thought is algebraic, Betts expresses
mind-growth geometrically; that is to say, his growth-formulæ
are expressed in numerical series, of which each can be pictured
to the eye in a corresponding curve. When the series are thus
represented, they are found to resemble the forms of leaves and
flowers.”--_Extract from “Symbolic Methods of Study,” by Mary Boole._
The _Pall Mall Gazette_, in a characteristic article entitled, “Very
Methodical Madness,” allows that “Like Rosicrucianism, esoteric
Buddhism, and other forms of the mystically incomprehensible, it
seems to exercise a magnetic influence upon many minds by no means as
foolish as its original inventor’s.”
“This work is the result of more than twenty years’ application to
the discovery of a method of representing human consciousness in its
various stages of development by means of geometrical figures--it is,
in fact, the application of mathematical symbology to metaphysics.
This idea will be new to many of our readers; indeed, so far as
we know, Mr. Betts is the only man who has tried to work out a
coherent system of this kind, though his work unfortunately remains
imperfect.”--_Theosophist_, June, 1887.
_In demy 8vo., cloth, price 10s. 6d._
THE MYSTERIES OF MAGIC;
A Digest of the Writings of Eliphas Levi, with Biographical and
Critical Essay by ARTHUR EDWARD WAITE.
“A very curious book.”--_Time._
“To the rapidly-extending catalogue of remarkable books published by
Mr. George Redway, of London, an important addition has been made by
the issue of a digest of the writings of Eliphas Levi. Many people,
we dare say, will consider the volume to be ‘full of nonsense,’
but it is really a very curious and improving work, going over a
vast space of ground, and presenting a great deal of matter that
is worth thinking over. The author has earned a title to be heard.
As a contribution to what is called ‘occult science,’ the present
book will, of course, find a welcome from many readers, among those
especially whose passion it is to grope for the unseen, and to these
the varied contents will give delight. The matter contained in Mr.
Waite’s volume is wonderfully varied, and much of it worth reading,
even by those who do not believe in magic of any kind, black or
white.”--_Glasgow Herald._
“No determined student of Nature’s higher mysteries, setting out
from the standpoint of modern European culture, can afford to remain
ignorant of Eliphas Levi’s works. But to study them in the original
is a wearisome task, if for no other reason, on account of their
aggregate length. The present single volume is a digest of half a
dozen books enumerated by the present author in a ‘biographical
and critical essay’ with which he prefaces his undertaking. These
are the _Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie_, the _Histoire de la
Magie_, the _Clef des Grands Mystères_, the _Sorcier de Meudon_, the
_Philosophie Occulte_, and the _Science des Esprits_. To attack the
whole series--which, indeed, it might be difficult to obtain now
in a complete form--would be a bold undertaking, but Mr. Waite has
endeavoured to give his readers the essence of the whole six books in
a relatively compact compass.”--_Light._
“Let no man think that such transcendental mysteries as the
astrologer and the magician plunge into have disappeared from
the face of the earth. Their votaries defy derision, they meet
contempt with a calm consciousness of power, and a sublime sense of
superiority; for in this generation the magicians have found a new
prophet, a new hierophant--almost a new gospel.... Meanwhile, lest
our readers should suppose that the modern students of the science of
magic are not in deadly earnest, or that they are few in number or
poor in substance, let them, with all due awe and thankfulness, buy
this handsome volume, and as they open it let them cast a glance at
the amazing list of works published and publishing by a single firm
on the various branches of the occult sciences. Having done that, let
them ask themselves whether some forms of faith--for we dare not drop
a hint of disrespect--do not die hard.”--_Athenæum, Aug. 6th, 1887._
_12mo., cloth, 2s._
NATURE AND LAW.
An Answer to PROFESSOR DRUMMOND’S “Natural Law in the Spiritual World.”
Professor Drummond subordinates the Spiritual universe to the
Material; the author of “Nature and Law” sustains a thesis
diametrically opposed to this. His conclusion is “that there is more
of heaven than of earth in all terrestrial things, more of spirit
than of matter in what are termed material laws.”
_Post free, price 3d._
THE LITERATURE OF OCCULTISM AND ARCHÆOLOGY.
Being a Catalogue of Books ON SALE relating to:--
Ancient Worships.--Astrology.--Alchemy.--Animal
Magnetism.--Anthropology.--Arabic.--Assassins.--Antiquities.--Ancient
History.--Behmen and the
Mystics.--Buddhism.--Clairvoyance.--Cabeiri.--China.--Coins.--Druids.--
Dreams and Visions.--Divination.--Divining
Rod.--Demonology.--Ethnology.--Egypt.--Fascination.--Flagellants.--
Freemasonry.--Folk-Lore.--Gnostics.--Gems.--Ghosts.--Hindus.--
Hieroglyphics and Secret Writing.--Herbals.--Hermetic.--India and the
Hindus.--Kabbala.--Koran.--Miracles.--Mirabilaries.--Magic
and Magicians.--Mysteries.--Mithraic
Worship.--Mesmerism.--Mythology.--Metaphysics.--Mysticism.--
Neo-platonism.--Orientalia.--Obelisks.--Oracles.--Occult Sciences.--
Philology.--Persian.--Parsees.--Philosophy.--Physiognomy.--Palmistry and
Handwriting.--Phrenology.--Psychoneurology.--Psychometry.--Prophets.--
Rosicrucians.--Round Towers.--Rabbinical.--Spiritualism.--Skeptics,
Jesuits, Christians and Quakers.--Sibylls.--Symbolism.--Serpent Worship.
--Secret Societies.--Somnambulism.--Travels.--Tombs.--Theosophy.--
Theology and Criticism.--Witchcraft.
_Monthly. Subscription, 10s. per annum._
THE PATH:
A Magazine devoted to the Brotherhood of Humanity, Theosophy in
America, and the Study of Occult Science, Philosophy, and Aryan
Literature. Edited by WILLIAM Q. JUDGE. Published under the auspices of
The Aryan Theosophical Society of New York.
_Price 1s. monthly._
“LUCIFER:”
A Theosophical Monthly, designed to bring light “to the hidden things
of darkness” on both the physical and psychic planes of life. Edited by
H. P. BLAVATSKY and MABEL COLLINS.
This Magazine is published with a dual purpose. The first is to
direct the searching light of impartial truth on the dark problems of
human life, chiefly on the present psychic and spiritual state of our
cultured classes throughout Europe and America. The second is to apply
it fearlessly as a dissecting knife to every prejudice, whether social
or religious, and as a microscope by which to reveal the hidden essence
underlying external appearances, the accepted routine of life, forms
of accustomed thought, existing institutions, sciences, and creeds.
The true light-bearer is at war with no man; but it is his duty to
serve humanity by opposing and denouncing everything which tends to
hypocrisy, egotism, and the hurt of the many for the gain of the few.
“LUCIFER” will endeavour to carry out this duty to the full. This is
the secondary task which falls to the lot of all who oppose the dark
serried mass of materialists. But the primary one, and that which in
this Magazine will always take the first place, is that of applying
theosophic thought to the problems of life. There are things which can
only be scrutinized to any effectual purpose by the application of a
higher knowledge than that which is sufficient to deal with external
facts. The Editors have the courage to undertake so great an effort
as the launching of this Magazine because they have promise and good
earnest of help, from those who possess that higher knowledge, and
who consider the time is ripe for truths, which have existed from all
ages, to be born again in the minds of men. The best known students
of mysticism and occult philosophy will contribute to its pages,
while fiction, the mirror of life, will be used to reveal some of the
marvellous phases of existence. The attempt will be not merely to
promote the comprehension of inner truths and mysteries connected with
the spiritual progress of humanity, but to show that occult philosophy
may shed a new light on the practical conduct of our destinies in their
relation with the physical world.
_Monthly, 2s.; yearly subscription, 20s._
THE THEOSOPHIST:
A Magazine of Oriental Philosophy, Art, Literature and Occultism.
Conducted by H. P. BLAVATSKY. Vols. I. to VIII. now ready.
“Theosophy has suddenly risen to importance.... The movement implied
by the term Theosophy is one that cannot be adequately explained
in a few words ... those interested in the movement, which is not
to be confounded with spiritualism, will find means of gratifying
their curiosity by procuring the back numbers of ‘The Theosophist’
and a very remarkable book called ‘Isis Unveiled,’ by Madame
Blavatsky.”--_Literary World._
_Demy 8vo., wrapper, price 1s._
THE HANDBOOK OF PHYSIOGNOMY.
By ROSA BAUGHAN.
“The merit of her book consists in the admirable clearness of her
descriptions of faces. So vivid is the impression produced by them
that she is able to dispense with illustrations, the reader using the
faces of his acquaintances for that purpose. The classification, too,
is good, although the astrological headings may be regarded by the
profane as fanciful. Physiognomy may now be scientifically studied by
means of composite photography.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._
_Fourth edition, newly revised, with illustrative plates, price 1s._
THE HANDBOOK OF PALMISTRY.
By ROSA BAUGHAN, author of “Indications of Character in Handwriting.”
“It possesses a certain literary interest, for Miss Baughan
shows the connection between palmistry and the doctrines of the
Kabbala.”--_Graphic._
“Miss Rosa Baughan, for many years known as one of the most expert
proficients in this branch of science, has as much claim to
consideration as any writer on the subject.”--_Sussex Daily News._
“People who wish to believe in palmistry, or the science of reading
character from the marks of the hand,” says the _Daily News_, in an
article devoted to the discussion of this topic, “will be interested
in a handbook of the subject by Miss Baughan, published by Mr.
Redway.”
_Nos. 3 to 13, and each succeeding number as issued, may be had, price
1s._
TRANSACTIONS OF THE LONDON LODGE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY:
Nos. 1 and 2.--Out of print.
No. 3--On the Higher Aspect of Theosophic Studies. By MOHINI M
CHATTERJI.
No. 4.--A Synopsis of Baron Du Prel’s “Philosophie der Mystik.” By
BERTRAM KEIGHTLEY.
No. 5.--A Paper on Reincarnation. By Miss ARUNDALE. And other
Proceedings.
No. 6.--The Theosophical Movement. By A. P. SINNETT.
No. 7.--The Higher Self. By A. P. SINNETT.
No. 8.--The Theosophical Society and its Work. By MOHINI M. CHATTERJI.
No. 9.--A Paper on Krishna. By MOHINI M. CHATTERJI.
No. 10.--On Mesmerism. By A. P. SINNETT.
No. 11.--Theosophy in the Works of Richard Wagner. By W. ASHTON ELLIS.
No. 12.--Buddha’s Teaching. By A. P. SINNETT.
No. 13.--The Relations of the Higher and the Lower Self. By A. P.
SINNETT.
_Printed on antique paper and tastefully bound, price 7s. 6d._
THE ASTROLOGER’S GUIDE.
ANIMA ASTROLOGIÆ;
OR, A GUIDE FOR ASTROLOGERS.
Being the One Hundred and Forty-six Considerations of the Astrologer,
GUIDO BONATUS, translated from the Latin by Henry Coley, together with
the choicest Aphorisms of the Seven Segments of JEROM CARDAN, of Milan,
edited by William Lilly (1675); now first republished from the original
edition with Notes and Preface by W. C. ELDON SERJEANT.
“Mr. Serjeant deserves the thanks of all who are interested in
astrology for rescuing this important work from oblivion.... The
growing interest in mystical science will lead to a revival of
astrological study, and advanced students will find this book an
indispensable addition to their libraries. The book is well got up
and printed.”--_Theosophist._
_In post 4to., illustrated with engravings on wood, most chastely bound
in white vellum, price 10s. 6d._
ASTROLOGY THEOLOGIZED.
THE SPIRITUAL HERMENEUTICS OF ASTROLOGY AND HOLY WRIT.
Being a Treatise upon the Influence of the Stars on Man, and on the
Art of Ruling them by the Law of Grace. Reprinted from the Original of
1649. With a Prefatory Essay on Bible Hermeneutics. By ANNA KINGSFORD,
M.D., Paris.
“It is well for Dr. Anna Kingsford that she was not born into the
sidereal world four hundred years ago. Had that been her sorry fate,
she would assuredly have been burned at the stake for her preface to
‘Astrology Theologized.’ It is a very long preface--more than half
the length of the treatise it introduces; it contains some of the
finest flowers of Theosophical philosophy, and of course makes very
short work of Christianity.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
“Mrs. Kingsford, amid many things which we do not understand, and
some few which we think we comprehend afar off, gives a more detailed
analysis of ghosts than we remember to have met with in any of the
ancient hermetic writers.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
“The only pleasing features of the book are the reproductions of a
number of beautiful symbolical figures with which it is illustrated.
That on p. 28, representing Christ surrounded by an elliptical glory
and carried up to heaven by angels, is taken from an illuminated
manuscript of the fourteenth century in the Bibliothèque Royale;
and the figure of the Virgin in an aureole, on p. 94, is from a
tenth-century illuminated manuscript in the same library. Some of
the figures here reproduced are among the finest things in Christian
iconography.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
_Small 4to., with illustrations, bound in vegetable parchment, price
10s. 6d._
THE VIRGIN OF THE WORLD.
By HERMES MERCURIUS TRISMEGISTUS. A Treatise on Initiations, or
Asclepios; the Definitions of Asclepios; Fragments of the Writings of
Hermes. Translated and edited by the authors of “The Perfect Way.” With
an Introduction to “The Virgin of the World” by A. K., and an Essay on
“The Hermetic Books” by E. M.
“It will be a most interesting study for every occultist to compare
the doctrines of the ancient Hermetic philosophy with the teaching of
the Vedantic and Buddhist systems of religious thought. The famous
books of Hermes seem to occupy, with reference to the Egyptian
religion, the same position which the Upanishads occupy in Aryan
religious literature.”--_Theosophist_, November, 1885.
_Just published, 32 pages, wrapper, price 1s._
THE NEW ILLUMINATION.
By EDWARD MAITLAND, author of “The Pilgrim and the Shrine.”
Contents:--The Revival of Mysticism.--The “Modus” of
Illumination.--Cyclical Illuminations.--Propositions
Involved.--Previous Illuminations.--The Obscuration.--The New
Illumination.--The Crucial Tests.--Further Tokens.
_In crown 8vo., price 7s. 6d._
MAGIC, WHITE AND BLACK;
OR, THE SCIENCE OF FINITE AND INFINITE LIFE.
Containing Practical Hints for Students of Occultism, by FRANZ
HARTMANN, M.D. Illustrated with magical signs, and a symbolical
frontispiece etched by MACKANESS, from a design by the Author.
_Post 8vo., cloth, price 10s. 6d._
THE LIFE OF PHILIPPUS THEOPHRASTUS, BOMBAST OF HOHENHEIM, KNOWN BY THE
NAME OF
PARACELSUS,
And the substance of his teachings concerning Cosmology, Anthropology,
Pneumatology, Magic and Sorcery, Medicine, Alchemy and Astrology,
Theosophy and Philosophy. Extracted and translated from his rare
and extensive works and from some unpublished Manuscripts, by FRANZ
HARTMANN, M.D., author of “Magic,” &c.
“Paracelsus was a high priest among mystics and alchemists; he left
behind him one hundred and six treatises upon medical and occult
subjects, which are likely to be read by the curious as long as
mysticism remains a necessary study for whoever would trace the
developments of civilization.
“From some considerable acquaintance with the writings of Paracelsus,
we can say that Dr. Hartmann has made his excerpts from them with a
good deal of skill. Students, indeed, should be grateful for this
book, despite its setting of Theosophical nonsense; since to read
one of Bombast’s Latin or German treatises is a very stiff exercise
indeed, unless you are well versed in his very recondite terminology.
“Dr. Hartmann has compiled a very full and accurate glossary of
occult terms, which will be of great use to future readers of
Paracelsus; and for so much he is to be thanked.
“Dr. Hartmann quotes some of his recipes for transmuting metals
and producing the ‘electrum magicum.’ But Paracelsus is the most
transcendental of European mystics, and it is not always easy to know
when he is writing allegorically and when practically. Dr. Hartmann
says he has tried these prescriptions and found them all right;
but he warns the uninitiated against running the risk of blowing
themselves up in the endeavour to follow the master’s instructions.
“Paracelsus held firmly to the belief of some of the hermetic writers
of the Middle Ages, that it is perfectly possible to create human
beings by alchemical means; and he even gives directions (in his
treatise ‘De Natura Rerum’) for the production of homunculi.
“On the whole, however, Dr. Hartmann has produced a very amusing book
and a book which will have some permanent value to the student of the
occult.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
_64 pp., 8vo., wrapper, price 1s. 6d._
THE “OCCULT WORLD PHENOMENA,”
AND THE SOCIETY FOR PSYCHICAL RESEARCH.
By A. P. SINNETT, with a Protest by MADAME BLAVATSKY.
“An interesting addition to the fast-expanding literature of
Theosophy.”--_Literary World._
“All who are interested in Theosophy should read it.”--_Glasgow
Herald._
“Mr. Sinnett scores some points against his adversary, and his
pamphlet is to be followed by some memoirs of Madame Blavatsky, which
may contain further refutations. Madame Blavatsky herself appends to
the pamphlet a brief and indignant denial of the grave charges which
have been made against her.”--_Graphic._
_In crown 8vo., cloth, price 7s. 6d._
THEOSOPHY, RELIGION, AND OCCULT SCIENCE.
By HENRY S. OLCOTT, President of the Theosophical Society.
“This book, to which we can only allot an amount of space quite
incommensurate with its intrinsic interest, is one that will appeal
to the prepared student rather than to the general reader. To
anyone who has previously made the acquaintance of such books as
Mr. Sinnett’s ‘Occult World,’ and ‘Esoteric Buddhism,’ or has in
other ways familiarized himself with the doctrines of the so-called
Theosophical Society or Brotherhood, these lectures of Colonel
Olcott’s will be rich in interest and suggestiveness. The American
officer is a person of undoubted social position and unblemished
personal reputation, and his main object is not to secure belief in
the reality of any ‘phenomena,’ not to win a barren reputation for
himself as a thaumaturgist or wonder-worker, but to win acceptance
for one of the oldest philosophies of nature and human life--a
philosophy to which of late years the thinkers of the West have been
turning with noteworthy curiosity and interest. Of course, should
the genuineness of the phenomena in question be satisfactorily
established, there would undoubtedly be proof that the Eastern sages
to whom Colonel Olcott bears witness do possess a knowledge of the
laws of the physical universe far wider and more intimate than that
which has been laboriously acquired by the inductive science of
the West; but the theosophy expounded in this volume is at once a
theology, a metaphysic, and a sociology, in which mere marvels, as
such, occupy a quite subordinate and unimportant position. We cannot
now discuss its claims, and we will not pronounce any opinion upon
them; we will only say that Colonel Olcott’s volume deserves and will
repay the study of all readers for whom the byways of speculation
have an irresistible charm.”--_Manchester Examiner._
_In crown 8vo., cloth, price 6s._
A PROFESSOR OF ALCHEMY
(DENIS ZACHAIRE).
By PERCY ROSS, author of “A Comedy without Laughter” and “A Misguidit
Lassie.”
The above work is not so much a novel as a study in alchemy. Its
incident and detail, with a few exceptions, are not fiction but fact,
being drawn from contemporary works, including Denis Zachaire’s own
“Opusculum.”
_In 2 vols., crown 8vo., cloth, price 10s. 6d._
UNITED.
By A. P. SINNETT.
“Mr. Sinnett’s previous works on ‘Esoteric Buddhism’ and ‘The
Occult World’ in some way prepare the reader for the marvellous
psychological phenomena with which the present volumes abound, and
which cannot fail to have an irresistible charm for all those who
love the byways of speculation.”--_Literary World._
“There is, nevertheless, a weird attractiveness about ‘United’ which
makes even the non-believer in theosophy loth to put down the book
when once he has taken it up; while to the lovers of occult phenomena
it will prove irresistibly fascinating.”--_Literary World._
“Literary ability is evident throughout the book.”--_St. James’s
Gazette._
“It would be difficult to point to a more earnest writer than Mr.
Sinnett, and all he says invariably carries force and weight.... The
book has a power of its own which compels respect, and Mr. Sinnett is
so much the same as he always is, so eager and sincere in expounding
the mysteries in which he is a fervent believer, that one seems to
be inspired with some of the curious fascination of his teaching....
In spite of all the improbable and weird fancies which have to be
accepted by the student of the occult religion, it should always be
borne in mind that its tenets are eminently elevating and beautiful;
that it appeals to the best side of our nature.... But all is vague
confusion to the uninitiated, and it has to be reluctantly admitted
that if attracted one is sadly dazzled by the perusal of such a
couple of volumes as ‘United.’ The purpose of ‘United’ is a good
one; it is written with marked ability, and the story is pleasantly
related in the happy vein of a characteristic author.”--_Morning
Advertiser_, Dec. 31st, 1886.
_Bound in fancy cloth, uncut edges, price 2s._
TOBACCO TALK AND SMOKERS’ GOSSIP.
An amusing Miscellany of Fact and Anecdote relating to “The Great
Plant” in all its forms and uses, including a Selection from Nicotian
Literature.
CONTENTS:--A Tobacco Parliament--Napoleon’s First Pipe--A Dutch Poet
and Napoleon’s Snuff-Box--Frederick the Great as an Ass--Too Small for
Two--A Smoking Empress--The Smoking Princesses--An Incident on the
G.W.R.--Raleigh’s Tobacco Box--Bismarck’s Last Cigar--Bismarck’s Cigar
Story--Moltke’s Pound of Snuff--Lord Brougham as a Smoker--Mazzini’s
Sang-froid as a Smoker--Lord Clarendon as a Smoker--Politics and
Snuff-Boxes--Penn and Tobacco--Tobacco and the Papacy--The Snuff-Mull
in the Scotch Kirk--Whately as a Snuff-Taker--The First Bishop
who Smoked--Pigs and Smokers--Jesuits’ Snuff--Kemble Pipes--An
Ingenious Smoker--Anecdote of Dean Aldrich--Smoking to the Glory of
God--Professor Huxley on Smoking--Blucher’s Pipe-Master--Shakespeare
and Tobacco--Ben Jonson on Tobacco--Lord Byron on Tobacco--Décamps and
Horace Vernet--Milton’s Pipe--Anecdote of Sir Isaac Newton--Emerson
and Carlyle--Paley and his Pipe--Jules Sandeau on the Cigar--The
Pickwick of Fleet Street--The _Obsequio_ of Havana--The Social
Pipe (_Thackeray_)--Triumph of Tobacco over Sack and Ale--The
Smoking Philosopher--Sam Slick on the Virtues of a Pipe--Smoking in
1610--Bulwer-Lytton on Tobacco-Smoking--Professor Sedgwick--St. Pierre
on the Effect of Tobacco--Ode to Tobacco (_C. S. Calverley_)--Meat and
Drink (_Charles Kingsley_)--The Meerschaum (_O. W. Holmes_)--Charles
Kingsley at Eversley--Robert Burns’s Snuff-box--Robinson Crusoe’s
Tobacco--Guizot--Victor Hugo--Mr. Buckle as a Smoker--Carlyle on
Tobacco--A Poet’s Pipe (_Baudelaire_)--A Pipe of Tobacco--The
Headsman’s Snuff-box--The Pipe and Snuff-box (_Cowper_)--Anecdote
of Charles Lamb--Gibbon as a Snuff-Taker--Charles Lamb as a
Smoker--Farewell to Tobacco (_Chas. Lamb_)--The Power of Smoke
(_Thackeray_)--Thackeray as a Smoker--Dickens as a Smoker--Chewing
and Spitting in America--Tennyson as a Smoker--A Smoker’s Opinion
of Venice--Coleridge’s First Pipe--Richard Porson--Cruikshank and
Tobacco--Mr. James Payn--Mr. Swinburne on Raleigh--The Anti-Tobacco
Party--“This Indian Weed”--Dr. Abernethy on Snuff-Taking--Abernethy
and a Smoking Patient--Tobacco and the Plague--“The Greatest
Tobacco-Stopper in all England”--Dr. Richardson on Tobacco--Advice
to Smokers--Some Strange Smokers--The Etymology of Tobacco--The
Snuff called “Irish Blackguard”--A Snuff-Maker’s Sign--Mr. Sala’s
Cigar-Shop--Death of the “Yard of Clay”--A Prodigious Smoker--A
Professor of Smoking--Tobacco in Time of War--Ages attained by Great
Smokers--A Maiden’s Wish--“Those Dreadful Cigars”--How to take a Pinch
of Snuff--The Tobacco Plant--Fate of an Early Smoker--Adding Insult
to Injury--Tom Brown on Smoking--The Snuff-Taker--Tobacco in North
America--National Characteristics--Smoking at School--Carlyle on “The
Veracities”--Children’s Pipes--The Uses of Cigar Ash--An Inveterate
Smoker--A Tough Yarn--Some French Smokers--Riddles for Smokers--Cigar
Manufacturing in Havana.
“One of the best books of gossip we have met for some time.... It is
literally crammed full from beginning to end of its 148 pages with
well-selected anecdotes, poems, and excerpts from tobacco literature
and history.”--_Graphic._
“The smoker should be grateful to the compilers of this pretty little
volume.... No smoker should be without it, and anti-tobacconists have
only to turn over its leaves to be converted.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._
“Something to please smokers; and non-smokers may be interested in
tracing the effect of tobacco--the fatal, fragrant herb--on our
literature.”--_Literary World._
_In crown 8vo., cloth, price 5s._
THE HISTORY OF TITHES.
By H. W. CLARKE.
“We have no hesitation in saying that he has produced the best
book of moderate size yet published for the purpose of enabling an
ordinary reader to thoroughly understand the origin and history of
this ancient impost.... The author gives a great deal of interesting
information concerning the planting and growth of Christianity in
these islands, the origin of parishes, and the founding and endowment
of parish churches.... Mr. Clarke declares himself in his book to be
a member of the Church of England. He thus writes in no spirit of
hostility to her. But he rightly uses very plain language in giving
his opinion on the wilful distortion of facts by Church writers
aiming to defend their Church.... No one who wishes thoroughly to
understand the history of tithes should be without this book. It will
well repay perusal as a book of ecclesiastical history apart from its
special object.”--_Literary World._
“The change of front which the defenders of the Church have been
executing in the face of the enemy has exposed them to some awkward
attacks, and Mr. Clarke has no doubt seized on a weak point in the
line which seems to have been now adopted. Nor must we take leave
of Mr. Clarke without praising his twelfth chapter, which contains
an impartial and valuable array of facts and figures, which should
be read by all who are interested in the solution of the tithe
problem.”--_Athenæum_, July, 1887.
_Demy 8vo., cloth, price 7s. 6d._
THE LIFE, TIMES, AND WRITINGS OF THOMAS CRANMER, D.D.
(The first Reforming Archbishop of Canterbury).
By CHARLES HASTINGS COLLETTE.
_In small 8vo., cloth, price 5s._
“Mr. Collette brings to his task both breadth and depth of knowledge,
and a desire to be scrupulously free from prejudice. That he
will please every reader is not to be expected, but it will be
generally admitted that he has made every effort to arrive at and
record the truth, nothing extenuating nor setting down aught in
malice.”--_Globe_, Aug. 19th.
_Small 8vo., cloth, price 5s._
MOUNTAINEERING BELOW THE SNOW-LINE;
OR, THE SOLITARY PEDESTRIAN IN SNOWDONIA AND ELSEWHERE.
By M. PATERSON, illustrated with etchings.
_Vanity Fair_ says:--“Mr. Paterson writes charmingly of a charming
subject. He is a cultured and an athletic man, and tells of the
climbs he has done in nervous, descriptive English. He confesses to
some partiality for getting along alone, but he is evidently not a
churl, and he opens the store of his experiences under the snow-line
in Wales, Cumberland, Scotland, and Norway with a skill which will
make his wanderings acceptable to a much larger number of people than
can ever climb mountains themselves.”
_Small crown 8vo., cloth, 5s._
AMBULANCE SERMONS:
Being a series of Popular Essays on Medical and Allied Subjects, by J.
A. AUSTIN, M.D.
“The essays are very readable and convey much instruction on
elementary topics of therapeutics in a pleasant and agreeable
form. A reader may learn from them how to cure a cold or manage
a baby, both difficult things to do; and will find much to help
him in the treatment of such accidents and ailments as are
usually considered too slight to warrant a resort to professional
assistance.”--_Scotsman._
“It is not merely a doctor’s book for family use, as the writer
endeavours to explain the physiological principles upon which medical
treatment rests, although he gives practical applications in the way
of directions and prescriptions.”--_Glasgow Herald_, Aug. 19th.
_Large crown 8vo., illuminated cover, price 10s. 6d._
THE FORTUNATE LOVERS.
Twenty-seven novels of the Queen of Navarre, translated by ARTHUR
MACHEN. Edited and selected with notes and an introduction by A. MARY
F. ROBINSON. With etched frontispiece by R. JACOMB HOOD.
_In crown 8vo., cloth, price 5s._
THE HEROIC ENTHUSIASTS
(GLI HEROICI FURORI).
An Ethical Poem by GIORDANO BRUNO.
Part the First translated by L. Williams. With an introduction,
compiled chiefly from DAVID LEVI’S “Giordano Bruno o la Religione del
Pensiero.”
_In crown 8vo., cloth, price 5s._
A SOUL’S COMEDY.
By ARTHUR E. WAITE.
“The spiritual history of Jasper Cartwright, which Mr. Waite has
narrated in his dramatic poem, ‘A Soul’s Comedy,’ is as complex as
any student of humanity could desire.... The story, as such, is not
without interest, though some of the interest is disagreeable.... Yet
Mr. Waite often writes very forcibly; his imagery is good; and there
is plenty of idealism in his pages.”--_Scotsman._
_Price 2s. 6d._
THE RUEING OF GUDRUN,
And Other Poems. By the Hon. Mrs. GREVILLE-NUGENT.
“Mrs. Greville-Nugent has succeeded very fairly well with her
villanelles and rondeaux, her triolets and sestines, her ballades and
chants royal.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
“Where she shows herself at her best is in the French forms of verse,
which exactly suit her talent.”--_Times._
_In preparation._
THE PRAISE OF ALE;
OR, SONGS, BALLADS, EPIGRAMS, AND ANECDOTES RELATING TO BEER, MALT, AND
HOPS.
Collected and arranged by W. T. MARCHANT.
CONTENTS:--Introduction.--History.--Cards and Wassail
Songs.--Church Ales and Observances.--Whitsun
Ales.--Political.--Harvest.--General.--Barley and Malt.--Hops.--Scotch
Songs.--Local and Dialect.--Trade Songs.--Oxford Songs.--Ale
Wives.--Brewers.--Drinking Clubs and Customs.--Royal and Noble
Drinkers.--Black Beer.--Drinking Vessels.--Warm Ale.--Facts, Scraps,
and Ana.
The volume will contain much curious and out-of-the-way information,
embracing a short sketch of the rise and progress of the art of
brewing in this country; an account of the laws relating to beer,
and the statutes against drunkenness; of the manners and customs of
“malt worms” and mug-house clubs; and the obsolete phraseology of
“toss-pots,” such as “super-nagulum,” “upsee-freeze,” “shoeing horns,”
and “carousing the hunter’s hoop.” The author will pay attention to the
drinking customs more or less connected with the Church--Whitsun Ales,
Bride Ales, Bride Bush, Bride Wain, and the like; the chants of the
wassail-bowl, of the Hock Cart, and the Sheepshearing and Harvest Home
rejoicings--
“Here’s a health to the Barley mow, brave boys,
Here’s a health to the Barley mow”--
and Brazenose songs in honour of the brew for which that college is
renowned. Then there are lyrics pertaining to particular sorts and
conditions of men, as the songs of the threshers and tinkers, sailors
and soldiers, and the clubs, which may be considered as forming a class
of themselves. This work will doubtless prove a valuable and pleasant
addition to the library of the student of history and lover of poetry.
_Printed on Whatman’s hand-made paper at the Chiswick Press, price 1s._
IMMODESTY IN ART.
An Expostulation and Suggestion in a Letter to Sir Frederick Leighton,
by FREDERICK GEORGE LEE, LL.D., F.S.A.
“With the general spirit and drift of Dr. Frederick George Lee’s
vigorous pamphlet we entirely and heartily concur. On certain
points of detail we may venture to differ from the author. Not all
representations of the nude are of necessity immodest: witness, for
example, the works of such an artist as Mr. G. F. Watts. Conversely,
there are scores of pictures (chiefly French) which, though they
do not come under the category of which we speak, are nevertheless
flagrantly immodest. We deem it unnecessary to discuss the matter
further, especially as we have already and more than once expressed
a very definite opinion upon it--in substantial agreement with Dr.
Lee--in the articles devoted to Art criticism. To that opinion we
intend to adhere, though in doing so we may stand alone in the public
press. As to Dr. Lee’s protest, it is, in our opinion, both timely
and serviceable.”--_John Bull._
_In 2 vols., cloth, price 6s._
THE CURATE’S WIFE.
A Novel by J. E. PANTON, author of “Sketches in Black and White,” “Less
than Kin,” &c.
“The author of ‘Less than Kin’ has produced in ‘The Curate’s Wife’ a
story as powerful and full of genuine human interest as has appeared
for some long time past. This tale of ‘country life’ is realistic in
the best sense of the word. Faithful as a photograph in all its minor
details, it shows clear insight into the character of both the sexes,
and under very varied conditions. The gradual transformation of the
heroine from a young girl, full of high purposes and enthusiasm,
into the hopeless drudge who in despair lays herself down to die, is
painted with an almost Zola-like fidelity. Her tyrant, the popular
curate, is also a powerful sketch. It is difficult not to think that
an expiation worked out in the scene of his misdeeds, with people
who pity while they blame him, is insufficient punishment for so
contemptible a cur. It would have been, doubtless, more satisfactory
had Meta conquered in the unequal contest between her well-meaning
inexperience and her husband’s brutal self-love, but in real life the
chances would be against her, and this clever novel is, above all, an
exact picture of certain phases of human nature as it is, and in this
lies its chief merit.”--_Morning Post._
_In crown 8vo., 2 vols., cloth, price 6s._
THE VALLEY OF SOREK.
By GERTRUDE M. GEORGE, with a Critical Introduction by RICHARD HERNE
SHEPHERD.
“There is in the book a high and pure moral and a distinct conception
of character.... The _dramatis personæ_ ... are in reality strongly
individual, and surprise one with their inconsistencies just as
real human beings do.... There is something powerful in the way
in which the reader is made to feel both the reality and the
untrustworthiness of his (the hero’s) religious fervour, and the
character of the atheist, Graham, is not less strongly and definitely
conceived.... It is a work that shows imagination and moral insight,
and we shall look with much anticipation for another from the same
hand.”--_Contemporary Review._
_Price 1s._
LOW DOWN.
Wayside Thoughts in Ballad and other Verse. By TWO TRAMPS.
“This is a collection of short pieces, most of which can fairly be
considered poetry--no slight merit, as verses run just now. Some of
the pieces are singularly pathetic and mournful; others, though in
serious guise, are permeated by quaint humour; and all of them are of
considerable merit. From the variety and excellence of the contents
of this bundle of poetical effusions, it is likely to attract a great
number of readers, and many passages in it are particularly suitable
for recitation.”--_Army and Navy Gazette_, Aug. 14, 1886.
“But ‘Low Down,’ as it is called, has the distinction of being
multi-coloured, each sheet of eight pages consisting of paper of a
special hue. To turn over the leaves is, in fact, to enjoy a sort of
kaleidoscopic effect, a glimpse of a literary rainbow. Moreover, to
complete the peculiarity of the thing, the various poems are printed,
apparently at haphazard, in large or small type, as the case may be.
There are those, perhaps, who would take such jokes too seriously,
and bring them solemnly to the bar of taste, there to be as solemnly
condemned. But that is scarcely the right spirit in which to regard
them. There is room in life for the quaint and curious as well as for
the neat and elegant.”--_Globe._
_2 vols., cloth, price 6s._
FIFINE:
A Novel. By ALFRED T. STORY.
“The account of the various families is most amusing. Soon after
Fifine’s arrival her husband reappears, and begins to persecute
her; but she is saved by a clever stratagem of the Professor’s, one
that we do not remember having previously come across in a novel.
It would not be fair to spoil the interest of this story by even
hinting how Fifine is relieved from her husband, and how all ends
happily. If the author will only change his style and be content
to use plain language, he bids fair to be successful in writing
novels.”--_Saturday Review._
“Exhibiting genuine ability.”--_Scotsman._
“Readers will be glad that the morally unpleasant portions of the
book are briefly narrated.”--_Scotsman._
_Twenty-four pages, wrapper, price 3d._
AN OMITTED INCIDENT IN THE “GREAT NAVAL WAR OF 1887.”
By Lieut.-Colonel W. HOPE, V.C.
“This witty, sarcastic, and drastic _brochure_ is just what might
have been expected from a brave, and of late persecuted, soldier.
It is feigned to be published in 1907; its origin is due to recent
contributions in the ‘St. James’s Gazette,’ and it is dedicated to
the Auxiliary Naval and Military Forces of the British Empire.... The
incident related by Colonel Hope is not without its lessons, and,
though at times bordering on the region of improbability, is very
well worth reading.”--_Western Daily Mercury._
_In large crown 8vo., handsomely printed in borders, with original
headpieces, on a special make of toned paper, and bound in best cloth,
the cover designed by_ MATTHEW BELL, _price 10s. 6d._
SEA SONG AND RIVER RHYME
FROM CHAUCER TO TENNYSON.
Selected and edited by ESTELLE DAVENPORT ADAMS. With a New Poem by
ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE. Illustrated with Twelve Original Etchings.
“The selections have been made with judgment and taste.”--_Glasgow
Herald._
“The book is on the whole one of the best of its kind ever
published.”--_Glasgow Herald._
“Its illustrations are really exquisite.”--_Glasgow Herald._
“The editor has made the selection with praiseworthy
judgment.”--_Morning Post._
“The value of the work is enhanced by a new poem from the pen of
Mr. Algernon Charles Swinburne which displays deep and heroic
feeling.”--_Morning Post._
“Twelve really exquisite and delicately executed etchings of sea and
river side accompany and complete this beautiful volume.”--_Morning
Post._
“A special anthology delightful in itself and possessing the added
graces of elegant printing and dainty illustrations.”--_Scotsman._
“An attractive volume.... Mr. Swinburne’s very spirited and patriotic
lay appropriately heads the collection, while in addition to this
new poem the editor has included some judicious selections from the
poet’s works.”--_Saturday Review._
“Mrs. Davenport Adams has evidently expended a prodigious amount of
labour in making the collection comparatively exhaustive.”--_Literary
World._
“The volume is got up in the handsomest style, and includes
a dozen etchings of sea and river scenes, some of which are
exquisite.”--_Literary World._
_Fourth edition, with engraved frontispiece, in crown 8vo., 5s._
COSMO DE’ MEDICI:
An Historical Tragedy. And other poems. By RICHARD HENGIST HORNE,
author of “Orion.”
“This tragedy is the work of a poet and not of a playwright. Many of
the scenes abound in vigour and tragic intensity. If the structure
of the drama challenges comparison with the masterpieces of the
Elizabethan stage, it is at least not unworthy of the models which
have inspired it.”--_Times._
_Demy 18mo., 200 pages, cloth, uncut, price 2s._
WELLERISMS
FROM “PICKWICK” AND “MASTER HUMPHREY’S CLOCK.”
Selected by CHARLES F. RIDEAL. Edited, with an Introduction, by CHARLES
KENT, author of “The Humour and Pathos of Charles Dickens.”
Among the Contents are:--
Sam Weller’s Introduction.--Old Weller at Doctor’s Commons.--Sam
on a Legal Case.--Self-acting Ink.--Out with It.--Sam’s old
White Hat.--Independent Voters.--Proud o’ the Title.--The Weller
Philosophy.--The Twopenny Rope.--Job Trotter’s Tears.--Sam’s Misgivings
as to Mr. Pickwick.--Clear the Way for the Wheelbarrow.--Unpacking the
Lunch Hamper.--Battledore and Shuttlecock.--A True Londoner.--Spoiling
the Beadle.--Old Weller’s Remedy for the Gout.--Sam on Cabs.--Poverty
and Oysters.--Old Weller on Pikes.--Sam’s Power of Suction.--Veller
and Gammon.--Sam as Master of the Ceremonies.--Sam before Mr.
Nupkins.--Sam’s Introduction to Mary and the Cook.--Something
behind the Door.--Sam and Master Bardell.--Good Wishes to Messrs.
Dodson and Fogg.--Sam and his Mother-in-law.--The Shepherd’s Water
Rates.--Stiggins as an Arithmetician.--Sam and the Fat Boy.--Compact
and Comfortable.--Apologue of the Fat Man’s Watch.--Medical
Students.--Sam Subpœnaed.--Disappearance of the “Sassage” Maker.--Sam
Weller’s Valentine.--Old Weller’s Plot.--Tea Drinking at Brick
Lane.--The Soldier’s Evidence Inadmissible.--Sam’s “Wision” Limited.--A
Friendly “Swarry.”--The Killebeate.--Sam and the Surly Groom.--Mr.
Pickwick’s Dark Lantern.--The Little Dirty-faced Man.--Old Weller
Inexorable.--Away with Melancholy.--Post Boys and Donkeys.--A
Vessel.--Old Weller’s Threat.--Sam’s Dismissal of the Fat Boy.--Is she
a “Widder”?--Bill Blinder’s Request.--The Watch-box Boy.
“Some write well, but he writes Weller.”--_Epigram on Dickens._
“Some of the best sayings of the immortal Sam and his sportive parent
are collected here. The book may be taken up for a few minutes with
the certainty of affording amusement, and it can be carried away in
the pocket.”--_Literary World._
“It was a very good idea ... the extracts are very humorous ... here
nothing is missed.”--_Glasgow Herald._
_One vol., crown 8vo., 400 pages, cloth, price 6s._
A REGULAR PICKLE:
HOW HE SOWED HIS WILD OATS.
By HENRY W. NESFIELD, author of “A Chequered Career.”
“Mr. Nesfield’s name as an author is established on such a pleasantly
sound foundation that it is a recognized fact that, in taking up a
book written by him, the reader is in for a delightful half-hour,
during which his risible and humorous faculties will be pleasantly
stimulated. The history of young Archibald Highton Tregauntly,
whose fortunes we follow from the cradle to when experience is just
beginning to teach him a few wholesome lessons, is as smart and brisk
as it is possible to be.”--_Whitehall Review._
“It will be matter for regret if the brisk and lively style of Mr.
Nesfield, who at times reminds us of Lever, should blind people
to the downright wickedness of such a perverted career as is here
described.”--_Daily Chronicle._
_In crown 8vo., price 6s._
LEICESTER: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
By FRANCIS W. L. ADAMS.
“Even M. Zola and Mr. George Moore would find it hard to beat Mr.
Adams’s description of Rosy’s death. The grimly minute narrative of
Leicester’s schoolboy troubles, and of his attempt to get a living
when he is discarded by his guardian, is, too, of such a character
as to make one regret that Mr. Adams had not put to better use his
undoubted, though undisciplined powers.”--_Academy._
“There is unquestionable power in ‘Leicester.’”--_Athenæum._
_In post 8vo., cloth, old style, price 5s._
EBENEZER JONES’S POEMS.
STUDIES OF SENSATION AND EVENT.
Poems by EBENEZER JONES. Edited, Prefaced, and Annotated by RICHARD
HERNE SHEPHERD. With Memorial Notices of the Author by SUMNER JONES and
W. J. LINTON. A new Edition. With Photographic Portrait of the Poet.
“This remarkable poet affords nearly the most striking instance of
neglected genius in our modern school of poetry. His poems are full
of vivid disorderly power.”--DANTE G. ROSSETTI.
_Small 4to., illustrated, cloth, price 5s._
FAMOUS FROSTS AND FROST FAIRS IN GREAT BRITAIN.
Chronicled from the Earliest to the Present Time. By WILLIAM ANDREWS,
F.R.Hist.S.
“It forms an interesting chronological record of the great frosts
and frost fairs that have taken place in Great Britain from the
year A.D. 134 to Christmas, 1886-7, and contains some curious and
out-of-the-way information on past customs.... There are some
quaint illustrations representing the old fairs; and also a good
index.”--_Hull Portfolio._
_In demy 8vo., wrapper, uncut, with extra portrait, price 5s._
“PHIZ”
(HABLOT KNIGHT BROWNE).
A Memoir; including a Selection from his Correspondence and Notes on
his Principal Works. By FRED. G. KITTON. With a Portrait and numerous
_Popular edition, crown 8vo., cloth, price 2s. 6d._
BURMA: AS IT WAS, AS IT IS, AND AS IT WILL BE.
By J. G. SCOTT (“Shway Yoe”).
“Before going to help to govern them, Mr. Scott has once more written
on the Burmese.... Mr. Scott claims to have covered the whole ground,
to show Burma as it was, is, and will be; and as there is nobody
competent to criticise him except himself, we shall not presume to
say how far he has succeeded. What, however, may be asserted with
absolute confidence is, that he has written a bright, readable, and
useful book.”--_Saturday Review_, March 27.
“Very lively and readable.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._
“The author knows what he writes about.”--_St. Stephen’s Review._
“There is a good deal of curious reading in the book.”--_Literary
World._
“The book is amusing and instructing, and Mr. George Redway, the
publisher, will have done the public and himself a service.”--_Court
Journal._
“The print is clear, and the binding in excellent
taste.”--_Bookseller._
“Evidently full of genuine information.”--_Society._
“A handy guide to Burma, as readable as it is accurate.”--_Globe._
“Mr. Scott should have called this volume ‘A Book for Members of
Parliament.’”--_London and China Telegraph._
“The sketch of Burmese cosmogony and mythology is very
interesting.”--_Nature._
“A competent historian. He sketches Burma and the Burmans with minute
fidelity.”--_Daily Chronicle._
“Probably no Englishman knows Burma better than Mr. J. G.
Scott.”--_Contemporary Review._
“An excellent description both of land and people.”--_Contemporary
Review._
“Most interesting.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
“Shway Yoe is a graphic writer ... no one can supply this information
better than Mr. Scott.”--_Asiatic Quarterly Review._
_Crown 8vo., picture cover, 1s._
DREAMS OF THE DERBY:
Together with many curious tips and omens for other Races, now first
collected and arranged for the printer. By FORTUNATUS.
CONTENTS:--About Sir Peter Teazle--Derby Dreams--Eleanor--Lapdog
and Cadland--Dangerous--Spaniel, winner of the Derby in
1831--Plenipotentiary--Flying Dutchman--Daniel O’Rourke--Caractacus:
Snewing’s Dream--A Hop-Merchant’s Dream--Dreams of
Caractacus--Ellington--A Story of £25,000--Pyrrhus the
First--Macaroni--Cremorne--Derby Sweeps--Dugdale’s Dream--Uncle
John’s Dream--A Club Steward’s Luck--Doncaster’s Derby--Another
of Fred Booth’s Stories--Bluegown--A Waif’s Tips--Blair
Athol--Bloomsbury’s Year--Sham Dreamers--Couronne de Fer--Lottie
Fowler--About Derby and other Tipsters--“Chanticleer’s”
Tip--Executor--Kisber--Miscellaneous--Poetic Prophets of
the Derby--The Oaks and St. Leger--Marie Stuart’s Oaks--St.
Leger--Caller Ou--Hawthornden--Craig Millar’s Year--Knight of St.
George--Achievement--Earlier Dreams and Omens--Dreams of Handicap and
other Race Winners--A Dream of Diophantus--The Fate of Dundee--Another
Dundee Story--See-Saw--Fanciful Backing--Prevision of an Accident--A
Conspiracy of 1843--Flash-in-the-Pan--One Act--Bob Smart’s Glenlivat
Dream--Inveresk--Julius--Tips for the Northumberland Plate--A Clever
Backer--The Chief’s Presentiment--Lowlander’s Victory at Ascot--Gubat.
_Fcap. 8vo., cloth, price 3s. 6d._
THE LOVE AFFAIR:
A DRAMA OF AN ANCIENT DEMOCRACY.
In five Acts, with six Tableaux. By W. W. ALDRED, author of “A Lost
Cause.”
“There are gleams of nature, of wit, of observation, and even of
verse, in ‘The Love Affair.’ The style is free from mere verbiage and
line padding; and it changes with freedom from the old and stately to
the modern and familiar.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._
_An édition de luxe, in demy 18mo, price 1s._
CONFESSIONS OF AN ENGLISH HACHISH EATER.
“There is a sort of bizarre attraction in this fantastic little book,
with its weird, unhealthy imaginations.”--_Whitehall Review._
“Imagination or some other faculty plays marvellous freaks in this
little book.”--_Lloyd’s Weekly._
“A weird little book.... The author seems to have been delighted with
his dreams, and ... carefully explains how hachish may be made from
the resin or the common hemp plant.”--_Daily Chronicle._
“To be added to the literature of what is, after all, a very
undesirable subject. Weak minds may generate a morbid curiosity if
stimulated in this direction.”--_Bradford Observer._
“The stories told by our author have a decidedly Oriental flavour,
and we would not be surprised if some foolish individuals
did endeavour to procure some of the drug, with a view to
experience the sensation described by the writer of this clever
brochure.”--_Edinburgh Courant._
_In crown 8vo., parchment, price 3s. 6d._
THE ANATOMY OF TOBACCO;
Or, Smoking Methodised, Divided, and Considered after a New Fashion. By
LEOLINUS SILURIENSIS.
“A very clever and amusing parody of the metaphysical treatises once
in fashion. Every smoker will be pleased with this volume.”--_Notes
and Queries._
“We have here a most excellent piece of fooling, evidently from
a University pen.... Contains some very clever burlesques of
classical modes of writing, and a delicious parody of scholastic
logic.”--_Literary World._
“A delightful mock essay on the exoteric philosophy of the pipe and
the pipe bowl ... reminding one alternately of ‘Melancholy’ Burton
and Herr Teufelsdröch, and implying vast reading and out-of-the-way
culture on the part of the author.”--_Bookseller._
_Edition limited to 250 copies, each numbered, price 5s._
A WORD FOR THE NAVY.
By ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE.
“Mr. Swinburne’s new patriotic song, ‘A Word for the Navy,’ is as
fiery in its denunciation of those he believes to be antagonistic to
the welfare of the country as was his lyric with which he startled
the readers of the _Times_ one morning.”--_Athenæum._
_The publisher of this poem is also the sole proprietor of the
copyright; it cannot therefore be included in Mr. Swinburne’s collected
works._
_Crown 8vo., cloth, price 3s. 6d._
LITERARY AND HISTORICAL EDITION OF POE’S RAVEN.
THE RAVEN.
By EDGAR ALLAN POE, with Historical and Literary Commentary by JOHN H.
INGRAM.
“This is an interesting monograph on Poe’s famous poem. First
comes the poet’s own account of the genesis of the poem, with a
criticism, in which Mr. Ingram declines, very properly, we think,
to accept the history as entirely genuine. Much curious information
is collected in this essay. Then follows the poem itself, with
the various readings, and then its after-history; and after these
‘Isadore,’ by Albert Pike, a composition which undoubtedly suggested
the idea of ‘The Raven’ to its author. Several translations are
given, two in French, one in prose, the other in rhymed verse;
besides extracts from others, two in German and one in Latin. But
perhaps the most interesting chapter in the book is that on the
‘Fabrications.’”--_Spectator._
“There is no more reliable authority on the subject of Edgar Allan
Poe than Mr. John H. Ingram.... The volume is well printed and
tastefully bound in spotless vellum, and will prove to be a work
of the greatest interest to all students of English and American
literature.”--_Publisher’s Circular._
_544 pages, crown 8vo., green cloth boards, price 7s. 6d._
DICKENSIANA.
A Bibliography of the Literature relating to CHARLES DICKENS and his
Writings, compiled by FRED. G. KITTON, author of “‘Phiz’ (Hablot K.
Browne), a Memoir,” and “John Leech, Artist and Humourist,” with a
portrait of “Boz,” from a drawing by SAMUEL LAURENCE.
“This book is honestly what it pretends to be, and nothing more.
It is a comprehensive catalogue of all the writings of Mr. Charles
Dickens, and of a good quantity of books written about him. It
also contains copious extracts from reviews of his works and from
sermons on his character. The criticisms are so various, and some
of them are so much at variance with others, that the reader of
them can complain of nothing less than a lack of material on which
to form his judgment, if he has not formed it already, on the claim
of Mr. Dickens to occupy a front place in the rank of English
classics. Assertions, if not arguments, are multiplied on either
side.”--_Saturday Review._
“Mr. Fred. G. Kitton ... has done his work with remarkable
thoroughness, and consequently with real success. It is a subject on
which I may fairly claim to speak, and I may say that all I know,
and a great deal I did not know, about Dickens is to be found in Mr.
Kitton’s work.”--“Atlas,” in the _World_.
“DICKENSIANA.”
“If with your Dickens-lore you’d make
Considerable headway,
The way to be well-read’s to take
This book brought out by REDWAY.
’Tis clear, exhaustive, and compact,
Both well arranged and written;
A mine of anecdote and fact,
Compiled by F. G. KITTON.”--_Punch._
_In preparation._
DICKENS AND THE STAGE.
By T. EDGAR PEMBERTON, author of “Dickens’s London.”
With new portraits of Mr. Irving as “Jingle,” Mr. Toole as “The Artful
Dodger,” and Miss Jennie Lee as “Jo.”
_Uniform with “Hints to Collectors,” price 6s._
THE BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SWINBURNE.
A Bibliographical List arranged in Chronological Order of the Published
Writings in Verse and Prose of ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE (1857-1887).
PREFACE TO THE NEW EDITION.
Born on April 5, 1837, in the year of Queen Victoria’s accession, of
which the whole nation is now celebrating the Jubilee, Algernon Charles
Swinburne to-day attains the jubilee or fiftieth year of his own
life, and may be therefore claimed as an essentially and exclusively
Victorian poet. Of the half-century of life now completed, more than
a quarter of a century has been devoted to fruitful and noble work
in song and to work hardly less fruitful and noble in the field of
criticism.
In issuing this new edition, revised throughout and brought down to
date, of a bibliographical record originally published nearly four
years ago, the compiler cannot deny himself the pleasure of associating
with the date the coincidence, not only of a double jubilee, but also
of a double birthday, viz., his own.
Long distant may the day be when this record, already so goodly an one,
can be made complete in a final sense, and collectors of the books of
our greatest Victorian poet and critic be able to echo Lord Melbourne’s
callous expression of grateful relief that they can bind him up!
As on former occasions, the compiler invites the co-operation of
literary correspondents, and will be grateful to anyone who will
correct an error or supply an omission.
_A few large-paper copies, with India proof portrait, in imperial 8vo.,
parchment-paper covers, price 7s. 6d._
AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS OF GEORGE CRUIKSHANK.
By “THETA” (WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY), with all the original woodcut
illustrations, a new portrait of CRUIKSHANK, etched by PAILTHORPE, and
a prefatory note on THACKERAY AS AN ART CRITIC, by W. E. CHURCH.
“Thackeray’s essay ‘On the Genius of George Cruikshank,’ reprinted
from the _Westminster Review_, is a piece of work well calculated to
drive a critic of these days to despair. How inimitable is its touch!
At once familiar and elegant, serious and humorous, enthusiastically
appreciative, and yet just and clear-sighted; but, above all, what
the French call _personnel_. It is not the impersonnel reviewer who
is going through his paces ... it is Thackeray talking to us as few
can talk--talking with apparent carelessness, even ramblingly, but
never losing the thread of his discourse or saying a word too much,
nor ever missing a point which may help to elucidate his subject
or enhance the charm of his essay.... Mr. W. E. Church’s prefatory
note on ‘Thackeray as an Art Critic’ is interesting and carefully
compiled.”--_Westminster Review._
“As the original copy of the _Westminster_ is now excessively
rare, this re-issue will, no doubt, be welcomed by
collectors.”--_Birmingham Daily Mail._
“The new portrait of Cruikshank by F. W. Pailthorpe is a clear, firm
etching.”--_The Artist._
_Printed on hand-made paper and bound in vellum, crown 8vo., price 6s._
HINTS TO COLLECTORS OF ORIGINAL EDITIONS OF THE WORKS OF
WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY.
By CHARLES PLUMPTRE JOHNSON.
“... A guide to those who are great admirers of Thackeray, and
are collecting first editions of his works. The dainty little
volume, bound in parchment and printed on hand-made paper, is very
concise and convenient in form; on each page is an exact copy of
the title-page of the work mentioned thereon, a collation of pages
and illustrations, useful hints on the differences in editions,
with other matters indispensable to collectors.... Altogether it
represents a large amount of labour and experience.”--_Spectator._
“... Mr. Johnson has evidently done his work with so much loving
care that we feel entire confidence in his statements. The prices
that he has affixed in every case form a valuable feature of
the volume, which has been produced in a manner worthy of its
subject-matter.”--_Academy._
“The list of works which Mr. Johnson supplies is likely to be of high
interest to Thackeray collectors. His preliminary remarks go beyond
this not very narrow circle, and have a value for all collectors of
modern works.”--_Notes and Queries._
“... It is choicely printed at the Chiswick Press; and the author,
Mr. Charles Plumptre Johnson, treats the subject with evident
knowledge and enthusiasm.... It is not a Thackeray Bibliography,
but a careful and minute description of the first issues, with
full collations and statement of the probable cost.... Mr. Johnson
addresses collectors, but is in addition a sincere admirer of the
greatest satirist of the century.”--_Book Lore._
_Printed on hand-made paper, and bound in vellum, crown 8vo., price 6s._
HINTS TO COLLECTORS OF ORIGINAL EDITIONS OF THE WORKS OF
CHARLES DICKENS.
By CHARLES PLUMPTRE JOHNSON.
“Enthusiastic admirers of Dickens are greatly beholden to Mr. C.
P. Johnson for his useful and interesting ‘Hints to Collectors of
Original Editions of the Works of Charles Dickens’ (Redway). The book
is a companion to the similar guide to collectors of Thackeray’s
first editions, is compiled with the like care, and produced with the
like finish and taste.”--_Saturday Review._
“This is a sister volume to the ‘Hints to Collectors of First
Editions of Thackeray,’ which we noticed a month or two ago.
The works of Dickens, with a few notable ‘Dickensiana,’ make up
fifty-eight numbers, ... and Mr. Johnson has further augmented the
present volume with a list of thirty-six plays founded on Dickens’s
works, and another list of twenty-three published portraits of
Dickens. As we are unable to detect any slips in his work, we must
content ourselves with thanking him for the correctness of his
annotations. It is unnecessary to repeat our praise of the elegant
_format_ of these books.”--_Academy._
_Only 100 copies printed, foolscap 8vo., printed on hand-made paper at
the Chiswick Press, and bound in parchment by Burn to form a companion
volume to “Tamerlane,” price 10s. 6d._
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST;
OR, A ROUGH OUTSIDE WITH A GENTLE HEART.
By CHARLES LAMB. Now first reprinted from the original edition of 1811,
with Preface and Notes by RICHARD HERNE SHEPHERD.
_Price 21s._
TAMERLANE,
And Other Poems. By EDGAR ALLAN POE.
First published at Boston in 1827, and now first republished from a
unique copy of the original edition, with a preface by RICHARD HERNE
SHEPHERD.
_100 copies printed. Two copies only remain._
_An édition de luxe in demy 18mo., price 1s._
JOHN LEECH, ARTIST AND HUMOURIST.
A Biographical Sketch by FRED. G. KITTON. New edition, revised. The
only published biography of JOHN LEECH.
“In the absence of a fuller biography we cordially welcome Mr.
Kitton’s interesting little sketch.”--_Notes and Queries._
“The multitudinous admirers of the famous artist will find
this touching monograph well worth careful reading and
preservation.”--_Daily Chronicle._
“The very model of what such a memoir should be.”--_Graphic._
_In large 8vo., uniform with the new “Standard” edition of Thackeray’s
Works, price 10s. 6d._
SULTAN STORK,
And other Stories and Sketches by WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY
(1829-44), now first collected, to which is added the Bibliography of
THACKERAY, revised and considerably enlarged.
The _Athenæum_ says:--“Admirers of Thackeray may be grateful for a
reprint of ‘Sultan Stork.’”
“The remains of Thackeray are now in the hands of the
resurrectionists. Writers in the _Athenæum_ have been gloating
over them, and Mr. George Redway, a London publisher of peculiar
and quaint literature, has issued a handsome volume of Thackerayan
fragments.”--_Glasgow Herald._
“Thackeray collectors, however, have only to be told that none of
the pieces now printed appear in the two volumes recently issued by
Messrs. Smith, Elder, and Co., in order to make them desire their
possession. They will also welcome the revision of the Bibliography,
since it now presents a complete list, arranged in chronological
order, of Thackeray’s published writings in prose and verse, and also
of his sketches and drawings.”--_Daily Chronicle._
“‘Sultan Stork’ ... which purports to be told by Scheherazade on the
thousand and second of the ‘Arabian Nights,’ is undoubtedly the work
of Mr. Thackeray, and is quite pretty and funny enough to have found
a place in his collected miscellanies. ‘Dickens in France’ is as good
in its way as Mr. Thackeray’s analysis of Alexander Dumas’ ‘Kean’
in the ‘Paris Sketch-Book.’... There are other slight sketches in
this volume which are evidently by Mr. Thackeray, and several of his
_obiter dicta_ in them are worth preserving.... We do not assume to
fix Mr. Thackeray’s rank or to appraise his merits as an art critic.
We only know that, in our opinion, few of his minor writings are so
pleasant to read as his shrewd and genial comments on modern painters
and paintings.”--_Saturday Review._
_In large crown 8vo., price 3s. 6d._
SITHRON, THE STAR STRICKEN.
Translated (_Ala bereket Allah_) from an ancient Arabic Manuscript, by
SALEM BEN UZÄIR, of Bassora.
“This very remarkable book, ‘Sithron,’ ... is a bold, pungent,
audacious satire upon the ancient religious belief of the Jews.... No
one can read the book without homage to the force, the tenderness,
and the never-failing skill of its writer.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
_Handsomely printed and tastefully bound, 436 pages, large crown 8vo.,
cloth extra, 7s. 6d._
ESSAYS IN THE STUDY OF FOLK-SONGS.
By the COUNTESS EVELYN MARTINENGO-CESARESCO.
“A pleasant volume on a pleasant topic.... The Countess, with her
sincere enthusiasm for what is simple, passionate, and sensuous in
folk-song, and with her lucid and unaffected style, well understands
the mode in which the educated collector should approach the shy
singers or story-tellers of Europe.... Her introduction is perhaps,
to the scientific student of popular culture, the best part of her
book.... Next to her introduction, perhaps her article on ‘Death in
Folk-Poetry’ is the most serviceable essay in the volume.... ‘Folk
Lullabies’ is perhaps the most pleasant of the remaining essays in
the admirable volume, a volume remarkable for knowledge, sympathy,
and good taste.”--Extracts from a page notice in the _Saturday
Review_, April 24, 1886.
“This is a very delightful book, full of information and thoughtful
suggestions. It deals principally with the Folk-songs of Southern
peoples, Venetian, Sicilian, Armenian, Provence, and Greek Songs
of Calabria, but there are several essays devoted to the general
characteristics of Folk-Poetry, such as the influence of Nature, the
Inspiration of Death, the idea of Fate, the numerous songs connected
with the rites of May, Folk-Lullabies, and Folk-Dirges. There is also
an interesting essay on what is called the White Paternoster, and
Children’s Rhyming Prayers. This is one of the most valuable, and
certainly one of the most interesting, books which have been written
on a subject which has of late years been exciting an ever-increasing
attention, and which involves many important problems connected with
the early history of the human race.”--_Standard._
“‘Folk-Songs,’ traditional popular ballads, are as tempting to me
as King Charles’s head to Mr. Dick. But interesting as the topic
of the origin and diffusion and literary merit of these poems may
be--poems much the same in all European countries--they are rather
caviare to the general. The Countess Martinengo-Cesaresco is, or
should be, a well-known authority among special students of this
branch of literature, to whom I heartily commend her ‘Essays in
the Study of Folk-Songs.’ The Countess is, perhaps, most familiar
with Southern _volksleider_, as of Greece, Italy, and Sicily. Her
book is a treasure-house of Folk-lore of various kinds, and the
matter is handled with much poetic appreciation and a good deal of
learning.”--_Daily News._
“A kind of popular introduction to the study of Folk-lore.”--_St.
James’s Gazette._
_About 500 pages, crown 8vo., cloth, price 10s. 6d._
THE HISTORY OF THE FORTY VEZIRS;
OR, THE STORY OF THE FORTY MORNS AND EVES.
Written in Turkish by SHEYKH-ZADA, and now done into English by E. J.
W. GIBB, M.R.A.S.
“The interest of this compilation is naturally not to be compared to
that aroused by the ever-fresh ‘Thousand and One Nights;’ but it has
had high reputation among particular admirers, and the gentleman to
whom we are indebted for this English version--apparently the most
complete in any language of Western Europe--merits the thanks of the
reading public for the work performed.”--_Athenæum._
“A delightful addition to the wealth of Oriental stories available to
English readers is ‘The History of the Forty Vezirs’ (Redway), done
into English by Mr. E. J. W. Gibb, from the Turkish of Sheykh-Zāda.
The collection comprises 112 stories. To the forty told by the
Lady and those of the forty Vezirs, Mr. Gibb has added four from
Belletête, twenty from a MS. in the India Office, six from Dr.
Behrnauer’s translation, and two from a MS. recently purchased by
Mr. Quaritch. The results of collation are admirably summarized in a
comparative table that analyzes the contents of the various texts.
In the preface Mr. Gibb deals with the bibliography of the French
and German versions, and indicates some of the more interesting
parallels suggested by those old stories in the ‘Gesta Romanorum,’
the ‘Decameron,’ the ‘Thousand and One Nights,’ the ‘Mabinogion,’
and other treasures of old-world fable. In short, Mr. Gibb has
considerately done everything to help the reader to an intelligent
appreciation of this charming book.”--_Saturday Review._
“In my opinion the version is definite and final. The style is light
and pleasant, with the absolutely necessary flavour of quaintness;
and the notes, though short and few, are sufficient and satisfactory.
Mr. Gibb does not write only _ad clerum_; and thus he has been
obliged to ‘leave in the obscurity of an Eastern language’ three
whole tales (pp. 353, 366, and 399), No. 2 being exceedingly witty
and fescennine. He has the good sense, when he supplants a broad
joke by a _banal_ English phrase, to subjoin in a note the original
Turkish (pp. 109, 140, 199, 215, and 382). Yet some of the _novelle_
are highly spiced enough: see the amorous princess in the Eleventh
Wazir’s story (pp. 381-3); and the truly Turkish and unspeakable
version of modest Æsop’s ‘Countryman and his Son.’ Of the less
Milesian I would especially commend the story of the Venus-star and
the magical angels, Harut and Marut (p. 167); the explanation of the
proverb, ‘Take counsel of the cap that is on thy head’ (p. 362),
and the Thirty-seventh Wazir’s tale, showing why ‘men have beaten
their wives since the days of Saint Adam’ (p. 349).”--Sir RICHARD F.
BURTON, in the _Academy_.
_Large post 8vo., cloth, uncut, price 7s. 6d._
THE BLOOD COVENANT:
A Primitive Rite and its Bearings on Scripture, by H. CLAY TRUMBULL,
D.D.
“An admirable study of a primitive belief and custom. One of the
utmost importance in considering the growth of civilization.”
“A profound interest will be aroused by the keenness and clearness
of vision, no less than by the wealth of learning, by means of
which he follows a line of research, tracing through this one rite
the cannibalism of savages to a religious impulse not essentially
different in its symbolical aspect from one of the most vital
principles of Christianity. In the details of the work will be found
much to attract the attention of the curious. Its fundamental and
essential value, however, is for the student of religions; and all
such will be grateful to Dr. Trumbull for this solid, instructive,
and enlightening work.”--_Scotsman._
_Demy 8vo., cloth, price 10s. 6d._
SERPENT-WORSHIP AND OTHER ESSAYS,
With a Chapter on Totemism, by C. STANILAND WAKE, Member of the
Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.
Contents:--Rivers of Life--Phallism in Ancient Religions--The Origin
of Serpent-Worship--The Adamites--The Descendants of Cain--Sacred
Prostitution--Marriage among Primitive Peoples--Marriage by
Capture--Development of the Family--The Social Position of Woman as
affected by “Civilisation”--Spiritism and Modern Spiritualism--Totems
and Totemism--Man and the Ape.
_In demy 8vo., choicely printed, cloth, or Japanese parchment, price
7s. 6d._
PRIMITIVE SYMBOLISM
As illustrated in Phallic Worship; or, The Reproductive Principle, by
the late HODDER M. WESTROPP. With an Introduction by MAJOR-GENERAL
FORLONG, author of “Rivers of Life.”
“This work is a _multum in parvo_ of the growth and spread of
Phallicism, as we commonly call the worship of nature or fertilizing
powers. I felt, when solicited to enlarge and illustrate it on the
sudden death of the lamented author, that it would be desecration
to touch so complete a compendium by one of the most competent and
soundest thinkers who have written on this world-wide faith. None
knew better or saw more clearly than Mr. Westropp that in this oldest
symbolism and worship lay the foundations of all the goodly systems
we call Religions.”--J. G. R. FORLONG.
“A well-selected repertory of facts illustrating this subject, which
should be read by all who are interested in the study of the growth
of religions.”--_Westminster Review._
_In crown 8vo., 676 pages, cloth, price 10s. 6d._
MYTHS, SCENES, AND WORTHIES OF SOMERSET.
By MRS. E. BOGER.
The author has somewhat departed from her original intention of making
a collection of the myths and legends of Somerset. Unwittingly fiction
glided into fact, and the story developed into history, and it was
found difficult, if not impossible, to define their respective limits.
For instance, though Arthur is an impalpable and shadowy personage,
while Alfred is a most real and substantial one, yet the mingling of
truth and fable in the story of each--as connected with Somerset--is
only one of degree; and even in later times, myth is so intertwined
with the lives of St. Dunstan, of Sir John de Courcy, of Roger Bacon,
&c., that, if one tries rudely to tear away the accretions of myth and
fable, a maimed and distorted picture is all that is left.
Among the legends of Saints are some of rare beauty, full of earnest
thought and quaint suggestiveness. It has been endeavoured to show
that, instead of being, as they are generally and conveniently
classed--with a charming simplicity--as the “lying inventions of the
monks,” they are in most cases but the loving exaggerations of a simple
age, to which every unexplained wonder was a miracle.
Some of the articles may be thought to be of undue length; but St.
Dunstan is a character so strangely misrepresented in most histories,
that the author was anxious to prove incontestably his claim to be one
of the worthiest of the worthies of Somerset; again, as to the unhappy
Duke of Monmouth, though the story of his rebellion is of necessity
taken chiefly from Macaulay, the story of his quasi-royal progress is
little known, and Macaulay studiously omits any palliating or softening
circumstance in the terrible record of the battle of Sedgmoor and the
Bloody Assize.
_In Preparation._
HOW TO TRACE A PEDIGREE;
OR, THE SCIENCE OF HERALDRY EXPLAINED.
By CHARLES WORTHY, Esq., late of the College of Arms.
Introductory.--Science of Heraldry, Coats of Arms, Varieties
of Arms, Partition Lines, Tinctures, Furs, Ordinaries, &c.,
&c.--Common Charges, Lions and other Beasts, Heraldic Monsters, &c.,
&c.--Miscellaneous Objects Alphabetically arranged.--Technical Terms
used in Heraldry.--The Rules of Blazon.--The Marshalling of Arms,
Hatchments, &c., &c.--Crests, Mottoes, Helmets, Mantlings, Supporters,
and Coronets.--The Rules of Precedence.--Peers, Baronets, Knights,
Esquires, Gentlemen.--Advice to Pedigree Hunters, How to Trace a
Pedigree, Parochial Registers, Public Documents, Probate Court, Fees,
&c., &c.--The College of Arms, Officers of Arms, Heraldic Records,
Heraldic Fees, Grants of Arms, Change of Name.--Liveries, with some
Remarks upon Cockades, and those who are entitled to use them.--General
Remarks, Drawing and Illuminating, Taxes in respect of Arms.
_Handsomely printed on antique paper, and tastefully bound, price 2s.
6d._
POPE JOAN
(THE FEMALE POPE).
A Historical Study. Translated from the Greek of Emmanuel Rhoïdis. With
Preface by CHARLES HASTINGS COLLETTE.
“When Dr. Döllinger wrote to the effect that ‘the subject of Pope
Joan has not yet lost interest,’ he said no more than the truth.
The probability is that the topic will always have its attractions
for the lovers of the curiosities of history. Mr. Baring-Gould has
declared that ‘the whole story of Pope Joan is fabulous, and rests
on not a single historical foundation;’ but others are not so firmly
convinced in the matter, and at all times there are those who are
anxious to investigate singular traditions.... Rhoïdis discusses
the topic with much learning and ingenuity, and Mr. Collette’s
introduction is full of information.”--_Globe._
“It is interesting enough, and is accompanied by curious
illustrations.”--_Notes and Queries._
_In crown 8vo., about 450 pages, with illustrations, and
historico-symbolical binding, price 7s. 6d._
THE REAL HISTORY OF THE ROSICRUCIANS.
Founded on their own Manifestoes, and on Facts and Documents collected
from the Writings of Initiated Members, by ARTHUR EDWARD WAITE, author
of “The Mysteries of Magic: a Digest of the Writings of Eliphas Levi.”
Influence of the Secret Societies.--Derivations of the name
Rosicrucian.--On the State of Mystical Philosophy in Germany at the
close of the Sixteenth Century.--The Prophecy of Paracelsus.--The
Fama Fraternitatis of the Meritorious Order of the Rosy Cross.--The
Confession of the Rosicrucian Fraternity.--The Chymical Marriage of
Christian Rosencreutz.--The Connection of the Rosicrucian Claims with
those of Alchemy and Magic.--On the Antiquity of the Rosicrucian
Fraternity.--Theories as to the Authorship of the Rosicrucian
Manifestoes.--Progress of Rosicrucianism in Germany.--Rosicrucian
Apologists: Michael Maier, Robert Fludd, Thomas Vaughan,
&c.--Rosicrucianism in France.--Connection between the Rosicrucians and
Freemasons.--Modern Rosicrucian Societies, &c., &c.
In the present work every important and available fact has been
carefully collected, and the manifestoes and other documents of the
Fraternity are republished in revised versions. The Rosicrucians as
represented by themselves are, therefore, offered to English readers
for the first time in the literature of the subject. The task has
been performed by a sympathetic but impartial writer, purged from the
bias of any particular theory, and above all uncontaminated by the
pretension to superior knowledge, which claimants have never been able
to substantiate.
_A few copies only remain of the following important work, by the
author of “The Rosicrucians.”_
PHALLICISM:
Its connection with the Rosicrucians and the Gnostics, and its
Foundation in Buddhism, by HARGRAVE JENNINGS, author of “The
Rosicrucians.”
“This book is written _ad clerum_, and appeals to the scholar only,
and not to the multitude. It is a masterly and exhaustive account
of that worship of the creative powers of nature which, under
various names, has prevailed among all the nations of antiquity and
of mediæval times, alike in Egypt and India, in Italy and Gaul,
among the Israelites of old, and among the primitive inhabitants
of Great Britain and Ireland ... a most valuable auxiliary to
all who care to pursue such a subject of inquiry, a subject for
which Mr. Jennings is the better fitted on account of his long and
intimate acquaintance with the Rosicrucians, their tenets, and their
practices.”--_Antiquarian Magazine and Bibliographer._
“Unpleasant as this subject is, we are quite prepared to agree
that in its scientific aspect, as a form of human worship, it has
considerable importance.... Mr. Jennings deals almost entirely
with the subjective part of his inquiry, and he has evidently
made a considerable amount of research into the literature of
early religions.... He has produced something which is, at
all events, worth the attention of the student of comparative
psychology.”--_Antiquary._
“This book ... is profoundly learned, and gives evidence on each page
of deep thought, intense powers of research, clear and unmistakable
reasoning, and thorough mastership of the subject. The appendix
also contains much very curious matter which will interest those
who desire to study the subject under all its different aspects and
bearings.”--_Reliquary._
_In small 4to., bound in cloth, price 3s. 6d._
THE DANCE OF DEATH
In Painting and in Print, by T. TINDALL WILDRIDGE. With Woodcuts.
“The origin of the Dance has been conjectured to have been one of the
religious mysteries, moralities, or dramatic exhibitions which at the
same time supplied a comedy and a homily. There certainly was an acted
processional dance in which the players one by one were snatched away;
Cervantes in ‘Don Quixote’ mentions it as the ‘Cortes of Death.’ ...
The earliest painting of the Dance of Death is said to be that at
Basil, though it is probable that many of which we have information
are as old. The German and Swiss bridges, so often, too, the site of
religious buildings, were decorated with the representation; an example
is upon the Pont des Moulins leading into Lucerne, where is a fine
Dance, restored within the last few years.” The blocks illustrating
this work are a series found in a northern printing office many years
ago. They seem to be of considerable age, and are somewhat close copies
of Holbein’s designs.
_Monthly, 1s. Volumes I. to XI., now ready, price 7s. 6d. each._
WALFORD’S ANTIQUARIAN MAGAZINE AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REVIEW.
Edited by G. W. REDWAY, F.R.Hist.S.
The following are the Contents of the first Four Numbers published
this year. ARTICLES:--Domesday Book.--Frostiana.--Some Kentish
Proverbs.--The Literature of Almanacks.--“Madcap Harry” and Sir
John Popham.--Tom Coryate and his Crudities.--Notes on John Wilkes
and Boswell’s Life of Johnson.--Rarities in the Locker-Lampson
Collection.--A Day with the late Mr. Edward Solly.--The Defence of
England in the 16th Century.--The Ordinary from Mr. Thomas Jenyns’
Booke of Armes.--A Forgotten Cromwellian Tomb.--Visitation of the
Monasteries in the reign of Henry VIII.--The Rosicrucians.--The
Seillière Library.--A Lost Work.--Sir Bevis of Hampton.--More Kentish
Proverbs.--Cromwell and the Saddle Letter of Charles I.--Recent
Discoveries at Rome.--Folk-Lore of British Birds.--An Old Political
Broadside.--Notes for Coin Collectors.--Higham Priory.--Byways of
Periodical Literature.--How to Trace a Pedigree.--The Curiosities
of Ale.--The Books and Bookmen of Reading.--The Language of the
Law.--Words, Idioms, &c., of the Vulgar.--Notes on Old Chelsea.--The
Romans in Cumbria.
COLLECTANEA.--Early Italian Prints.--Tercentenary of the
Potato.--Chaucer Discovery.--Sir John Soane’s Museum.--Copyright in
Government Publications.--Pausanias.--The Loan of Manuscripts.--Paper
Making in 1588.--Portraits of Charles Dickens.--Hopton Castle.--A
very Ancient Watch.--The Value of Antiquarian Study.--Curious
Forestry Privilege.--A “Factory.”--Thimbles Old and New.--Mrs.
Glasse’s Cookery Book.--A Bucks Estate.--Chalfont St. Giles.--Greek
Coins.--Shakespearian Literature.--Geography in the Sixteenth
Century.--Welsh Place Names.--Japanese Art.--Duelling in
1760.--Shelleyana.--English Archers.--Oriental Porcelain.--South
Italian Folk-Lore.--Serpent-Lore.--Modern Witches.--The Domesday
Plough.--A Bishop of the Olden Time.--Historical Treasures in
the Upsala Cathedral.--The Witches Ladder.--Old Prayer-Book.--A
Relic of James II.--Pontefract and Ripon.--Old Shoes.--Love
Charms.--County Families.--A Roman Fire Brigade.--Parish
Registers.--Border Raiding.--Peasant Proprietors.--Queen
Mary’s Tree.--The Turks and Persians as Book-lovers.--Epitaph
of John Ruskin’s Parents.--Quakers.--“Yankee” and the “Stars
and Stripes.”--Gipsies.--The Royal Academy.--Chigwell Church,
Essex.--Printers’ Errors.--A Village Club.--An Historical Fishery.--A
Survival.--A Cock Match.--Early Publishing.--Pancakes at Westminster
School.--The Archbishop’s Palace at Croydon.--The Art of the Saracens
in Egypt.--The Early Custody of Domesday Book.
CORRESPONDENCE.--The late Bishop Hannington’s Ancestry.--A Reader
of Curious Books.--Throwing the Dart in Cork Harbour.--The De la
Poles.--The Family of John Hampden.--The “Olla Podrida” and T.
Monro.--Life of Bertram Montfichet.--Magdalen College, Oxford.--Book
Bound in a Murderer’s Skin.--A Forgotten Society.--Latin Verses by Dr.
Johnson.--“Merchet” and the “Jus Primæ Noctis.”--Hanna, Hanet, and
Wallace.--Another Book Bound in a Murderer’s Skin.--Humorous Portrait
of Charles Dickens.--Beating Boys at Parish Boundaries.--Destruction of
National Antiquities.
REVIEWS.--OBITUARY MEMOIRS.--MEETINGS OF LEARNED SOCIETIES.--NEWS AND
NOTES.
_Published periodically, four numbers out, 1s. each._
JOURNAL OF THE BACON SOCIETY.
Contents:--Bacon as Viewed by his Biographers--Mr. Donnelly’s
Shakespeare Cipher--Did Francis Bacon write Shakespeare?--Hamlet’s Note
Book--Shakespeare the Lawyer; Bacon the Poet--Bacon and Shakespeare
on the Solace derived from Contemplation--What Lawyers say about the
Law in Shakespeare--Shakespeare the Lawyer; Bacon the Poet, Part
II.--Higgins on the Bacon-Shakespeare Controversy--Parallelism--Mr.
Donnelly and the Alleged Cipher--England’s Helicon.
_Monthly. Annual Subscription, 5s._
THE EAST ANGLIAN;
OR, NOTES AND QUERIES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH THE COUNTIES OF
SUFFOLK, CAMBRIDGE, ESSEX, AND NORFOLK.
Edited by C. H. EVELYN WHITE, F.S.A.
_Monthly. Annual Subscription, 8s._
THE WESTERN ANTIQUARY;
OR, NOTEBOOK FOR DEVON, CORNWALL, AND SOMERSET.
Containing Original Articles, Notes, Queries, and Replies. Illustrated.
Edited by W. H. K. WRIGHT, F.R.H.S.
_Elegantly printed on Dutch paper, and bound in parchment-paper cover,
price 1s._
THE SCOPE AND CHARM OF ANTIQUARIAN STUDY.
By JOHN BATTY, F.R.Hist.S.
“It forms a useful and entertaining guide to a beginner in historical
researches.”--_Notes and Queries._
“The author has laid it before the public in a most inviting,
intelligent, and intelligible form, and offers every incentive to
the study in every department, including Ancient Records, Manorial
Court-Rolls, Heraldry, Painted Glass, Mural Paintings, Pottery,
Church Bells, Numismatics, Folk-Lore, &c., to each of which the
attention of the student is directed. The pamphlet is printed on a
beautiful modern antique paper, appropriate to the subject of the
work.”--_Brighton Examiner._
“Mr. Batty, who is one of those folks Mr. Dobson styles ‘gleaners
after time,’ has clearly and concisely summed up, in the space of
a few pages, all the various objects which may legitimately be
considered to come within the scope of antiquarian study.”--_Academy._
_In preparation, 2 vols., 8vo._
THE WHITE KING;
OR, ENGLAND AND ENGLISHMEN IN THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.
By W. H. DAVENPORT ADAMS.
This work opens with a sketch of Charles’s life, and goes on to deal
with the leading statesmen, courtiers, authors, artists, &c. The
worthies of Charles’s reign--apart from the Civil War, which is not
dealt with--are, to many readers, unfamiliar, and it has been the aim
of the author to throw light on these more obscure characters and
aspects of the earlier portion of the seventeenth century.
_In preparation, price 1s._
THE SHAKESPEARE CLASSICAL DICTIONARY;
Or, Mythological Allusions in the Plays of Shakespeare explained, for
the Use of Schools and Shakespeare Reading-Societies. By H. M. SELBY.
[Illustration]
CHISWICK PRESS:--C. WHITTINGHAM AND CO., TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
1. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
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A catalogue of remarkable books published by Mr. George Redway (1887)
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- Title
- A catalogue of remarkable books published by Mr. George Redway (1887)
- Author(s)
- George Redway (Firm)
- Language
- English
- Type
- Text
- Release Date
- February 12, 2023
- Word Count
- 17,753 words
- Library of Congress Classification
- Z
- Bookshelves
- Browsing: Encyclopedias/Dictionaries/Reference, Browsing: Other
- Rights
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