mmmmmmymtmrvmiizz' - £■ yggnttammtmmmmmmutemmmmmm mmmnmmmw'mv^v' a J JntM MfJSi r ME ■HBH mwmsmmm&mm ■ •■■- • ft 0*2.8-/ H UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES /I 37 SMTE NORMAL SCUOfll Los Aitgetes, Cai THE BEST BEADING- HINTS ON THE SELECTION OF BOOKS; ON THE FORMATION OF LIBRARIES, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE; ON COURSES OF READING, ETC. WITH A CLASSIFIED BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR EASY REFERENCE Fourth Revised and Enlarged Edition, continued to August, 1876, with the addition of Select Lists of the best French, German, Spanish and Italian Literature EDITED BY FREDERIC BEECHER PERKINS U ?7 NEW YORK G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 27 and 29 West 23D Street 1887 Copyist. O. P. PUTNAM'S SONS. 1R77. Pre** of G. P. Putnam'* Sons New York o CONTENTS. Preface ... 8 Classified List of English and American Publications 1 -277 Complete Works, English and American 278-281 Periodicals, English and American 282-283 French Literature, Selected List. 284-287 German " " " 288-291 Spanish " " u 292-295 Italian " " " 296-298 Juvenile Books, American and English 299-303 PART SECOND. Readings on Eeading 305-318 Suggestions for Courses of Reading 319-335 On Owning Books 335-340 Hints on Book Cluba 840-343 448877 PREFACE. <■> ^ The reviser of the present edition of "The Best Reading" had more or less to do with the plan and details of its first edition in 1872; and he regrets that his accomplished and excellent friend, Mr. George P. Putnam, is not still living, as he would assuredly be competent to improve this edition as much as he did that. The unusual success of the work, however, including the weighty testimony of at least one imitation which was remarkably close in point of arrangement and typography, has proved its practical usefulness. The object of this list is to guide libraries and private purchasers in buying books. For this purpose it names the best books usually now in the market, in the chief departments and on the leading topics A of current and general literature, with their editions and retail prices. fNy This description of course excludes rare books and, as a rule, those that are out of print, as well as most of those of great cost. The fol- lowing classes of books, with the exception of a few leading works of a general character, are also excluded by this plan : 1. Polemic the- ology; 2. Lawbooks; 3. Sunday-school books ; 4. Technical works in sciences, arts and trades ; 5. School and similar text-books; 6. Many insignificant novels. It has also been intended to exclude what Mr. James Russell Lowell classifies as "Literature suited to desolate islands." In preparing this list as it stands, various worthy objects have been contemplated with desire and refrained from with self-denial. The bibliographer will appreciate the unsatisfied wish to include rare books, first editions, publications of printing clubs, privately printed works, etc., and to specify and describe in detail. The scholar will understand the distinct temptation to fill out under each topic a selec- VI Preface. tion of authorities, whether purchasable or not, in the order of their importance, with brief specifications of the scope and merit of each, so as to furnish 525 courses of reading, instead of 525 (or thereabouts) topics with a few authorities under each. The scientific classification- ist will miss the only philosophical system, viz., his own. It would be odd if he did not; for system, in that worthy gentleman's sense, has been diligently avoided. The sole rule followed has been to make it easy to find a book. As to extent, a fully appointed library for theology alone must con- tain at least thirty thousand volumes; five hundred would by no means constitute a complete collection on chess ; (Oettinger's Bibliothek des Schachspiels enumerated in 1844, over thirty years ago, more than that number of works and editions, among them 44 of Vida's poem alone), and two million titles would not include nearly all that have been printed. To make out full courses of reading would have re- quired an impracticable mass of labor. Even to insert single-line valuations or descriptions of each book would have doubled the size and cost, and more than doubled the labor, of the list. Thus, instead of instructing professed collectors, or critically estimating authorities, or recording all the books there are, all that has been attempted is, to name the price of the principal good books that can be got. This, it is believed, has been in some measure accomplished. It is almost unnecessary, were it not for the satisfaction of discount- ing a certain possible sort of criticism, to observe that no two persons would make out alike either such a list of topics or the books named under them. To point out, therefore, that too few books or topics are mentioned in this list, and also too many; that some are named in it, and that others are not, is simply to say that the arrangement made is not another arrangement that has not been made; that the critic did not do the work; that an elephant is not a brick; that opinions differ; and perhaps, after the manner of Goldsmith's art critic, that *the picture would have been better if the painter had taken more pains." All these assertions, even the last, are however granted. Nobody can know the deficiencies of such a piece of work half as well as they who do it ; but imperfect as it is, it is confidently believed that this list is a safe one to purchase books by; and that, while a library containing all the books named in it would indeed not be com- plete in any one general or special department, it would nevertheless I"* an uncommonly comprehensive, instructive and readable collec- tion, either for a citizen or for a town. No radical changes have been made in the present edition, for expe» Prefaoe. vii rience has indicated that the plan of the work was a good one. Many titles of suitable books previously admitted, and of others subse- quently published down to August, 1876, have been added in their proper plaoes. A certain number of others have been dropped, most'y because they were judged not of permanent value. The three alphabets of topics of the last edition have been thrown into one, and the sub-alphabeting has been revised. The nomenclature of topics has bem somewhat cleared, and a liberal number of cross-references added, so that the present alphabet of subjects is believed to be lucid in arrangement and easy of reference. Under a few heads the classi- fication shows separately the works on two sides of a question, and similar hdications have been given in a few titles of works elsewhere; but if th* arrangement shows what the reviser's belief is on those subjects, )r any other, it is a failure. Short lists have been added of French, German, Spanish and Italian books, with the intention of pointing cut cheap editions of such standard writers, and such easy and amusing introductory books as can probably be procured at any time, and is are most likely to be useful to students. And the list has been read over with the view of correcting any other errors or omissions. With a lew exceptions, titles of books are entered but once. In the list of " Complete Works," however, and in that of " Libraries," and simihv collections, the titles of course cover many works which appear elsewhere under a topic. Thus, Burke on the Sublime, which is under "^Esthetics," and Milton's Paradise Lost, which is under * l Poetry," are included under their names in " Complete Works," and the lite is true of the individual books in the " Golden Treasury Series, the " Library of Wonders," etc. The topics chosen have usually been as specific as was practicable, because these are most likely to be looked for, and therefore to save most labor. Thus, one who wants books about the horse, will find them under " Horse," and is not expected to reason about Domestic Animals, 01 Mammalia, or Zoology, or Natural History. If he wants a book on Chemistry he need not search under " Natural Science." If he wants one on Abyssinia, he need not search Africa; and so on. The cross-riferences will, it is believed, prevent any perplexity from exceptions to this rule. The task of indicating in any adequate manner " the best books " on any one subject is obviously a delicate and difficult one. In some departments we do not attempt it at all. But in others, for the conve- nience of rurchasers, and without any purpose of critical judgment, Tiii Preface. beyond what is supposed generally established, a certain number »t books have been marked which are supposed to be on the whole the best of those named on the subject. Thus : a means that the book so marked is considered the book, or as good as any, at a moderate tost , b means in like manner, the best of the more elaborate or costly books on the subject. In the department of Fiction a more precise cUssifi- cation has been attempted, in which a general idea of the relative importance of the authors is indicated by the use of the lettffs a, b and c, and of the relative value of their several works by the aster- isks * and **. A fuller explanation of the classification of Fiction will be found under the heading itself. The Editions quoted are by preference American, where there are such; but English ones are given when there is any reason for it. The Prices given are the " long " or full retail prices for copies bound in cloth. Lower prices for copies in paper are sometimes added. The additional net cost of good library " half binding" (for vhich mo- rocco or " goat " is decidedly the best), is for duodecimos from 75 cents to $2 per volume: for octavos, from $1.50 to $3.50 per volume. Li- braries and other buyers can, where purchasing in quantit.es, usually be supplied at a considerable reduction from the catalogue prices here quoted, and such a reduction is offered by the publishers of this work. American currency is most commonly given, but where only an English price is found, it may appear in sterling. These sterling prices may be estimated in federal money at present, including all expenses, at 50 cents to a shilling. Incorporated institutions are how- ever entitled to deduct the duty from this rate ; and no duty is charged on imported books printed twenty years ago or mjre. The prices of books change so much from year to year, that it is impossible to guarantee that works can always be obtaiied for the sums quoted. Occasionally a book will be out of print and cannot for the time be obtained at all. In most cases, however, vhere prices have changed they have lowered; many books reported " o. p." by the publishers can with a little care be picked up at the list prices oi less: and an estimate of the cost of a dozen or a hundred or a thousand volumes at M TnK Best Reading " prices, will be found pretty nearly correct. This tabular record of books now in the market is supplemented bj a brief selection from the wise words of good men, on ;he genera) subject of books, libraries, and systematic reading, which are bettei worthy of consideration than any suggestions of our cwn could be. Abbreviations. The sizes of books are usually indicated thus: 4° or Quarto. — The sheet folded in 4 leaves. 8°, Octavo, cr. 8°, Crown Octavo. } Sheet folded in & R. 8°, or imp. 8°, large size Octavo. £ or 16 leaves. 12°, Duodecimo. — Sheet folded in 12 or 24 leaves. 18°, Octodecimo. — Sheet folded into 18 or 36 leaves. 24°, and 32°.— Sheet folded into 24 and 32 leaves. ABBREVIATIONS. Alb. — Albany. Bohn — Bohn's Libraries (pub- lished in London. Bost. — Boston. Camb. — Cambridge. Chic. — Chicago. Cin. or Cine. — Cincinnati. Ed.— Edited. Edin. — Edinburgh. Glasg. — Glasgow. 111., or Illus. — Illustrated. L., or Lond. — London. L. & N. — London and New York. L. & B. — London and Boston. L. & P. — London and Philadel- phia. [The three preceding lines indicate hooks usually printed in London, and imported in quantities and issued by publishers in New York, Boston ob Philadelphia, usually with their im- print.] Trans. — Translated. Vol., or v. — Volume. Wash. — Washington. EXPLANATION OF THB MARKS OF RATING USED FOR BOOKS AND AUTHORS. For the convenience of book buyers and readers, the editors Lave attempted to indicate by the use of certain rating marks their opinion of the relative value or importance of the several works named under one subject heading. Any such expression of opinion must appear more or less arbitrary, and probably no two persons could be found to agree in the rating of a moderately long list of books. It is hoped, however, that these marks may prove of some service, if only as suggestions, and may help to save time and to facilitate selections. a means that the book so marked is considered, on the whole, the best work, or as good as any on tbe subject, at a moderate eost ; b means, in like manner, the best of the more elaborate or costly books on the sub- ject. Where there is no marked difference in the cost of the books named, a means the book that is recommended as the most desirable. In the department of Fiction a more precise classification has been attempted, in which a general idea of the relative importance of the authors is indicated by the use of a, b, and e, and of the relative value of the several works by the asterisks * and **. A fuller explanation of the classification of fiction will be found under the heading itself. THE BEST READING: CLASSIFIED LIST MODERN PUBLICATIONS, ENGLISH AND AMERICAN, NOW SUPPOSED TO BE IN THE MARKET. Not meant to include technical works on Law, Medicine, Controversial Theology. Exclusive also, of most of the School Text Books, Sunday School Books, Popular Religious Books, unimportant Works of Fiction, and merely temporary or occasional publications. Abyssinia. b. Baker. Nile Tributaries of Abyssinia. Hotten. Abyssinia and its People. Hutchinson. Ten Years among Ethiopians. Lepsius. Letters from Ethiopia. Markham. Abyssinian Expedition (of 1569). Parkyns. Life in Abyssinia. Plowden. Travels in Abyssinia. a. Russell. Nubia and Abyssinia. Accidents. First Help in Accidents and Sickness. a. Hope. Till the Doctor Comes. b. Howe. Emergencies and How to Treat them. Plain Directions for Accidents, &c. Smee. A. and Emergencies. Ed. by Trail. What to do in case of Accidents. Acoustics. Bartlett. Acoustics and Optics. Davis. A. Light and Heat. (Adv. Sci. Ser.) Lees. A. Lig.it and Heat. (Elem. Sci. Ser.) Macdonald. Sound and Color. a. Radau. Wonders of A. (Libr. of Wonders). Saeltzer. Treatise on Acoustics, etc. b. Tvndall. On Sound. 8° N. Y. §2 50 12° Loud. 7s Qd 8° Lond. 14s 12° Lond. 2 25 8° Lond. 14s 12° Lond. 3 75 8° Lond. 18s 18° N. Y. 75 12° Bost. 1 50 12° N. Y. 75 8° N. Y. 3 00 12° Phil. 1 00 12° N. Y. 25 12° N. y! 50 8° N. Y. 3 50 12° N. Y. 1 50 16° N. Y. 75 8° Lond. BsGd 12° N. Y. 1 50 12° N. Y. 2 00 12° N. Y. 2 00 Actors. — Africa. 12° N. Y. $ 45 12° Lond. 17s Qd 8° Lond. 12 00 12° Bost. 63 iptorecks. 18° N. Y. 75 8° Lond. 12s 12° Lond. 5s 8° Lond. 5s 12° Lond. 5s Actors, Acting. See Criticism ; Drama ; also under Biography. Addresses. See Orations. Adulteration of Food, etc. Cotter. Adulteration of Liquors. b. Hassall. Adulteration Detected. Food and its Adulteration. Hoskins. What we Eat: Common A. Adventures and Perils. See also Buccaneers ; Shiptorecks Barrow. Mutiny of the Bounty. Belcher, Lady. Mutiny of the Bounty. Bernard. \\ onderful Escapes. Bruce. Book of Adventures and Perils. Herbert. . Great Historical Mutinies. Aeronautics. See Ballooning. ./Esthetics. See also Criticism ; Fine Arts. Alison. On Taste. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Bell. Expression: its Anatomy and Philosophy. 12° N. Y. 1 25 Burke. Sublime and Beautiful. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Day. Principles of ^Esthetics. 12° X. Y. 1 25 Hay. Science of Beauty. 8° Edin. 10s Qd Hopkins. Strength and Beauty. 12° N. T. 1 75 Longinus. The Sublime. Tr. by Giles. 18° Lond. 2s Qd Moffat. Introd. to Study of ^Esthetics. 12° Cine. 1 25 Ruskin. True and Beautiful. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Schiller. J2sthetical Essays and Letters 12° Bonn 1 40 Affghanistan, etc. Burnes. Residence in Cabul, 1842. 8° Lond. 18s Elphinstone. Kingdom of Cabul. 2 vols. 1819. 8° Lond. 28s Honigberger. 35 Years in the East. 2 vols. 8° Lond. 30s Sale, Lady. Disasters in Affghanistan. 1843. 8° Lond. 2s Qd Africa. A ncieni History, see History, Ancient. See also name of each country. 1. Travels, etc., Generally. Grant. Walk across Africa. Hunting Scenes in the Wilds of Africa. Kingston. African Travel. Park to Stanley. Miriam. Home Life in Africa. Murray. Discovery and Adventure in A. Read*. African Sketch Book. 2 vols. Stanley. Coomassie and Magdala. 2 8° Lond. 12° Phil. 8° Lond. 15s 1 75 7s6rf 12° Lond. Lond. 8° N. Y. 5s 24s 3 50 Africa. 2. Central and Eastern. a. Baker. Albert N'Yauza. b. Ismailia. b. Barth. Travels in N. and C. Africa. 3 vols. a. Same. Abridged. «. Burton. Lake Regions of Central Africa. b. Du Chaillu. Explorations in Equat'l. Af. b. Journey to Ashango Land. Krapf . Travels in East Africa. Livingstone. Last Journals. Same. Cheap Edition. New. Wanderings and Labors in Eastern A. a. Park. Travels and Life. Petherick. Central Africa. b. Schweinfurth. Heart of Africa. 2 v. b. Speke and Grant. Source of the Nile. Stanley. How I found Livingstone. Taylor. Central Africa. Thomas. Eleven Years in Central Africa. 3. North. Cooke. Conquest and Civilization in North A. Ditson. Crescent and French Crusades. Hodgkin. Journey to Morocco. Naphegyi. Ghardaia; 90 Days in the Sahara. Richardson. Travels in the Sahara. 2 v. a. Russell. History of Barbary States. St. John. Adventures in Libyan Desert. Tristram. The Great Sahara. 2 vols. 4. South. Alexander. Exp'n into So. Africa. 2 vols. a. Andersson. Lake Ngami. a. Notes of Travel in Africa. Okavango River. South West Africa. Baldwin. South African Hunting. Boyle. To the Cape for Diamonds. p Chapman. Travels in South Africa. 2 v. Gumming. Five Years of Hunter Life in S. A Diamond Fields of South Africa. b. Livingstone. Missionary Travels in S. b. Expedition to Zambesi. 2 vols A. South Africa : Popular Ed. Moffatt. Missionary Adventures in S. A. Pringle. South Africa. Tavlor. Travels in South Africa. Wilmot & Chase. Hist, of Cape Colony. 12° Phil. $2 60 8° N. Y. 5 00 8° N. Y. 12 00 12° Phil. 175 8° N. Y. 3 50 8° N. Y. 5 00 8° N. Y. 5 00 8° Lond. 21* 8° N. Y. 5 00 8°N. Y. 2 50 8° Lond. 10s Qd 18° N. Y. 75 8° Lond. 16s 8° N. Y. 8 00 8° N. Y. 4 00 8° N. Y. 3 50 12° N. Y. 150 8° Lond. 7s Qd 12° Edin. 5s 12° N. Y. 2 50 8° Lond. 21s 12° N. Y. 175 8° Lond. 30s 18° N. Y. 75 12° Lond 2s 8° Lond. 15s 8° Lond. 21s 8° N. Y. 175 12° N. Y. 2 00 8° N. Y. 3 25 12° Phil. 175 8° N. Y. 150 . 8° Lond. 14s 8° Lond. 32s '. 8° N. Y. 3 00 N. Y. 1 50 8° N. Y. 4 50 8° N. Y. 5 00 12° Phil. 175 8° Lond. 12s 8° Lond. 2s M 12° N. Y. 1 50 8° Lond. 15s Africa. — Agriculture. 5. West. Allen. Expedition to the Niger, 2 vols. 8° Lond. 32s Burton. Abeokuta and the Cameroons, 2 v. 8° Lond. 25s Two Trips to Gorilla Land, 2 vols. 8° Lond. Forbes. Missions to Dahomey, 2 vols. 8° Lond. 21s a. Lander. Travels in Africa, 2 vols. 18° N. Y. $1 50 Monteiro. Angola and R. Congo, 2 vols. 12° Lond. 21s Poole. Sierre Leone and the Gambia, 2 vols. 8° Lond. 21s b. Reade. Savage Africa. 8° N. Y. 4 00 Valdez. Six Years in Western Africa. 8° Lond. 5 00 a. Wilson. Western Africa. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Agricultural Chemistry. Boussingault. Rural Economy. 8° N. Y. 1 60 Caldwell. Agricultural Chemical Analysis. 12° N. Y. 2 00 6. Johnson. How Crops Grow. 12° N. Y. 2 00 b. How Crops Feed. 12° N. Y. 2 00 a. Johnston. Agricultural Chemistry. 12° N. Y. 1 75 a. Elements of Agricultural C, etc. 12° N. Y. 1 50 o. Liebig. Agricultural Chemistry. 12° N. Y. 1 00 Natural Laws of Husbandry. 12° N. Y. 1 50 a. Norton. Scientific Agriculture. 12° N. Y. 75 Agriculture. — See also Botany ; Gardening ; Domestic A nimals ; Drain- ing ; Fruity Poultry; and names of Crops, Animals, etc. a. Allen. New American Farm Book. 12° N. Y. 2 50 Buell. Fanner's Companion. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Farmer's Instructor, 2 vols. 18° N. Y. 1 50 Clift. Tim Bunker Papers. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Copeland. A., Anc. and Mod., 3 vols. R. 8° Lond. 28s b. Copeland. Country Life. Illus. 8° Bost. 5 00 Darlington. American Weeds and Useful Plants. 12° N. Y. 1 75 Emerson. Manual of Agriculture. 12° Bost. 1 25 Enfield. On Indian Corn. 12° N. Y. 1 00 a. Farming for Boys. 12° Bost. 1 50 Flint. Grasses and Forage Plants. 8° Bost. 2 50 Gaylord & Tucker. Husbandry, 2 vols. 18° N. Y. 1 50 Grant. On Beet Root Su^ar. ' 12° Bost. 1 25 Greeley. What I Know about Farming. 12° N. Y. 1 50 b. Johnson. Farmers' and Planters' Cyclopedia. R. 8° Phil. 6 00 b. Loudon. Cyclop, of Agriculture. 8° Lond. 12 00 Mitchell. My Farm at Edge wood. 12° N. Y. 1 25 a. Rural Studies. 12° N. Y. 1 75 a. Our Farm of Four Acres. 16° N. Y. 60 Stephens. Book of the Farm, 2 vols. R. 8° Lond. 60s Wanklyn. Milk Analysis. 12° N. Y. 1 00 a. Waring. Elements of Agriculture. 12° N. Y. 1 00 A Farmer's Vacation. Sq. 8° Bost. 5 00 b. Handy Book of Husbandry. 8° N. Y. 3 50 4 Alaska. — Alphabets. Alaska. b. Dall. Alaska and its Resources. a. Whymper. Alaska. Illustrated. Albania. 11. 8° Bost. 8° N. Y. Walker. Through Macedonia to the Albanian Lakes. 8° Lond. Wingfield. Tour in Albania, Dalmatia, etc. 12° Lond. Albigenses and Waldenses. Baird. History of Waldenses. 8° N. Y. Beckwith. Lite and Labors among Wal- denses. 12° Lond. Faber. Ancient Vallenses and Albigenses. 8° Lond. Gilly. Valdenses, etc. 12° Lond. Sismondi. Crusades against the Albigenses. 8° Lond. Alchemy. Book of Quinte-essence. Ed. by Furnivall. 8° Lond. Hitchcock. Alchemy and the Alchemists. 12° Bost. a. Pepper. Half Hours with the Alchemists. 12° Lond. Alcohol. — See Narcotics, etc. ; Temperance. Algiers. Blackburn. Artists and Arabs. 8° Lond. French in Algiers. 12° Lond. Gaskell. Algeria as it Is. 12° Lond. Gerard. Lion Hunting in Algeria. 12° N. Y. a. Herbert, Lady. Search after Sunshine. 8° Lond. Morell. Topo. and Hist, of Algeria. 8° Lond. Naphegyi. Among the Arabs. 12° Phil. Rogers. Winters in Algiers. 8° Lond. Allegory. See under Fiction. Alphabets, Lettering, Monograms. Book of Monograms. R. 8° N. Y. Copley. Alphabets. Obi. 4° N. Y. Handbook of Illuminated Initial Letters, 6th to 18th Century. Lond. Handbook of MS., Missal and Ornamental Al- phabets. Obi. 8° Lond. Jones. 1001 Initial Letters. 4° Lond. 702 Monograms in Colors. 8° Lond. Lillie. Alphabet of Monograms. F° Lond. Monogram and Alphabet Album. Prang & Co. Alphabets ; plain, ornamented, illuminated. Obi. 8° Bost. $7 50 2 50 20s 10s 6c? 2 50 ZsQd 12s 2s Qd Is 100 lsQd 10s Qd 2s 7s Qd 1 50 16s Qd Qs 1 75 12s 7 3 12s 50 00 1 50 70s 5s 5s Qd 2 50 Alps. — America. Shaw. Alphabets, Numerals and Devices. R. 8° Lond. 31a Qd Handbook of Alphabets. 8° Lond. 15s Mediaeval Alphabets, etc. R. 8° Lond. $7 50 Standard Sign Writer. 4° N. Y. Alps. See also Switzerland. Ball. Guide to Western Alp. 12° Lond. 7s Qd b. Brockedon. Passes of the Alps. 4° Lond. 150s Berlepsch. The Alps. 8° Lond. 10s Forbes. Tour of Alt. Blanc and Mt. Rosa. 16° Lond. 1 50 Theory of Glaciers of Savoy. 8° N. Y. 3 00 Freshfield. The Giisons, etc. 1862. 12° Lond. 10s Qd Girdlestone. High Alps without Guides. 8° Lond. 7s Qd «. Jones. The Regular Swiss Round. 8° Lond. 7s Qd Peaks, Passes and Glaciers, 2 vols. R. 8° Lond. 15 00 a. Same, cheap edition. 12° Lond. 2 00 Smith, Albert. Story of Mont Blanc. 12° N. Y. 1 00 a. Tyndall. Glaciers of the Alps. 8° Lond. 14s a. Mountaineering in the Alps. 8° Lond. 7s Qd Hours of Exercise in the Alps. 8° N. Y. 2 00 a. Whymper. Scrambles among the Alps. 8° Phil. -J. 60 Amazon River. See Brazil. America. See also Arctic Regions, and separate Countries; United States, etc. 1. Antiquities. Baldwin. Ancient America. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Squier & Davis. Antiq. and Discoveries in the West. 4° Sm. Inst. 10 00 2. Discovery. «. Abbott, J. Discovery of America, 3 vols. 16° N. Y. 2 25 Beamish. Discovery of America by Northmen in 10th Century. 8° Lond. 2 50 De Costa, Columbus and the Geographers of the North. Hartf. 1 00 Pre-Columbian Discovery of America. 12° Alb'y. 2 50 Davis. Spanish Conquest of New Mexico. 8° Doylest. 3 00 Eden. First Three English Books on America. Edited by Arber. 4° L. & N. Y. 9 00 ■a. Irving. Columb. and his Companions, 3 vols. 12° N. Y. 6 75 3 vols. 18° 3 75; abridged, 1 50 b. Irving, T. De Soto in Florida. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Kohl. Discovery of America, 2 vols. 8° Lond. 16s Leland. Fusang. Discovery of America in 5th Century. 12° N. Y. 1 75 Smith, J. T. Discovery of America by North- men. 8° Lond. 6s 6 America. — Ancient History. 3. Early and General History. Charlevoix. New France ; by Shea, 3 vols. 8° N. Y. $15 00 Domenech . Seven Years in Deserts of North America, 2 vols. 8° Lond. Gs a. DeVere. Romance of American History. 12° N. Y. 1 50 a. Helps. Spanish Conquests in America. 4 vols. 12° N. Y 6 00 />. Parkman. Discovery of the Great West. 8° Bost. 2 50 h. Jesuits in North America. 8° Bost. 2 50 b. Pioneers of France in the New World. 8° Bost. 2 50 Robertson. History of America. 8° N. Y. 2 25 4. Central. Froebel. Travels in Central America, etc. 8° Lond. 18s Morelet. Travels in Central America. 8° N. Y. 2 00 Norman. Ruined Cities of Yucatan. 8° N. Y. Patterson, W. Central America, from a MS. in British Museum. 8° Lond. 2s Gd b. Squier. Notes on Central America. 8° N. V. 4 00 Nicaragua. 8° N. Y. 4 00 Honduras. 8° N. Y. 2 00 Mrs. Travels in Central America. 8° N. Y. 2 00 a. Stephens. Central America, etc. 2 vols. 8° N. Y. 6 00 b. Yucatan, 2 vols. 8° N. Y. G 00 Weils. Honduras. Illustrated. 8° N. Y. 3 50 5. South. Baxlev. What I saw on W. Coast S. Am. 8° N. Y. 3 50 Bishop. 1000 Miles Walk across S. America. 12° Bost. 1 50 Grimshaw. History of South America. 12° Phil. 1 00 Hassaurek. Four Years among Spanish Amer- icans. 12° N. Y. 1 75 «. Humboldt. Equinoc. South America, 3 vols. Bohn. 5 25 Hutchinson. Recollections of South America. 8° Lond. 21s b. Marcoy. Travels across S. America, 2 vols. R. 4° N. Y. 15 00 Myers. Tropics of South America. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Paez. Travels in South and Central America. 8° N. Y. 3 00 Waterton. Wanderings in South America. 12° Lond. 5s Americanisms in Language. Bartlett. Dictionary of Americanisms. 8° Bost. 2 50 De Vere. Americanisms. 12° N. Y. 3 00 Amusements. See Athletic Sports; Games and Amusements; Gym- nastics. Analysis, Chemical. See Chemistry. Analysis, Grammatical. See Grammar; Language. Anatomy. See Physiology and Anatomy. Ancient History. See History. Anecdotes. — Angling. Anecdotes. Anecdotes of Clergy in America. 12° Phil. #1 50 Anecdotes, Literary and Scientific. R. 8° Loud. 5s a. Arvine. Cyclopedia of Literary Anecdotes. 8° Bost. 4 00 a. •. Moral and Religious Anecdotes. 8° Bost. 5 0.) a. Big. low. Anecdotes of Bench and Bar. 12° X. Y. 2 00 Book of Modern Anecdotes. Loud. 3s Gd Book of Blunders. 12° Lond. U Gd Clerk, Mrs. G. Tlam-en-X&s ; Hist. Tales and Anecdotes. From the Arabic. P. 8° Lond. 7s Gronow. Celebrities of London and Paris, 2 vols. 12° Lond. 2 50 Hood, E. P. 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How to Study the Xew Test., 3 vols. 18° Lond. 10* Gd K New Test. Commentary, 4 vols. 8° Lond. 16 00 22 12° N. Y. §2 00 12° Bost. 1 50 ,. 8° N. Y. 9 00 8° N. Y. 3 00 8° N. Y. 4 50 8° X. Y. 1G 50 8°N.Y. 11 00 12° N. Y. 1 5<» 12° N. Y. 1 50 8° Bost. 3 00 12° Andov. 2 25 8° X. Y. ea. 5 00 Bible. b. Alexander. The Psalms ; 2 vols., $5; Isaiah, 2 vols., $1 ; Matthew and Mark, ea. Arnold, M. God and the Bible. Bengel. Gnomon of the New Test., 2 vols., R. a. Barnes. Notes on Isaiah, 2 vols. a. Psalms, 3 vols. a. New Test., 11 vols. Cowles. Notes on the Prophets, 5 vols. b. Crosby. New Testament with Notes. b. Dunn. The Study of the Bible. llackett. Commentary on the Acts. Haley. Alleged Discrepancies of B. b. Lange. Biblical Commentary, 19 vols. Olshausen. Comment, on New Test., 6 vols. 8° N. Y. 18 00 Owen. Commentary on Mark, Luke and John, each 12° N. Y. 1 75 Portable Comment, on Old and New Test. By Jamieson, etc., 2 vols. 8° Bost. 6 00 Ripley. Notes on Gospels. 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Biographia Literaria. 2 vols Cowley. Essays. Davy. Consolations in Travel. Salmonia. b. De Morgan. Budget of Paradoxes. 2 ; do., cheap edition, 16° Phil. 75c. N. Y. 3 00 Illustrated by Griset. 4° 5 00 standard literature. The second contains the books that come under the designation of good novels, and which can be recommended to the readers &f fiction ; and in the third we have inserted those that we consider less desirable, but which* may, in most cases, be added without detriment to an ex- tended collection of fiction. It is by no means certain, however, that all of these are even worth reading ; some may be positively mis- chievous ; but it has been intended not to name really bad books. The names of authors of works of the first class, are marked a ; those of the second class, b ; and those of the third, c. As in many cases, however, the works of one author are of varying merit and value, and would naturally come under different classes, we have used a further designation for the books themselves. Those of the first or best class under any author's name are marked with two stars ; those of the second with one, and those of the third have been inserted without star. When it is considered that the English press alone turns out some three hundred novels every year, and that on our side, including the " yellow-covered," we manufacture nearly as many more, it is obvious that even the long list* which we give here is merely a selection from e2 105 Fiction. the vast mass of fiction now afloat, and indicates only those hooks which have been most generally recognized as (more or less) worth reading. But even this list comprises a great deal more than any library, private or public, except those of the very largest class, is likely to want. Those who select the books indicated by ♦* in this list will be reasonably secure of having the best works of fiction now in the market.] b. About. The Fellah. * King of the Mountains. Man with Broken Ear. * Tolla. Nose of a Notary ; Germaine. Absjornsen, P. Chr. Tales from the Norse. Tr. by Dasent. I b. Aguilar, Grace. Days of Bruce. 2 vols. * Home Influence. Home Scenes and Heart Studies. * Mother's Recompense. Vale of Cedars. * Woman's Friendship. Women of Israel. 2 vols. Aide, H. Penruddocke. r. Aimard G. Gold Seekers, Indian Chief & 6 others. Ainslie. See Maitland. ~. Ainsworth, W. II. Novels. 16 vols. 8° Lond. $12 ; Singly. Alcestis. a. Alcott, Louisa M. Eight Cousins. * Hospital Sketches. * Little Men. ♦♦Little Women. 2 vols. * Moods. * Morning Glories. * Old Fashioned GirL * Shawl Straps. * Proverb Stories. ♦•Work. Illust. Aldrich, T. B. ♦♦Marjorie Daw and other People. b. Alexander. Mrs. ♦ Her Dearest Foe. Ralph Wilton's Weird. Which Shall it Be ? 106 12° Lond. 9s 16° Lond. Is 16° N. Y. 1 25 12° Edin. 2s 12° N. Y. ea. 1 25 8° N. Y. 3 00 12° N. Y. 2 00 12° N. Y. 1 00 12° N. Y. 1 00 12° N. Y. 1 00 12° N. Y. 1 00 12° N. Y. 1 00 12° N. Y. 2 00 8° Bost. 1 25 12° Phila. ea. 75 4 16° ea. 50 16° N. Y. 1 25 16° Bost. 1 50 12° Bost. 1 50 16° Bost. 1 50 16° Bost. 3 00 12° Bost. 1 50 16° N. Y. 1 50 12° Bost. 1 50 16° Bost. 1 00 16° Bost. 75 12° 1 75 16° Bost. 1 50 16° N. Y. 1 25 16° N. Y. 1 25 16^ N . Y . 1 25 Fiction. Allston, W. Monaldi. 12° Bost. 1 60 b. Ames, Mary C. * Eirene ; a Story of New England. 8° N. Y. 1 25 a. Andersen, II. C. **Improvisatore. 8° paper, 50 cents. 12° N. Y. 1 75 * Only a Fiddler (with 0. T., 8° paper, 50c. ).12° N. Y. 1 75 * 0. t. 12° N. Y. 1 75 * Two Baronesses. 12° N. Y. 1 75 Appleton's Library of Choice Novels. 23 vols. paper. ea. 60 Appleton's Library of Romance, 17 vols. 8° N. Y. ea. 1 50 **Arabian Nights Entertainments, Lane's Translation. 2 vols. 12° N. Y. 3 50 Same. 3 vols. 8° Lond. 8 00 Arthur, T. S. Forty-two works. Phil. a. Auerbach, Berthold. **Black Forest Stories. 12° N. Y. 1 50 * Edelweiss. N. Y. 1 25, 16° Bost. 1 00 * German Tales. N. Y. 1 25, 16° Bost. 1 00 Joseph in the Snow. Illustrated. 16° N. Y. 1 25 Little Barefoot. Illustrated. 16° N. Y. 1 25 **On the Heights. 16° Bost. 2 00 Same. 12° N. Y. $2 00 ; 2 vols. 16° 2 50 * Professor's Wife. 12° Lond. 2s Gd * Villa on the Rhine. 2 vols. 12° N. Y. 2 50 * Villa Eden (same as above). 16° Bost. 2 00 Waldfried. 12° N. Y. 2 00 a. Austen, Jane. Novels. 5 vols. 16° N. Y. 4 00 **Emma. 12° Bost. 1 75 **Mansfield Park. 12° Bost. 1 75 **Pride and Prejudice. 12° Bost. 1 75 **Sense and Sensibility. 4 vols. 12° Bost. 1 75 b. Austen, Mrs. J. G. Cipher. 8° N. Y. 1 50 Moloch Mountain. 8° N. Y. 1 50 b. Baker, W. M. * The New Timothy. (2 more.) 12° N. Y. 1 50 Banim, J. Works. 12 vols. 12° N. Y. ea . 150 b. Baring-Gould. * In Exitu Israel. 12° L. & N. 1 50 b. Barker, Lady. Ribbon Stories. 1 50 a. Beckford, W. Vathek : an Oriental Tale. 16° N. Y. 1 25 b. Beecher, H. W. * Norwood. 12° N Y. 1 50 107 Fiction. b. Benedict, J. L. .Miss Van Kortlandt. 8° My Daughter Elinor. 8° (Four others.) Bird, R. M. Nick of the Woods. 12° N. Y. Calavar. 12° N. Y. a. Bjornsen, B. ♦•Arne. 12° N. Y. Fisher Maiden. 16°N.Y. * Happy Boy. 12° N. Y. * Love and Life in Norway. 16° N. Y. b. Black, W. * In Silk Attire, Paper, 8° 50c. ; * Kilmeny, ' Paper, 8° 50c. ; * Love or Marriage, Paper, 8° 50; * Mincing Lane, Paper, 8° 50c. ; * Daughter of Heth, Paper, 8° N. Y 50c. ; Marriage of Moira Fergus, 8° 50c. ; )■ and Maid of Killeena, etc., 50c; Three Fea- Bost. thers, a 1.00; **A Princess of Thule,8° 75c. ; **Strange Adventure of a Phaeton, 75c. b. Blackmore. * Clara Vaughan. 12° Phila. Cradock Nowell. Paper. 8° N. Y. * Alice Lorraine. Paper. 8° N. Y. •* Lorn a Doon. Paper. 8° N. Y. * The Maid of Sker. Paper. 8° N. Y. b. Blake. * Lady of Lyndon. Ruth Maxwell. 8° Bost b. Blanche, Aug. * The Bandit ; from the Swedish. 8° N. Y. •♦Blindpits ; a Story of Scottish Life. 12° N. Y. Blue Ribbon, The. 8° N. Y. a. Boccaccio. **The Decameron. 12° Bohn b. Bolt'. * Madame De StaeL 12° N. Y. b. Borrow, Geo. * Lavengro. 8° N. Y. * Romany Rye. 8° N. Y. Bound to John Company. Paper. 8° N. Y. Boyesen. Norseman's Pilgrimage. 12° Braddon, Miss. Aurora Floyd, and about 30 more. Paper. 8° N. Y. ea. Robert Ainsleigh. 2 vols. 12° Phila. n. Bradley (Cuthbert Bede). Adventures of Verdant Green. 12° N. Y. 108 N. Y 1 50 N. Y. 1 50 ea. 1 50 60 75 CO 26 00 20 1 75 75 75 75 75 1 25 1 25 1 50 1 75 50 1 75 1 50 75 75 75 1 50 50 or 75 3 00 1 50 Fiction. «. Bremer, Fredrika. * Fathers and Daughters, 12° $1.75; * Four) Sisters, 12° 1.75; **Home, 12° 1.75; J- Phila. ••The Neighbors, 12° 1.75. ) The preceding, 4 vols. 12° Bohn 7 00, P. 8° N. Y. 2 0C * President's Daughter, 8° 25c; Every Day") Life, 8° 25c. ; * Parsonage of Mora, 8° I vr v 25c; Midnight Sun, 8° 25c; * H. f a * x * Family, 8° 50c ; Nina, 8° 50c J Brewster, Anne M. H. Compensation. 12° Phila. 1 75 St. Martin's Summer. ■a Bronte*, Charlotte. **Jane Eyre, 12° $1.50; **Professor, 12°) 1.50; ••Shirley, 12° 1.50; ••Villette, \ N. Y. 12° 1.50. ) b. Bronte*, Anne Tenant of Wildfell Hall. 12° N. Y. 1 50 i. Bronte", Emily. Agnes Grey and Wuthering Heights. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Bronte" Novels. Cheap Library Ed. 6 v. 16° Phila. to. 1 25 Brooke, H. Ed. by C. Kingsley. Fool of Quality. 8° Lond. 1 75 b. Brooks, Shirley. * Aspen Court, Paper, 8° 50c. ; * Silver Cord, ' 8° $2.00 ; * Gordian Knot, 8° 50c ; J> N. Y. * Sooner or Later, 8° $2.00. Broughton, Rhoda. * Cometh Up as a Flower. Good-Bye. Sweetheart. Nancy. Not Wisely, but Too Well. Red as a Rose is She. Brown, Charles Brockden. Arthur Merwyn; Edgar Huntley; Jane Tal-) 100 P i ., ft ftft bot ; Ormond ; Wieland. 6 vols. } iJ rnua ' ° UU ■a. Brown, John, M. D. ••Marjorie Fleming. 16° Bost. 25 Bulwer. See Lytton. a. Bunyan . **Pilgrim's Progress (Golden Treasury Ser). 16° Lond. 1 50 Fac-simile of first edition. 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Y. 1 75 Willmott. Sacred Poets of 19th Century. English Sacred Poetry. Iceland. Burton. Ultima Thule. 2 vols. Chambers. Iceland and Faroe Islands. a.Dufferin. Yacht Voyage to Iceland. b. Forbes. Iceland. Gould. Iceland. Headley. The Island of Fire. Kneeland. American in Iceland. b. Paijkull. A Summer in Iceland. Illus. Pfeiffer. Iceland. Stephens. Off the Geysers. a. Taylor, Bayard. Egypt and Iceland. Waller. Six Weeks in the Saddle. Ichthyology. See Fishes. Illuminating. Art of Illumination. 8° N. Y. 3 00 Art of Illuminating. R 8° Lond. 3 50 Same. Colored illus. 14 00 a. Donlevy. Art of Illuminating. 4° N. Y. 2 00 Humphreys. Art of Illumination and Missal Painting. 12° Lond. 21s Illuminated Books of Middle Ages. f° Lond. 210s Illuminated Crest Book. 4° Lond. 15s Shaw. Art of Illuminating. 4° Lond. 42s Hand Book of Illuminating. R. 8° Lond. 15 00 Ilium. Ornaments, 6th to 17th Century. 4° Lond. Illuminated Ornaments. 4° Lond. Tymms and Wyatt. Art of Illuminating. R. 8° Lond. Ward. 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Paper b. Pumpelly & Brooks. Iron Ore in Missouri and Michigan. Illust. 2 vols. Styffe. Iron and Steel. Tredgold. Strength of Cast Iron and other Metals. Truran. Iron Manuf. of Gt. Britain. R Turner. Manufacture of Iron, 2 vols. 12° Lond. 2 50 8° L. & B. 4 50 8° Lond. 8 00 8° N. Y. 2 00 8° N. Y. 3 50 8° Wash. 2 00 4° L. & N". Y. 15 00 12° Phila. 3 00 8° N. Y. 8° Phil. 10 00 Phil. i 50 i 4° N. Y. 10 00 Lond. 12s 8° Lond. 6 00 . 8° Lond. 10 00 8° N. Y. 10 00 Israel. See Jews. Italy. See also Piedmont; Rome; and names of other Italian cities. Beckford. Italy with Sketches of Spain. 2 vols. Butt. History of Italy. 2 vols. Cobbe. Italics: Politics in Italy. 1864. Dickens. Pictures from Italy. Elliott. Diary of an Idle Woman in Italy. Eustace Classical Tour in Italy, 3 vols. Gallenga. Italy Revisited, 2 vols. Goethe. Sketches of Travels in Italy. Gould. Letters from Italy and Sicily. b. Hare. Cities of Northern and Central Italy. 3 vols. Days near Rome. a. Hawthorne. Mrs. England and Italy. 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Seaman's Friend. 12° Bost. 1 50 Totten. U. S. Naval Text-book. 12° N. Y. 3 00 Bowditch. American Navigator. 8° N. Y. 5 00 Evers. Navigation. (Elem. Sci. Ser.) 16° N. Y. 75 Same. (Elem. Sci. Ser.) 12° N. Y. 1 50 Manning. Commodore's Signal Book, etc. 8° N. Y. Rogers. Code of Signals. Sea Sickness. Alderson. Sea Sickness. 12° Lond. 2* Barker. Sea Sickness. 12° N. Y. 75 Secession. See Rebellion, under United State*. Secret Societies. Anderson. General History, Encyclopaedia, and Dictionary of Free Masonry. Sm. 8° N. Y. 5 00 Donaldson. Odd Fellows' Text Book and Manual. 12° Phila. 2 00 Findell. History of Free Masonry. 8° Lond. 10» Qd Fox. Free Masonry in England. 16° Lond. Fellows. Mysteries of Free Masonry. 16° Lond. 8* Greene. Broken Seal, or the Morgan Abduc- tion. 12° Bost. 1 50 Fort. Early History, etc., of Free Masonry (Guilds, Building Fraternities, etc). 8° L. & Phila. 3 5C Heckethorn. Secret Societies of all Ages, etc. 2 vols. 12° L.&N.Y.10 5C James. Secret Societies of the Middle Ages. 250 Selections — Sermons. Jennings. The Rosicrucians. 12° Lond. 10s 6a Mackey. Masonic Lexicon. 12° Phila. 3 00 Heboid. Freemasonry in Europe. 8° Cincm. Taylor. Monitor of 1 reemasonry. 1 5C Templar Manual. 1 0C Selections. See also Quotations. Eliot, George. Wit and Wisdom of. 1 vol. 16° Bost. 1 25 Fontaine. Best Thoughts of Dickens. 5 00 Gardner, F. and others. Selections from Latin Authors. 1 25 Half-hours with Best French Authors. 12° N. Y. 3 50 a. Knight. Half-hours with best authors. 4 vols. 12° Phila. 9 00 2 vols. 8° Lond. 6 00. 3 vols. 8° Phila, 6 00 Laconics, or, the best Words of the best Au- thors. 3 vols. 16° Lond. 7s Qd Landor. Selections from. By Hillard. 8° Bost. 2 50 Mackay. Home Affection portrayed by the Poets. New Edition. 8° Lond. 12s Qd Thousand-and-one English Gems of Prose. P. 8° Lond. 3s M Milton. Treasures from Prose Writings of. 18° Bost. 2 50 Montagu. Selections from Taylor, Hooker, Barrow, etc. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Newman, J. H. Characteristics ; arranged by Lilly. 12° N. Y. 2 50 Parton. The Words of Washington, selected, etc. Saunders. Salad for the Solitary, etc. Selections from Jeremy Taylor. a. Smith, Sydney. Wit and Wisdom of. Ed- ited by Duyckinck. Southgate. Noble Thoughts in Noble Lan- guage. Many Thoughts of Many Minds. 2 series. Townsend. Everyday Book of Mod. Lit. Sq. Treasury of Literature and Art. Sermons. See also Preaching and Preachers. Arnold. Sermons on Christian Life. 2 vols Artoni. Sermons in Several Synagogues. Beecher. Lectures to Young Men. Sermons. 10 vols. Summer Parish. (Sermons, etc., at Twin Mountain House.) Yale Lectures on Preaching. 1st Ser. 91 25 ; 2d and 3d Ser. ea. $1 00. Brooke. Christ in Modern Life. Blair. Sermons. Burns. Cyclopedia of Sermons. 16° Bost. 1 00 12° N. Y. 4 00 16° Bost. 1 25 12° N. Y. 2 2£ 8° Lond. 10s Qd . 8° Lond. ea, 12s Qd . 8° Lond. 4 00 8° Lond. 4 50 12° N. Y. 4 00 8° Lond. fa 1 50 8° N. Y. ea. 2 50 12° N. Y. 1 50 12° N. Y. 12° N. Y. 2 00 8° N. Y. 2 00 8° N. Y. 2 50 251 Servia. Bushnell. Sermons for the New Life. 12° NY. 2 00 Sermons on Living Subjects. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Butler, Bp. Sermons. 12° Bohn. 2 50 Candlish. Sermons. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Chanuing. The Perfect Life; 12 Discourses. 12° Bost. 1 50 Colyer. Nature and Life. 12° Bost. 1 50 Guthrie. The Way to Life. Sermons. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Christ and the Inheritance of the Saints. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Parables in the Light of the Present Day. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Hall, Newman. Sermons. 12° N. Y. 1 75 Hare. The Alton Sermons. 12° N. Y. 2 50 Hyacinthe, Father. The Family (Discourses), etc. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Latimer, Bp. The Ploughers. (Arber Re- prints.) 16° Lond. 1* Qd Seven Sermons before Edward VI. (Arber Reprints.) Lever. Sermons. (Arber Reprints.) Manning. Lectures. Sermons, vol. 1. Maurice. The Ground and Object of Hope for Mankind. Cr. Sermons Preached in Country Churches. Melvill. Sermons. 2 vols. R. Murray. Music Hall Sermons. Park Street Pulpit, 2d ser. Newman, J. H. Sermons at Oxford between 1826 and 1843. P. Pulpit Cyclopedia and Ministers' Companion. Punshon. Lectures and Sermons. Cr. Robertson. Sermons, 4 vols, in 1. Simons. Sunday Half Hours with Great Preachers. Sketches and Skeletons of 500 Sermons. South. Sermons. 5 vols. Spurgeon. Sermons, 9 series. et Stanley. Sermons. Tavlor, Jeremy. Sermons (select.) Taylor, Wm. M. The Lost Found. Temple. Rugby Sermons. 3d ser. Trench. Sermons. Vaughan. Christ, the Light of the World. Wesley. Sermons, chiefly on the Spiritual Life. 12° N. Y. 1 00 16° Lond. Is Qd 16° Lond. Is Qd 1 25 2 00 1 , 8° N. Y. 1 25 8° Lond. 10s 6,/ , 8° N. Y. 5 00 12° Bost. 1 50 12° Bost. 2 25 8° Lond. 5s 8° N. Y. 2 50 8° N. Y. 2 50 8° Bost. 2 00 ' 8° Phila. 3 75 . 8° N. Y. 2 00 8° N. Y. 20 00 12° N. Y. 1.50 12° Lond. 2s 6'/ 12° Lond. 3s 6^/ 1 50 12° Lond. 1 50 8° Lond. 10s M 12° Lond. 3s Qd Servia. Arbuthnot. Servia : Social, Political, etc. 8° Lond. 10s 6^ Mijaterics. History of Modern Servia. 8° Lond. 10s Qd Servian Folk Lore. 8° L. & N. Y. 3 00 252 Sewerage — Shakespeare; Comments, Concordances, etc. a. Ranke. History of Servia. 12° Bohn 1 75 Sewerage. See also Drainage. Burke. Sewage Utilization. 12° Loud. 3s Qd Banchell. Sewage and its Economical Dis- posal. 8° Lond. Is Reynolds. Sewer Gas, and How to Keep it Out of Houses. P. 8° Lond. Is Qd Sewage Question, comprising a Series of Reports. P. 8° Lond. 4s Qd Sewing Machine. Green. History of Sewing Machines. 8° Lond. 3 75 Shakespeare : Works. Avon ed. 8 v. 8° N. Y. 25 00 Bell's ed. 6 v. 8° N. Y. 9 00 b. Cambridge ed. (Clark and Wright.) 9 v. 8° N. Y. 36 00 b. Clarke's ed. 4 v. 8° Lond. 12 00 a. Same. 1 v. R. 8° Lond. 8 00 Collier's ed. 6 v. 8° Lond. 48 00 Collins' ed. 6 v. 12° N. Y. 7 50 Same. 2 v. 8° N. Y. 9 00 Cundell's Boudoir Shakespeare, for Reading Aloud. Lond. per part Is b. Furness. Variorum ed., v. 1, Romeo and J.; v. 2, Macbeth; v. 3 and 4, Hamlet. 8° Phila. ea. 3 00 b. Dyce's ed. (Large type.) 9 v. 8° Lond. ea. 3 00 a. Globe ed. 1 v. 12° Phila. 1 50 a. Handy vol. ed. 13 v. 32° Lond. 10 00 Hazlitt's ed. Illust. 4 v. 8° X. Y. 9 00 Hudson's ed. 11 v. 12° Bost. 15 00 Family ed. 3 v. 12° Bost. 6 00 School ed. 3 v. 12° Bost. 6 00 Separate plays. 32° Bost. ea. 40 Keightley's ed. 6 v. . 18° Bost. 12 00 b. Knight's Pictorial ed. 8v. R. 8° Lond. 40 00 Stratford ed. 6 v. 12° L. &K Y. 10 00 Rolfe : Julius Caesar, Tempest, Merchant of Venice, Henry VHI. Illust. 16°. Ea. 90c; in 1 vol. N. Y. 3 00 b. Staunton's ed. 3 v. L. 8° L. &N. Y. 22 50 Library ed. 6 v. 12° L. & N. Y. 12 00 Valpy's ed. 111. 15 v. 16° Lond. 27 50 a. White's ed. 12 v. 12° Bost. 18 00 Same. Fine ed. 8° Bost. 36 00 Shakespeare : Comments, Concordances, etc. Abbott. S. Grammar. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Bible Truths with S. Parallels. 12° Lond. 2 ')0 253 Sheep — Shipbuilding Campbell. S.'s Legal Acquirements. Clarke. Concordance to S. Coleridge. Lectures on S. Craik. English of S. (Julius Caesar, with notes.) Dowden. S. : A Critical Study. Elze. Essays on S. Trans, by Schmitz. Fleay. S. Manual. Furness, Mrs. Concordance to Poems. Gervinus. Commentaries on S. Giles. Human Life in S. Guizot. S. and His Times. b. Halliwell. Life of S. b. List of Works Illustrating S. Hazlitt. Characters of S. Holmes. Authorship of S. (Baconian theory.) 12 a. Hudson. Lectures on S. 2 v. a. S.'s Life, Art, etc. 2 v. Jameson. Female characters of S. Jacob. S. Diversions. Jervis. Diet, of the Lang, of S. Keightley. S. Expositor. a. Knight. Studies of S. Latham. Hamlet of Saxo Grammaticus and S. Maginn. Shakespeare Papers. Nares. Glossary of S. Words and Phrases, by Halliwell. 2 v. Ruggles. S.'s Method as an Artist. Schmidt. S. Lexicon. 2 v. L. Stearns. S. Treasury of Wisdom, etc. a. White. S. Scholar. a. Life and Genius of S. Winsor. Bibliogr. of Original Quartos and Folios. 250 copies only. Wordsworth. S.'s Knowledge of the Bible Sheep. Jennings. Sheep, Swine and Poultry. Morrell. American Shepherd. Randall. Sheep Husbandry. Fine Wool Husbandry. Youatt. On Sheep. Shells. See Conchology. Shetland. See Scotland. Shipbuilding. See also Yachting. Forbes. Life-boats. 1 00 Russell. Modern Naval Architecture. 3 v. atl. f° Lond. Thearle. Shipbuilding and Laying Off. 254 12° N. Y. 1 OC . 8° Bost. 9 (HI 8° Lond. 3s fid 12° Bost. 1 75 8° Lond. 12s 8° N. Y. 4 00 12° L. & N. Y. 1 75 8° Phila. 4 00 8° Lond. 7s 6d 12° Bost. 2 00 12° N. Y. 1 50 8° Lond. 16° Lond. 12° Lond. 1 75 12° N. Y. 2 25 12° N. Y. 3 00 12° Bost. 4 00 8° N. Y. 8° L. & N. Y. 4 00 4° Lond. 12* 12° Lond. 7s Qd 8° L. & N. Y. 3 00 8° Lond. 5s 12° Lond. 1 00 8 Lond. 28s 12° N. Y. 1 75 8° Lond. 34s 12° N. Y. 2 (K> 8° N. Y. 2 50 12° Bost. 2 50 L 4° Bost. 25 00 12° Lond. 6 00 12° N. Y. 1 75 12° N. Y. 1 75 12° N. Y. 1 50 12° N. Y. 1 00 12° Phila. 1 00 Shipwrecks — Slavery. (Elem. Sci. Ser.) Plates 4to Text. 16° N. Y. 2 00 — '— Same. (Adv. Sci. Ser.) 2 vols. 4to. 12° N. Y. 4 00 Shipwrecks. See also Adventures. Goodrich. Man upon the Sea. 8° Phila. 2 25 Lewis. History of the Life-boat. 8° N. Y. 1 75 Perils of the Sea. 18° N. Y. 75 Redding. Shipwrecks and Disasters at Sea. 4 vols. 16° Lond. 14* Shooting. See Hunting. Short Hand. See Phonography. Siam. Bowring. People and Kingdom of Siam. 2 v. 8° Lond. 32* Leonowens. English Governess at Court of Siam. Mouhot. Trav. in Siam. 2 v. Siberia. Atkinson. Oriental and West. Siberia. The Same. b. Amoor River. Bush. Reindeer Dogs and Snow Shoes. Erman. Travels in Siberia. 2 vols. a. Kennan. Tent Life in Siberia. Sicily. See also Italy. Amari. Hist of the Sicilian Vespers. 3 v. Bartlett. Pictures from Sicily. Lloyd. Hist, of Sicily to the Athenian War, Tuckerman. Sicily : a Pilgrimage. Sickness. See Health and Disease ; Draining ; Longevity ; Maternity ; Sanitary Science; Sewerage; Sleep. Singing. Gsertner. The Art of Singing. 4° Phila. 3 00 Seiler. The Voice in Singing, from German. 12° Phila. 1 50 Streeter. Voice Building. 12° Phila. 1 50 Skating. Anderson. Art of Skating. 12° Lond. 2* Qd Vandervell and Witham. System of Figure Skating. 12° Lond. 6* Skepticism. See Infidelity ; Rationalism. Slavery. 2.55 12° Bost. 3 00 8° Lond. 32* 8° N. Y. 3 5a 12° Phila. 1 75 R. 8° Lond. 42* 8° N. Y. 3 00 8° Lond. 31s 6d 12° N. Y. 2 00 12° Lond. 31s Qd 8° 3s 6d r. 8° Lond. Us 12° N. Y. 75 Sleep — South America. Hope. In Quest of Coolies. 12° Lond. 6* Still. Underground Railroad. 4 50 Wilson. Slave Power in the U. S. 3 vols. 8° Bost. ea. 5 00 Sleep. See also Dreams. Cappie. Causation of Sleep. 12° Lond. 2* M Hall. On Sleep. 12° N. Y. 1 60 Macnish. Philosophy of Sleep. 12° Glasg. Is Sociology. American Social Science Asso. ; Transactions, 8 parts, paper. 8° Bost. ea. 1 50 Booth. St. Simon and St. Simonians. 8° Lond. 7s Qd Carey. Past, Present and Future. 8° Phila. 2 50 Coxe. Moral Reforms Suggested. 12° Phila. 1 00 Chapin. Moral Aspects of City Life. 12° N. Y. 1 00 Dall. The College, Market and Court. 12° Bost. 2 50 Elder. Questions of the Day. 8° Phila. 3 00 b. Fawcett. Essays on Political and Social Sub. 8° Lond. 3 50 Greenwood. The Seven Curses of London. 12° Bost. 1 50 Greg. Mistaken Aims, etc., of Artisan Class. 12° Lond. 10s Gd Hamilton. Present Status of Social Science. 12° N. Y. '2 00 a. Mill. Liberty ; and Subjection of Women. In 1 vol. 8° N. Y. 2 50 Mivart. Contemporary Evolution. 12° Lond. 7s Gd National Association, (English) for Promotion of Social Science. Transactions, 1857 to 1876. 20 vols. 8° Lond. ea. 15s Nordhoff. Communistic Societies of U. S. 8° N. Y. 4 00 Noyes. American Socialisms. 8° Phila. 3 00 a. Rogers. Social Economy. 12° N. Y. 75 b. Spencer. Social Statics. 12° N. Y. 2 50 Descriptive Sociology (tabulated statis- tics), per part. f° N. Y. 4 00 Principles of Sociology, per part. N. Y. 60 Study of Sociology. ' 12° N. Y. 1 50 Stephen. Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Villetard de Prunieres. Hist, of the Inter- national. Tr. 12° N. Haven. 1 50 Solar System. See Astronomy. Solitude. Alger. Solitudes of Nature and of Man. 16° Bost. 1 5C Zimmerman. On Solitude. 18° Phila. 76 Songs. See Ballads, Poetry, Singing. Sound See Acoustics. South America. See America, South. 256 South Carolina — Spain and Portugal. South Carolina. Pike. The Prostrate State. 12° N. Y. 1 00 South Seas. See East Indies, Pacific, Polynesia, etc. Southern States. See United States ; and separate States. Spain and Portugal. See also Peninsular War. Abbott. Romance of Spanish History. 12° N. Y. 2 00 Anderson. In Spain. 12° N. Y. 2 25 Attache at Madrid; Court of Isabella II. 12° N. Y. 100 Baxley. Spain ; Art Remains, etc. 2 vols. 12° N. Y. 5 00 Baxter. Portugal, Spain and Italy. 2 vols. 8° Lond. 21s Blackburn. Travelling in Spain. 8° Lond. 6s Byrne. Cosas de Espana. Illust. 2 vols. 8° Lond. 7 50 Callcott. His. of Spain and Portugal. 2 v. 12° Lond. 12s ■a. Conde. The Arabs in Spain. 3 vols. 12° Bohn. 5 25 Davillier. Spain, Picturesque, Historical, Romantic. 240 Illustrations by Dore. f° X. Y. 18 00 Dunham. Hist, of Spain and Portugal. 5 v. 18° N. Y. 3 75 Field. Ten days in Spain. 16° Bost. 1 50 Ford. The Spaniards and their Country. 12° N. Y. 1 50 Hand Book of Spain. 2 vols. 12° Lond. 30s Gautier. Wanderings in Spain. P. 8° Lond. 2s 6*7 Hare. Wanderings in Spain. 12° Lond. 3 00 *. Hay, John. Castilian Days. 12° Bost. 2 00 Herbert. Impressions of Spain. 8° N. Y. 2 00 Historical Sketches of Portugal. 12° Lond. 5s «. Irving. The Conquest of Granada. 12° N. Y. 2 25 Same, cheaper edition. 16° N. Y. 1 25 and 1 75 0 N.Y. 85 German: Belles Lettres, Collections &c. Miniatur-Bibliothek. (Fiction, poetry, drama.) 24 vols. Phila. ea. 50 Roquette. Geschichte des deutschen Gedichts. N. Y. 3 15 Scherr. Allgemeine Geschichte der Literatur. 2 vols. N. Y. 5 85 Schiller und seine Zeit. 2 vols. N. Y. 1 00 Universal-Bibliothek. (Cheap editions of mas- ter-pieces of German Literature. Paper, ea. 10c, and upwards; cloth, ea. 30c, and upwards. N. Y. Vilmar. Geschichte der deutschen national Literatur. Phila. 3 50 291 8° 8 80 de 8° a 00 12° 1 25 12° 2 80 12° 3 00 Spanish Books. III. SPANISH BOOKS. Aleman. Vida y hechos del Picaro Guzman de Alfarache. 2 vols 8° 3 80 Antologia Espafiola. Coleccion de poesias lir- icas ordenada par C. Michaelis. 1 Parte. Poetaa de la Siglos XV— XIX. 12° 1 50 Apuntes para una Bibliotheca de Escritores Espanoles contemporaneos en prosa y verso, par Ochoa. 2 vols. Ascargorta. Compendio de la Historia Espana. Balmes. Filosofia Elemental. Filosofia Fundamental. 2 vols. Protestantismo. 2 vols. Bibliotheca de las Maravillas, dirigida par D. E. Charton. Per vol. 3 00 Breton de Los Herreros. Obras escogidas. 2 vols. 8° 8 00 Caballero, Fenian. Clemencia. Novela de costumbres. 12° 1 50 La Gaviota. 12° 1 50 La Familia de Alvareda. Lagrimas. 12° 1 50 Cuentos y Poesias Populares Anda- luces. ' 12° 1 50 Relaciones. 12° 1 50 Elia. El Ultimo Consuelo; La Noche de Navidad; Callar en Vida y Per- donar en Muerte. 12° 1 50 Cuadros de Costumbres. 12° 1 50 Cuatro Novelas. 12° 1 50 La Farisea; Las dos Gracias y Otras Novelas Escogidas. 12° 1 50 Un Verano en Bornos; Cosa Cumplida; Solo en la Atra Vida; Lady Virginia. Novelas originales. 12° 1 50 Castelar. Discursos Parlamentarios. 3 vols. 4 80 Cervantes. Obras Completas. 4 vols. Don Quijote. Same. 2 vols. Cid. (Romancero del. ) Coleccion de Piezas Escogidas de Lope Vega, Calderon de la Barca, etc. • Coleccion de Autores Espanoles. 34 vols. Coleccion de los Mejores Autores Espanoles, Antiguos v Modernos. About 60 vols. Per vol. 3 00 and 4 00 Conde. Historia de la Dominacion de los Arabes en Espafta. 8° 4 00 Diccionario Biografico Universal. 4° 6 40 • Thin aeries contains a selection of the more prominent Spanish novelists. 2!»2 8° 12 00 8° 8 00 12° 3 00 8° 1 70 de 8° 4 00 12° Per vol. 1 50 Spanish Books. Diccionario de Artes y Manufacturas. 4 vols. Diccionario (nuevo) de la Lengua Castellana. 4° Diccionario Enciclope'dico de la Lengua Es- panola. 2 vols. 4° Eguilaz. Obras Dramaticas. 8° Espronceda. Obras Podticas. 8° Galdos, Benito. La Fontana de Oro. 12° Garcio de Quevedo. Obras Poeticas y Lit- terarias. 2 vols. 8° Gil y Zarate. Obras Dramaticas. 8° Hartzenbusch, J. E. Obras Escogidas. 2 vols. 12° Iriarte. Fabulas. 12° Lafuente, Alcantara. Historia de Granada. 2 vols. 8° Larra (Don Mariano de.) Obras Completas. 2 vols. 8° Lesage. Gil Bas de Santillana. 8° Same. 2 vols. 12° El Bachiller de Salamanca. 8° Lope de Vega. Teatro Escogida. 8° Marmol, I. Amalia. 2 vols. 12° Martinez de la Rosa. Obras Completas. 5 vols. 8° Melo. Historia de los Movimientos, Separa- cion y Guerra de Cataluna. 8° Mendoza. Vida de Lazarillo de Tormes. 8° Guerra de Granada contra los Moris- cos. 8° Moratin. Comedias Completas. 8° Origines de Teatro Espanol. 8° Poesias de la America Meridional. Collecion- adas par A. J. de Wittstein. 12° Quevedo Villegas. Obras Selectas en Prosa y Verso. 8° Quintana. Vidas de Espanoles Celebres. 8° Rumas Ineditas de D. Inigo Lopez de Men- doza. de Fernan Perez de Guzman, y de otros Poetas del Siglo XV. 8° Romancero del Cid. Nuevo edicion publi- cados por C. Michaelis. 12° Salva. Diccionario de la Lengua Castel- lana. 4° Sanchez. Collecion de Poesias Anteriores al Siglo XV. 8° Solis. Historia de la Conquista de Mej- ico. 8° Teatro Moderno Espanol. El Hanto por Cien- to ; Flor de un Dea; La Cruz del Matri- monio. 12° 1 50> 24 00 9 20 20 00 4 00 2 40 1 50 8 00 4 00 3 00 60 6 00 8 00 3 00 3 00 4 00 3 00 18 00 1 40 1 40 1 40 2 40 4 00 1 50 4 00 4 00 3 60 1 50 8 oa 4 80 3 00 293 Spanish Books. Tesoro de Escritores Misticos Espaiioles. 3 vols. 8° 12 80 Tesoro de Historiadores Espafioles. 8° 3 60 Tesoro de Novelistas Espaaoles, Antiquoa y Modernos. 8° 9 00 Tesoro del Parnaso Espafiol. Poesias Selectas Castellanas desde el Tiempo de J. de Mena, hasta nuestros dias. 8° 4 00 Tesoro de los Poemas Espafioles, epicos, sag- rados y burlescos. 8° 4 00 Tesoro de Prosadores Espafioles (siglo XIII — XVIII) par Ochoa. 8° 4 00 Tesoro de los Romanceros y Cancioneros Es- pafioles. 8° 4 00 Tesoro del Teatro Espafiol desde su Origen, por Ochoa. 5 vols. 8° 4 00 Toreno. Historia del Levantamiento. 3 vols. Tres Flores del Teatro Antiquo Espafiol. Trueba. El Libro de los Cantares. Las Hijas del Cid. Cuentos Carapesinos. Cuentos Populares. Cuentos de Color de Rosa. Trueba y Quintana. El Cid Campeador. /.ay as y So torn a j or. Novelas Ejemplares. Zorilla. Obras Completas. 3 vols. 294 8° 7 20 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 8° 3 00 8° 12 00 Spanish Books for Young People. COLECCION DE IIISTORIAS MORALES PARA LA NINEZ. ENCUADEUNADAS A LA HOLANDESA DE LUJO. Todas las obritas de que se compone esta biblioteca han sldo arregladas con el objeta de formar los premios que generalmente >o dan en las escuelas. Colkccion 12° a 45 cts. Rosa de Tanenburgo. (ieuoveva. Joven Robinson. Illia. Timoteo. Nociones sobre fisica y metediolo- gia. Nociones sobre el electro mag- netismo. Francisco Pizarro. Eufemia. Simon de Nantua. Tesoro (el) de nifias. Angela. Conversaciones sobre las obras de bios. Viajes alrededor del mundo. Viajes en Asia. Viajes en Africa. Vida de Jesu Cristo. Yida de la Virgeu. Moral en accion. 1 listeria de las cruzadas. Ejemplos morales. Biografia de O'Higgins. Biografia de San Martin. Biografia del libertador Simon Bolivar. Biografia de Morelos. Biografia de Mina. Rasgos biograficos de nifios cele- bres. Descripoion del universo, nociones de historia natural. Cuentos y Refranes. Modelos de los nifios. El suefio de un angel. La mano de la Providencia. Amor fraternal. Historia natural (aves.) Arbol (el) sano. Angel (el) de Paz. Sembrar para recoger. Senda (la) del deber. La alegria del hogar. El capitan de la Esperanza. -Juegos de las diferentes edades. Cuentos de las hadas. Hombres ilustres de la antigiiedad y edad-media. Hombres ilustre modernos. Hombres ilustres de la America. Mujeres celebres de Europa. Mujeres celebres de America. Coleccion 18° a 35 cts. Joven ermitafio. Pueblo (el) hebreo. Ramillete de cuentos. El Cielo. Africa ecuatorial. Cestillo de floies. Huevos de Pascua. America-Estados-Unidoa. Cristobal Colon. Hernando Cortes. Luisito. Corderito (el.) Enrique de Eichenfel. Noche (la) buena. Ser (el) humano. Vida india. Canario (el.) Paloma (la.) Naufragioe celebres. Buenos padres buenos hijos. Deber es del hombre. Mara villas de la naturaleza. Elementos de moral. Historia natural (mamiferos.) Vida de San Francisco de Asis. Vida de San Antonio de Padua. • Cruz de madera. Pequefio (el) hercules. Diego el pequefio. Linterna magica. Cuentos morales. Mitologia de la Juventud. Libro de las nifias. Ramillete de cuentos. Cuentecitos a mis nifios. Libro de familia. Cuentos para la nifiez. Jose y Felipe. El maestro de la aldea. 295 Italian Books. IV. ITALIAN BOOKS. Alfieri (Vittorio.) Tragedie. 2 vols. 12° 3 60 Vita, Giornali, Lettere per cura di Emilio Teza. 12° Aretino, L. Istoria Fiorentina. 12° Arici (Cesare.) Poesie Scelte. 12° Ariosto, Lodovico. Orlando Furioso. 2 v. 12° <)p«re Minori in Versi e in Prosa. 2 vols. 12° Azeglio (Massimo.) Niccolo de* Lapi. 12° Ettore Fieramosca. 12° I miei Ricordi. 2 vols. 12° Baguoli, P. Poesie Scelte. 12° Balbo, Cesare. Novelle. 12° Novelle ; Frammenti sul Piemonte. 12° Vita di Dante Alighieri. 12° Meditazioni Storiche. 12° Pensieri ed Esempi. 12° Delle Speranza el Italia. 12° Sommario della Storia d'ltalia. 12° Pensieri sulla Storia d'ltalia. 12° Baldi (Bernard.) Versi y Prose Scelte. 12° Bianchetti. Dei Lettori e dei Parlatori 12° Boccaccio. II Decamerone. Revised, etc., by Fanfani. 2 vols. 12° II Decamerone. (Brockhaus' edition.) 2 vols. 12° Same. (Didot's edition.) 2 vols. 12° Buonarotti (Michel Angelo.) La Fiera; La Tancia. 12° Opere Varie Raccolte da Fanfani. 12° Prime e Lettere. 32° Cannale, M. Nuova Istoria della Republica di Gen ova. 4 vols. Cantu, Cesare. Margherita Pusterla. 12° Storia della Letteratura Italiana. 12° Cantu. Poesie. 12° Carcano, G. Damiano. 12° Dodice Novelle. 12° Poesie Varie. 12° Carrer, L. Racconti & Dialoghi. 12° Poesie Scelte. 12° Carutti, D. Racconti. 12° Cecchi, G. M. Commedie. 2 vols. 12° Cennini. II Libro dell' Arte. 12° DalF Ongaro (Francesco.) Novelle Vecchie e Nnovo. 12° Racconti. 12° Dante. La Commedia. Revised by Brunone Branchi. 12° 2 00 290 1 80 1 80 1 80 a 00 3 00 1 80 1 00 2 40 1 80 1 50 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 3 60 3 00 40 3 60 1 80 1 00 7 20 1 50 2 25 1 10 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 1 80 8 60 1 35 1 80 1 80 Italian Books. 1 3 80 60 2 I 1 1 M HO 80 80 Dante La Vita Nuova e il Canzionere. Edited bv Giuliani. 12° II Convito di Dante. 12° — — Racolta Dantesca di Pietro Fraticelli. La Divina Commedia. 12° II Canziouiere, annot. and ill. 12° La Vita Nuova. 12° II Ccuvito e le Epistole. 12° Voeubolario Dantesco o Dizionario Critico e Ragionata. 12° 1 80 La Divina Commedia, with life, by Boc- caccio. 12° I 20 Davanzati, B. Opere. 2 vols. 12° 3 GO De Amicis, E. Racconti Militari. 12° 1 80 Novelle. 12° 1 10 La Vita Militare. 12° 1 80 Donati, C. Fogli Secche. Racconti y No- velle. 12° 1 80 Fanfani, Pietro. Cecco d'Ascoli. Racconti Storico del Secolo XIV. 12° 1 50 Fiori della Poesia Italiana Antica e Moderna Raccolti da Michaelis. Foscolo (Ugo.) Prose Letterarie. 4 vols. Epistolario. 3 vols. Prose Politiche. Poesie. Lettere di Jacopo Ortis. Franceschi - Ferrucci (Caterina.) Prose y Versi. I Primo Quattro Secoli della Letter- atura Italiani. 2 vols. Gioberti. Del Buono e del Bello. Giordani, P. Opere. 3 vols. Giudici-Emiliani, P. Storia della Letteratura Italiana. 2 vols. Storia del Teatro in Italia. Giusti, G. Poesie. Versi Editi y Inediti. Raccolta di Proverbi Toscani. Epistolario. Goldoni, C. Commedie. Containing: Un Cu- rioso Accidente; Terenzio; Le Barufe Chiozoto; La Bottega del Caffe; La Lo- candiera; II Barbero Benefico; I Rus- teghi. 12° 1 80 — — Commedie Scelte. Containing : Pamela Nubile; II Vero Amico ; Le Smaine per la Villeggiatura; II Barbero Benefico ; II Raggiratore ; La Bottega del Caffe. ' 12° 1 2d Commedie Scelte. Containing : II Tor- quato Tasso; Le Donne Curiose; Un Cu- 12° 1 50 12° 7 20 12° 5 40 12° 1 80 12° 1 80 12° 1 00 12° 1 80 12° 3 60 12° 1 80 12° 4 50 12° 3 60 12° 1 80 12° 1 50 12° I 80 12° 1 80 12° 1 80 297 Italian Books. nose Accidents ; Terenzio ; L'Avaro Fastoso ; 11 Vero Amico ; 11 Barbero Benefice 12° 1 50 Grazzini, A. F. Commedie. 12° 1 80 Novelle . 12° 1 80 Guerrazzi, F. D. Isabella Orsini. 12° 1 80 L'Assedio di Firenze. 2 vols. 12° 1 25 Grossi, T. Marco Visconti. 12° 1 80 Heyse, P. Antologia dei Modern! Poeti Italiani. 12° 2 50 Leopardi, G. Opere. 2 vols. 12° 3 60 Epistolario. 2 vols. 12° 3 60 Machiavelli, N. Le Istorie Fiorente. 12° 1 80 11 Principe. 1 Discorsi sopra la prima deca di Tito Livio. 12° 1 80 Maffei, G. Storia della Letteratura Ital- iano. 2 vols. 12° 3 60 Mamiani, T. Poesie. 12° 1 80 Manzoni, A. I Promessi Sposi. 12° 1 50 Metastasio, P. Drammi. 12° 1 80 Monti, V. 1 Poemi. 2 vols. 32° 2 00 Le Poesie Liriche. 32° 1 00 Poesie Drammatische. 32° 1 00 Nicolini, G. Poesie. 12° 1 80 Prose. 12° 1 80 Parini, G. Versi y Prose. Pellico, S. Le Mie Prigioni, F. da Ri 12° 1 80 mini, Tommaso Moro e Poesia Scelte. 12° 1 50 Le Tragedie. 12° 1 80 Cantiche e Poesie Varie. 12° I 80 Epistolario. 12° 1 80 Le Mie Prigioni Separate. 12° 1 00 Petrarca; F. Le Rime. 12° 1 80 Lettere delle Cose Familiari ; Lettere Varie. 5 vols. 12° 9 00 Rosini, G. La Monaca di Monza. 12° 1 80 Luisa Strozzi. 12° 1 80 Sacchetti, F. Le Novelle. 2 vols. 12° 3 60 Tasso (Torquato). La Gerusalemme Lib- erata. 12° 1 30 Same. 32° 1 00 L'Aminta y Rime Scelte. 32° 1 00 Tasso, T. I Dialoghi. 3 vols. 12° 5 40 Le Lettere. 5 vols. 12° 9 00 Le Prose Diverse. 2 vols. 3 60 Thonar, P. Racconti Popolari. 12° 1 80 Verri, P. Shoria di Mi lano 2 vols. 12° 3 60 Visconti Venosta, G. Novelle. 12° 1 80 298 JUVENILES. ft. Abbott, J. The Rollo Books, 14 vols., 16° $ 12 60 The Rollo Story Books, 12 vols., 16° 3 75 Rollo's Tour In Europe, 10 vols., 16° 9 00 Franconia Stories, 10 vols., 16°, each 90 Little Learner Series, 10 vols., 16°,oach 90 Marco Polo Series. 10 vols., 16°, each . 90 Rainbow and Lucky Series, 10 vols., 16°, each 90 Story Books, 12°, each . . 1 75 August Stories, 18°, N. Y., each 1 50 Florence Stories. 6 vols 6 00 Science for the Young, each. . 1 50 American History, 8 vols 10 00 Adams, W. T. (Oliver Optic) . . Army and Navy Stories, 6 vols.. 16°, Illus. each 1 50 b. Boat Club Series, Illus., 6 vols. each 1 25 Cross and Crescent Series, 3 vols., 16°, Illus Flora Lee Story Books, 6 vols. each Lake Shore Series, 6 vols., Illust., each 1 00 Onward and Upward Series, 6 vols.. Illust., each 1 25 Our Standard Bearer: The Life of Gen. U. S. Grant, Illust. by Nast, 16° 150 Riverdale Stories, 12 v., each. 45 Sailor Boy Series, 3 vols., Illust., each 1 50 Starry Flag Series, t> vols., Illust., each 1 25 Way of the World, 12° 2 00 Woodville Stories, 6 vols., 16°, Illust., each . .. 1 25 Yacht Club Series, 6 vols., 16°, Illust., each 1 50 young America Abroad Se- ries, 12 vols., each 150 Adventures by Sea and Land, 12° 2 00 i. Aikiu, Dr. J. & Mrs. Barbauld. Evenings at Home, 12°, N.Y. 1 50 1 Alcott, Miss L. M. Little Women, 2 vols 3 00 Little Men, 1 vol 1 50 Old Fashioned Girl 1 50 Aunt Jo's Scrap Book, 1 00 Morning Glories 1 50 a. AMi'xh.T. B. SWy of a Bad Boy, 16° 1 50 6. Alger, 11., Jr. Juveniles, 13 vols., per vol. .. 1 25 a. A. L. O. E. (Miss Charlotte Tucker). Juvenile Library, in a wood case $28 00 Amongst Machines, 8° 175 a. Andersen, Hans C. Fairy Tales, 5 vols., 16°, each. 1 25 Wonder Stories, 12° 2 25 Stories and Tales, Illust., 12°. 2 25 a. Arabian Nights (and various other editions) 12° 1 75 a. Auerbach. Little Harefoot 125 Aunt Fanny. [See Barrow.] Aunt Louisa. Nursery Books, with large colored plates, each 2 50 Aunt Mattie's Library, 4 vols., 18° 3 60 Austin. Moonfolk, 8° 1 75 b. Baker, S. W. Cast up by the Sea, 12° 1 50 b. Ballantyne, R. M. Away in the Wilderness, 12°.. 1 75 Coral Island, 12 3 125 Dog Crusoe, 12° 1 25 Fast in the Ice I 25 Fighting the Whales 125 Freaks on the Fells 1 25 Fire Brigade 1 25 Floating Light, 16° 1 50 Gascoyne, 12° 1 25 Gorilla Hunters, 12° 1 25 Martiii Rattler, 12° 1 25 Red Kric, 12° 1 25 Shifting Winds, 12° 1 25 Unerava, 12° 1 25 Wild Man of the West, 12°. . 1 25 World of Ice (The), 12° 1 25 Young Fur Traders, 12° 1 25 Barbauld, Mrs- Things by their Right Names, 18° 75 a. Barrow, Mrs. F. Aunt Fanny's Stories, 6 vols.. 5 00 Night Cap Stories, 6 vols 5 00 Barrows, Rev. W. Twelve Nights in the Hunt- er's Camp, 12° 125 b. Beckoning Series, 3 vols 3 75 Belmont Series, 5 vols., Bost . 6 25 a. Biart, L. Young Naturalist, 12° 1 75 Bowman, Anne. Bear Hunters, 16° 125 Kangaroo Hunters, 15° 1 25 Boy's Globe Library, 3 series each 4 vols., Pliila., per v. . . 1 50 b. Brehat, A. de. Adventures of a Little French Boy 1 50 Buscti, W. Max and Maurice, 12° 1 5» 299 Juveniles. o. Carrol 1 . , Lewis. Alice's Adventure* 9160 Through Looking-Glasa 160 Castlemon, H. Fra li on a Gunboat 126 " on the Lower Mississippi 1 26 u on the Prairies 126 « in the Woods 126 •' The Young Naturalist... 1 26 '' Before Vicksburgh 125 ' among the Rancheros. .. 1 25 ' - at Don Carlos' Kancho. . . 1 26 " in the Mountains 126 Go Ahead; No Moss, each 126 Sportsman* ? Cub in the Sad- dle ; Afloac ; Among the Trappers, 3 vols., each 1 26 Tom Newcombe 1 26 Cecil and His Dog, 16° 1 26 Chambers' Library for Young People, 20 vols.; 2d series, 7 vols., each 75 a. Charleswortli, Miss. Ministering Children, 12° 1 75 Sequel to Ministering Chil- dren, 12° 1 76 Both vols, in one, red line edition 4 00 England's Yeoman, 12° 1 76 Charlotte Elizabeth. [See Ton- Da. j Child, Lydia Maria. Rainbows for Children 150 Children's Album, etc Child's Book of Song & Praise, withMuslc 3 60 Clarke, K. S. (See May, Sophie. ) b. Conant, Mrs. Butterfly Hunters, 16° 1 50 Conrad the Squirrel 126 a. Coolidge. What Katy Did 160 Craigie, M.E. Once Upon a Time, 16° 100 Crossland, Mrs. Memorable Women, 111 us.... 160 Crusoe Library, 6 vols., 12°, ea. 1 6C Cumming, W. G. Wild Men and Beasts 1 60 Dall, Mrs. C. H. Patty Gray's Journey to the i 'otton Islands, 3 v., each. 1 26 Palton, W. Lost Among the Wild Men, 8°, Lond 3*. M. Tiger Prince. 16° 160 Wolf Boy of China, 12° 1 26 a. Dana, P. H. Two Years Before the Mast, 16° 1 60 a. Day, Thos. Sanford & Merton, 16° 1 28 a. De Foe. Robinson Crusoe. 18° 1 60 (And various other edit.) De Mille. J. B. O. W. C, Series, 6 v. 16°, each 1 60 a. Diaz. Mrs. A.M. William Henry Letters, 16° . . 1 60 King's Lily and Hosebud 1 50 a. Dickens. Child Pictures from 1 50 300 Child's Hist, of Eng., 2 v.. Same In 1 vol a. Dodge, M K. Hans B linker's Skates UP N. Y Irvington Stories, 12° N. Y. b. Du Chaillu, P. Travels and Adventures, 4. . . . vols., each Country of Dwarfs, 12°.... a. Edge worth, Miss M. Frank, 2 vols., 18° Harry & Lucy, 2 v. 12° Moral Tales, 2 vols. 18° Parents Assistant, 12° Rosamond, 12° Works complete, 10 vols Edgar. Books for Boys, 5 v. each .... a. Eggleston. The Big Brother,12° Captain Sam, 12° Eiloart. Boy with an Idea, 8°. . Everett, Wm. Changing Base, 16° Double Play, 16° Fairy Book, lllust., 12° Fanning for Boys, 16° Bost. . Forrest, N. Honest and Earnest Farrar. Eric, Julian, etc., 3 v. ea. Fraser Tytler, Ann. Leila on the Island ; at Home. 2 vols. 16° each French Fairy Tales, 12° Friendly hand and kindly words, 16° Frontier Series. Hunter's Camp, etc., 5 v. ea.. Gatty, Mrs. Alice and Adolphus, 16° Aunt Judy's Tales, 16° Parables from Nature, 16° ... . Girl's Own treasure, lllust. 4to Girl's Own Book, 16° a. Golden Treasury Series Book of Golden Deeds Fairy Book Robinson Crusoe Godwin, Mrs. Bright Side Series, 6 vol*.... Goulding, P, K. Marooner's Island Nacoochee Sal-O-Quat Sapelo ' Young Marooners In set 3 vols. J Gray, Ellis. Long ago Grav, Q.Z. The Children's Crusade In 13th Century o. Grace Greenwood. History of my pets Recollections of Childhood.. Stories from Ballads Greenwood, Jax. Little Ragamuffin, 8° pa ... Reuben Davidger, 8° Grimm's Goblins (■ilium's Popular Tales, 12°.. • 1 50 1 OC 2 00 1 60 1 78 1 76 1 60 3 00 1 50 1 50 1 50 15 00 I 20 1 60 1 5« 1 75 1 25 1 26 1 50 1 60 1 00 1 6C 1 25 1 50 It 1 26 90 90 90 2 50 1 00 1 25 1 25 1 25 3 00 8 75 1 50 1 00 1 00 1 00 1 00 50 1 78 1 5C 2 51 The Best Reading. Hale Rev. E. E. How to Do It, 12° Harper's Story Books. By Abbott. illust.. 12 vols. each 90c. and Haven, Alice B. Juveniles, 8 vo'i., 12° a. Hawthorne, N. Tanglewxxl Tales, 16° True Stories 16° Wonder Book, 16°.. *. Hayes I. I. Cast away In the Cold, 16° Heroes of Europe. Illust Holland, Mrs. Affectionate Bros., 18° The Young Crujoe, 18° *. Hooker. Child's Book of Nature, lv. . . Natural History Science for Family, 3 v. ea. . . Hope, A. R. A Book about Boys, 16° Howitt, Mary. Birds and their Nests, 111... . Juveniles, 14 vols Howitt, Win. Boy's Advent in Australia-. . Illustrated Wonder Books, 8 vols. 16° each «. Ingelow, Jean. Mopsa, the Fairy, 16° Poor Mat, or the Clouded Intellect Sister's Bye Hours, 16° Stories told to a Child Jack the Conqueror, 4to John Whopper's Adventures.. Jones, T. It. Animal Creation Johnson. The Roddy Books, 3 vols each Jutland Series, 4v. 12 D , each t. Kellogg, E. Elm Island Stories 6v. 12° each Pleasant Cove Series, 6v. 16° each Whispering Pine Series, 6v. 12° each j Kingsley, Rev. Charles. The Heroes ; or Greek Fairy. The Water Babies I. Kingston, W. H. G. Adrift in a Boat, 16° Adventures of Dick Onslow Among the Islands of the Pa- cific, 12° 2 50 Antony Waymouth At the South Pole, 8°, 5s Cruise of the Frolic, 8° 4s Fred. Markham in Russia, Small 4° 75 Foxholme Hall, 12°, 3s 6d Harry Skipwith, 12°, .... 3s 6d In the Eastern Seas, 12° 2 50 In the Wilds of Africa, 12° 2 50 My First Voyage, 8° 2 00 Off to Sea. 4°' 150 Old Jack. 8° 2 00 On the Banks of the Amazon, 12° 2 50 «1 26 1 75 8 00 1 50 1 50 1 50 1 50 1 50 75 75 2 00 1 50 1 50 1 25 2 00 7 00 1 50 1 00 1 25 1 25 1 25 2 00 75 3 75 1 25 1 50 1 25 1 25 1 25 1 50 1 75 1 25 Peter the Whaler, 12*, Pirate's Treasure, 12°,... Round the World, 12 ' Schoolboy Days, 8°. Washed Ashore, 16 Kirby, M. ft E. Sea and its Wonders. Ill The World at Homa. Ill a. KnatehbulMIugessen. Crackers for Christmas Puss Cat Mew, 12° Moonshine (Fairy Stories).... Prince Perrypets. Tales at Tea Time, each Kuutze, E. J. Mystic Bell, 10° Lauder, Miss S. W. Spectacle Series for Young Eyes, 3 vols., 16° Ledgeside Series, 6 vols., 16°... Leslie, Mrs. M. Minnie and her Pets, 6 vols. III. 18°. Each Library of Adventure. Holiday Adventures Adventures on Ice Pioneers of Civilization Library of Wonders. Lilliput Levee Lectures Little Lives Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe. Little Mother Little Rosy's Travels, small 4° Little Rosy's Voyage of Dis- covery, small 4° Luyster, Miss. Alias Lily's Voyage Round World The Little Gipsy a. Macdonald, Geo. Ranald Bannerman's Boyhood. At the Back- of the North Wind Princess and Goblin Dealings with the Fairies b. Mace. Home Fairy Tales Mouthful of Bread ... Servants of the Stomach a. Mackarness, Mrs. M. A. Cloud with Silver Lining.. Dream Chintz Home on the Rock Merry Christmas Old Jolliffe Sequel to Old Jolliffe. Only a Shilling Star in the Desert — Above in set, 4 vols., 16°. Siberts Wold Sunbeam Stories McKeever, Harriet B. Breakers Ahead Edith's Ministry, 16° Eleanor's Three Birthdays. Flounced Robe Lucy Forester's Triumphs. Marv Leslie's Trials, lt>°... Silver Threads, 12° Westnook Parsonage Woodcliff Children 301 2a 3s 6d 2 50 58 2s 6d 3 00 3 00 1 25 1 25 1 60 I 50 1 00 8 00 7 50 7 50 1 75 1 50 1 50 50 1 25 2 00 2 50 2 60 2 50 3 50 2 50 1 75 2 00 2 DO 1 26 1 75 1 ra 1 75 4 76 76 1 0C 1 00 1 OC 1 5C Juveniles. Mackintosh, Miss M. J. Conquest and Self-Conquest, 18° $ 78 b. Magnet Stories, 4 vols., 16° 5 00 Mann, Mrs. The Flower People 100 Malot, H. Romain Kalbris, his Adven- tures, 12° 2 00 I Manneriug, May. Billy Grimes' Favorite 100 Climbicg the Rope, 16° 1 00 Cruise of the Dashaway, 16°. . 1 00 little Maid of Oxbow, 16° 100 Little Spaniard, 16° 1 00 Salt Water Dick, 16° 100 a. Mart ineau, Harriet. Crofton Boys, etc., 4 vols 5 00 a. Marryat, Capt. P. Children of the New Forest, 12° 126 Masterman Ready. Scenes in ) Africa. Settlers in Canada, \ 2 25 3 vols.. 16° ) Mateaux. Home Chat with our Young Folks 2 50 Max and Maurice- Trans, by Brooks 1 50 a. Mav, Sophie (Miss Clarke) Dotty Dimple Stories, 6 vols. 111., 18°. Each T5 Little Prudy Stories, 6 vols. 111., lo°. Each 75 Little Prady's Flyaway Series, 6 vols., 18°. Each. . 75 Mayhew Bros. Good Genius that Turned Everything to Gold 75 Magic of Kindness 75 a. Mayhew, Hy. Boyhood <>f Martin Luther. ... 1 25 Peasant Boy Philosopher 1 25 Wonders of Science, 16° 1 25 Young Benjamin Franklin, 16° 1 25 The same, tine ed., gilt edge. . 1 50 Men who have made them- selves. Illust 150 "Men who have Risen," Li- brary. eacu 160 Men who have Risen Small Beginnings Steady A Im Ijondon Merchants "Ministering Children" Series, 4 vols 6 00 Meteyard. Doctor's little Daughter 2 00 Miller, Thos. Boy's Book of the Seasons ... 2 00 Morris. Dogs and their Doings 2 00 Mulock, D. M. The Fairy Book, 12°, N. Y.... 150 Adventures of a Brownie 90 Munchausen, Baron, 16° 1 25 Musset. Paul de. Mr. Wind and Madame Rain, square 4° 75 OUphant. Agnes IIo|ietoim'g.Sehoolsand Holidays l 50 802 Ople. Mrs., Works. a. Our Young Folks (monthly) per vol $3 00 Paul Preston's Voyages, etc. ... I 26> Penniman, Maj. The Tanner Boy. life of Grant Pepper. Boy's Play Book of nee 2 00 Boy's Play Book of Metals 2 25 Perilous Incidents, 12° 2 00 a. Phelps, MissE S. Gipsey Breynton Series, 16° 4 vols 5 00 Trotty Book, 4° 1 60 Philip Quarll. a. Picture Gallery of all Nations, Illustrated. 4' 2 60 Pictures of Eng. Hist. 4° 2 60 Pleasure Book of the Year, 4° 2 50 Popular Fairy Tales, 16° 1 25 a. Prentiss, E. Flower of the Family, 16°.... 1 25 The Little Susy Library, 3 vols., lti 3 2 60 The Percys, 16 5 125- Nid worth & Magic Wands, 16° 126 b. Reid, Mavne. Tales of Adventure, 2 series, each 9 00 Tales for Boys First Series, 12 vols., each. .. 1 60 Second Series, 4 vols., each . 1 75 Ritchie. Romance of Hist. — France .. 2 50 Riverside Magazine, Illust., 3 vols., each 3 00 b. Robinson, L. B. The House with Spectacles,16° 125 Rossetti. Sing Song (for Nur- sery) 2 00 Rout ledge. Every Boy's Annual 3 00 Runaway (The) 150 Springdale Stories, 6 vols 4 50 Saxe, J. G. Clever Stories of Many Nations 3 50 Scudder, H. E. Dream Children, etc., 3 vols.. 4 00- a- Sedgwick. Miss ( . M. Boy of Mount Rhigi, 18° 1 25 live and Let Live, 18 5 75 Poor Kich Man and Kiel: Poor Man. 18°.... 75. Love Token 75 Means and Ends, Self-Train- ing 75 Stories for Youth 75 Seven little Sisters, 12° 1 25- Sherwood, Mrs- Whole Works, 16 vols ........ 24 00 Choice Works, Lady Manor, etc., 11 vols 16 60 Smith, Mrs. C. American Home Book, Indoor Games 1 50 Standard Fairy Tales, Illust., IS 8 1 60 b. Stephens, C. A. Camping Out Series, v. 1,1 ('ampins; Out ; t. -, Left on I . .- Labrador : v. ;t, oft* to the f w Geysers, each ) The Best Reading. Stockton. Roundabout Rambles ........ 2 60 Stoddard. Adventures In Fairy Land.. 1 25 Stolz, Mad. de. House on Wheels 126 Story Without an End, 16° 1 25 a. Stowe, Mrs. H. B. Pussy Willow, small 4° 1 60 Queer Little People, small 4° 1 60 Sunshine Series, 6 v., 18° 3 00 Swift. Gulliver's Travels, 111., 16°.. 1 60 a. Swiss Family Robinson 1 60 Tale of a Nest, 12° 160 a. Taylor, Bayard. Boys of Other Countries, 12°.. 1 60 a. Thayer, Wm. Tanner Boy (Lincoln) 1 60 Printer Boy (Franklin) 1 60 Things Worth Knowing 1 00 Thurston, Miss Louise M. Charley Roberts Series, 4 v. 16°, each 1 00 Forest Mills, 16° 80 Tonna, Mrs. The Charlotte Elizabeth Stories,8 vols., 16°. .. 7 20 Townsend, V F. OnlyGirls 160 Treasury of Fairy Stories, Illust 1 75 a. Trowbridge, J. T. Lawrence's Adventures among the Ice - Cutters, Glass-Makers, etc ... 1 50 The Brighthope Series,5 vols., 18° 4 00 Jack Hazard, 16° 150 Tuthill, Mrs. L. C. Tip-top Story Book for Boys, 16°, 3 vols., each 125 Tip-top Story Book for Girls, 3 vols., 1G°, each 125 Tyng, Rev. S. H. The Spencers 1 25 Tytler, Miss. Sweet Counsel for Girls .... 1 60 Uncle Sam Series, 4 vols, paper, col'd, each 60 Vieux Moustache, That Good Old Time, 16°. ...» 1 25 Two Li ves in One, 16° 1 26 a. Warner, Miss. Carl Krinken, 16° 100 Casper, l*)^ .... 100 Hard Maple, 16° 00 Rutherford Children, 16°.... t 09 Sybil and Chryssa, 16° 1 00 A Story of Small Beginnings, 4 vols 5 00 Trading 1 26 Waste Not, Want Not Series, 8 vols., 1C* 2 50 Watts' Songs for Children, Illustrated 2 60 Wells, Mrs. Kate G. In the«Ulearings, 16° 80 What Makes Me Grow, 16° 1 00 a. Whitney, Mrs. Leslie Goldthwaite 17* We Girls, 12° 1 50 Real Folks, 12° 150 Pansies 160 Whittier, J. G. Child Life, Illustrated 3 00 Winter Evening Library, 8 vols 8 00 Wonders, Illust. Library of Electricity : - - the Moon — Sculpture, each 1 60 Women of Worth Library, 4 vol8.,each 150 Wood. The Modern Play- mate. Illust Lond. 4 50 Yonge, Miss C. M. Caged Lion, 12° 1 25 Castle Builders, 12° 100 Countess Kate Richard the Fearless, 16° 75 Six Cushions, 16° 1 0O Book of Golden Deeds 125 Young American's Library of Eminent Statesmen, 6 vols., 16° each 1 26 Young American's Library of Famous Generals, 6 vols., 16° each 1 25 Young Hunter's Library, 111., 4 vols., 12° each 158 303 / PART SECOND. PREPARED BY FRED. B. PERKINS. L READINGS ON READING. H. SUGGESTIONS FOR COURSES OP READING DX ON OWNING BOOKS. IV. HINTS ON BOOK CLUBS. READINGS ON READING L The Duty of Owning Books. BY HENRY WARD BEECHER. We form judgments of men from little things about theii houses, of which the owner, perhaps, never thinks. In earlier years, when travelling in the West, where taverns were scarce, and in some places unknown, and every settler's house was a house of entertainment, it was a matter of some importance and some experience to select wisely where you would put up. And we always looked for flowers. If there were no trees for shade, no patch of flowers in the yard, we were suspicious of the place. But, no matter how rude the cabin or rough the surroundings, if we saw that the window held a little trough for flowers, and that some vines twined about strings let down from the eaves, we were confident that there was some taste and carefulness in the log cabin. In a new country, where people have to tug for a living, no one will take the trouble to rear flowers unless the love of them is pretty strong ; and this taste, blossoming out of plain and uncultivated people, is itself like a clump of harebells grow- ing out of the seams of a rock. We were seldom misled. A patch of flowers came to signify kind people, clean beds, and good bread. But in other states of society other signs are more signifieAJit. Flowers about a rich man's house may signify only that he has 506 THK BEST READING. a good gardener, or that he has refined neighbors, and does what he sees them do. But men are not accustomed to bay books, unless they want them. If, on visiting the dwelling of a man of slender means, we find that he contents himself with cheap carpets and very plain furniture, in order that he may purchase books, he rises at once in our esteem. Books are not made for furniture, but there is nothing else that so beautifully furnishes a house. THE PLA.INE8T BOW OP BOOKS THAT CLOTH OR PAPER EVER COVERED 18 MORE SIGNIFICANT OP REFINEMENT THAN THE MOST ELABORATELY CARVED itagire OR SIDEBOARD. Qive us a house furnished with books rather than furniture . Both, if you can, but books at any rate I To spend several days in a friend's house, and hunger for something to read, while you are treading on costly carpets, and sitting upon luxurious chairs, and sleeping upon down, is as if one were bribing your body for the sake of cheating your mind. Is it not pitiable to see a man growing rich, augmenting the comforts of home, and lavishing money on ostentatious uphol- stery, upon the table, upon everything but what the soul needs 1 We know of many and many a rich man's house where it would not be safe to ask for the commonest English classics. A few garish annuals on the table, a few pictorial monstrosities, together with the stock religious books of his " persuasion," and that is all ! No poets, no essayists, no historians, no travels or biogra- phies, no select fictions, or curious legendary lore. But the wall- paper cost three dollars a roll, and the carpets four dollars a yard ! Books are the windows through which the soul looks out. A home without books is like a room without windows. No man has a right to bring up his children without surrounding them with books, if he has the means to buy them. It is a wrong to his family. He cheats them ! Children learn to read by being in the presence of books. The love of knowledge comes with reading and grows upon it. And the love of knowledge, in a young mind, is almost a warrant against the inferior excitement of passions and vices. Let us pity these poor rich men who live barrenly in great, bookless houses I Let us congratulate the poor that, in our day, books are so cheap that a man may every year add a hundred volumes to his library for the price of what his tobacco and his beer would cost him. Among the earliest ambitions to be excited In clerks, workmen, journeymen, and, indeed, among all that art HEADINGS ON BEADING. Jjy^ struggling up in life from nothing to something, is that of own- ing, and constantly adding to, a library of good books. A little library growing larger every year, is an honorable part of a young man's history. It is a man's duty to have books. A library is not a luxury, but one of the necessaries of life. — " Eye* and Ewn." 12mo. Boston, 1862. II. Value and Pleasure of Books and Reading. Books are the food of youth, the delight of old age ; the orna- ment of prosperity; the refuge and comfort of adversity; a delight at home, and no hindrance abroad ; companions by night, in travelling, in the country. — Cicero. Books are a guide in youth and an entertainment for age They support us under solitude, and keep us from becoming a burden to ourselves. They help us to forget the crossness of men and things, compose our cares and our passions, and lay our disappointments asleep. When we are weary of the living, we may repair to the dead, who have nothing of peevishness, pride, or design in their conversation. It is chiefly through books that we enjoy intercourse with superior minds ; * and these invaluable communications are within the reach of all." — Madame de Oenlis. " the great minds of former ages. The debt which he owes to them is incalculable. They have guided him to truth. They have filled his mind with noble and graceful images. They have stood by him in all vicissitudes ; comforters in sorrow, nurses in sickness, companions in solitude. Their friendships are exposed to no danger from the occurrences by which other attach- ments are weakened or dissolved ; time glides on ; fortune is inconstant ; tempers are soured ; bonds which seemed indissolu- ble are daily sundered by interest, by emulation, or by caprice. But no such cause can affect the silent converse which we hold with the highest of human intellects. That placid intercourse is disturbed by no jealousies or resentments. There are the old friends who are never seen with new faces, who are the same in wealth and in poverty, in glory and in obscurity. With the dead there is no rivalry. In the dead there is no change. Plato is never sullen. Cervantes is never petulant. Demosthenes never comes unseasonably Dante never stays too long. No different 308 THE BEST BEADING. of political opinion can alienate Cicero. No heresy can excite the horror of Bossuet." — Lord Macaulay: Review of Montagu's Bacon. Books ? The only bodies are they, for noble spirits, that have no ailments or annoyances. Books talk to you, not through the ear, but another way. They shout their silent meaning at the soul through the eye. They never importune, and are never reluctant. They are always full without eating. They are still, but never sleep. They grow old without infirmity. They are neither sick nor weary ; they outwatch the watcher, and greet the morning, and wait for the stars at evening. For every other guest we make a couch and spread a table. But strange are the manners of books and pictures, that bring rest to our perturba- tions, and are guests that perform all the offices of hospitality for the host. — H. W. Beecher, " Eyes and Ears," page 397. [Note the coincidence of expression, as well as thought, In the above foor extracts.] It is nearly an axiom, that people will not be better than the books they read. — Dr. A. Potter. It is as important that we should have good books as that we should keep good company, as the one will make the other. — u An Old Bookseller." We cannot linger in the beautiful creations of inventive genius, or pursue the splendid discoveries of modern science, without a new sense of the capacities and dignity of human nature, which naturally leads to a sterner self-respect, to manlier resolves, and higher aspirations. We cannot read the ways of God to man as revealed in the history of nations, of sublime virtues as exempli- fied in the lives of great and good men, without falling into that mood of thoughtful admiration, which, though it be but a tran- sient glow, is a purifying and elevating influence while it lasts. The study of history is especially valuable as an antidote to self exaggeration. It teaches lessons of humility, patience, and sub- mission. When we read of realms smitten with the scourge of famine ut pestilence, or strewn with the bloody ashes of war ; of grass growing in the streets of great cities ; of ships rotting at the wharves ; of fathers burying their sons ; of strong men beg ging their bread ; of fields untitled, and silent workshops, and despairing countenances, — we hear a voice "f rebuke to our own HEADINGS OK BEADING. 30& clamorous sorrows and peevish complaints. We learn that pain and suffering and disappointment are a part of God's providence, and that no contract was ever yet made with man by which virtus should secure to him temporal happiness. In books, be it remembered, we have the best products of the best minds. We should any of us esteem it a great privilege to pass an evening with Shakespeare or Bacon, were such a thing possible. But, were we admitted to the presence of one of these illustrious men, we might find him touched with infirmity, or op- pressed with weariness, or darkened with the shadow of a recent trouble, or absorbed by intrusive and tyrannous thoughts. To us the oracle might be dumb, and the light eclipsed. But, when we take down one of their volumes, we run no such risk. Here we have their best thoughts embalmed in their best words ; im- mortal flowers of poetry, wet with Castalian dews, and the golden fruit of wisdom that had long ripened on the bough before it was gathered. Here we find the growth of the choicest seasons of the mind, when mortal cares were forgotten, and mortal weaknesses were subdued ; and the soul, stripped of its vanities and its pas- sions, lay bare to the finest effluences of truth and beauty. We may be sure that Shakespeare never out-talked his Hamlet, nor Bacon his Essays. Great writers are indeed best known through their books. How little, for instance, do we know of the life of Shakespeare ; but how much do we know of him I . For the knowledge that comes from books, I would claim no more than it is fairly entitled to. I am well aware that there is no inevitable connection between intellectual cultivation, on the one hand, and individual virtue or social well-being, on the other. " The tree of knowledge is not the tree of life." I admit that genius and learning are sometimes found in combination with gross vices, and not unf requently with contemptible weaknesses ; and that a community at once cultivated and corrupt is no impos- sible monster. But it is no overstatement to say, that, other things being equal, the man who has the greatest amount of intellectual resources is in the least danger from inferior temptations, — if for no other reason, because he has fewer idle moments. The ruin of most men dates from some vacant hour. Occupation is the armor of the soul ; and the train of Idleness is borne up by all the vices. I remember a satirical poem, in which the Devil is represented as fishing for men, and adapting his baits to the taste and temperament of his prey ; but the idler, he said, pleased him most, because he bit the naked hook. To a young man away 31C THE BEST READING. from home, friendless and forlorn in a great city* the hoars ol peril are those between sunset and bedtime ; for the moon and stars see more of evil in a single hour than the sun in his whole day's circuit. The poet's visions of evening are all compact 01 tender and soothing images. It brings the wanderer to his home, the child to his mother's arms, the ox to his stall, and the weary laborer to his rest. But to the gentle-hearted youth who is thrown upon the rocks of a pitiless city, and stands, " homeless amid a thousand homes," the approach of evening brings with it an ach- ing sense of loneliness and desolation, which comes down upon the spirit like darkness upon the earth. In this mood his best im- pulses become a snare to him ; and he is led astray because he is social, affectionate, sympathetic, and warm-hearted. If there be a young man thus circumstanced within the sound of my voice, let me say to him, that books are the friends of the friendless, and that a library is the home of the homeless. A taste for read- ing will always carry you into the best possible company, and enable you to converse with men who will instruct you by their wisdom, and charm you by their wit ; who will soothe you when fretted, refresh you when weary, counsel you when perplexed, and sympathize with you at all times. — George S. HUlard. If I were to pray for a taste which should stand me in stead under every variety of circumstances, and be a source of happi- ness and cheerfulness to me through life, and a shield against its Ills, however things might go amiss, and the world frown upon me, it would be a taste for reading. . . . Give a man this taste, and the means of gratifying it, and you can hardly fail of making a happy man, unless, indeed, you put into his hands a most perverse selection of books. You place him in contact with the best society in every period of history — with the wisest, the wittiest, the tenderest, the bravest, and the purest characters who have adorned humanity. You make him a denizen of all nations, a cotemporary of all ages. — Sir J. Herschel. Employ your time in improving yourself by other men's docu- ments ; so shall you come easily by what others have labored hard for. Prefer knowledge to wealth ; for the one is transitory the other perpetual. — Socrates. He that will inquire out the best books in every science, and Inform himself of the most material authors of the several act* I READINGS ON READING. 311 of philosophy and religion, will not find it an infinite work to acquaint himself with the sentiments of mankind concerning the most weighty and comprehensive subjects. — Locke. Beading maketh a full man. — Bacon. Bead, and you will know. — Mrs. Jones. TBEASUBES OP LIBBABIES. My days among the dead are passed ; Around me I behold, Where'er these casual eyes are cast, The mighty minds of old : My never-failing friends are they, With whom I converse day by day With them I take delight in weal, And seek relief in woe ; And while I understand and feel How much to them I owe, My cheeks have often been bedewed With tears of thoughtful gratitude. My thoughts are with the dead ; with them I live in long-past years ; Their virtues love, their faults condemn, Partake their hopes and fears, And from their lessons seek and find Instruction with a humble mind. My hopes are with the dead ; anon My place with them will be, And I with tliem shall travel on Through all futurity ; Yet leaving here a name, I trust, That will not perish in the dust. — Southey. I no sooner come into the library, but I bolt the door to me, ex- cluding Lust, Ambition, Avarice, and all such vices, whose nurse is Idleness, the mother of Ignorance and Melancholy. In the very lap of eternity, among so many divine souls, I take my seat with so lofty a spirit, and sweet content, that I pity all that know not this happiness. — Heinsiu*. 312 THE BEST READING A book is good company. It is full of conversation without loquacity. It comes to your longing with full instruction, but pursues you never. It is not offended at your absent-mindedness, nor jealous if you turn to other pleasures, of leaf, or dress, or mineral, or even of books. It silently serves the soul without recompense, not even for the hire of love. And yet more noble, it seems to pass from itself, and to enter the memory and to hover in a silvery transformation there, until the outward book is but a body and its soul and spirit are flown to you, and possess your memory like a spirit. And while some books, like steps, are left behind us by the very help which they yield us, and serve only our childhood or early life, some others go with us, in mute fidelity, to the end of life, a recreation for fatigue, an instruction for our sober hours, and a solace for our sickness or sorrow. Ex- cept the great out-doors, nothing that has no life of its own gives bo much life to you. — H. W. Beecher, " Eyes and Ears," •*. 892, 8. No such treasure as a library. — Whitlock. Books are yours, Within whose silent chambers treasure lies Preserved from age to age; more precious far Than that accumulated store of gold And orient gems, which, for a day of need, The Sultan hides deep in ancestral tombs. These hoards of truth you can unlock at will. — Wordsworth. Dreams, books, are each a world ; and books, we know, Are a substantial world, both pure and good ; Round these, with tendrils strong as flesh and olood, Our pastime and our happiness will grow. — Wordsworth : Personal Talk, 56. 1. Books make up no small part of human happiness. — Frederie the Great, in youth. My latest passion will be for literature. — Frederic the Great, in old age. For books are not absolutely dead things, but do contain ft progeny of life in them as active as that soul whose progeny READINGS ON READING. 313 they are ; nay, they do preserve, as in a vial, the purest efficacy and extraction of that living intellect that hred them. — Milton : Arcopagitica. As good almost kill a man as kill a good hook : who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image ; but he who destroys a good book kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were, in the eye. — Same. Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much ; Wisdom is humble that he knows no more. Books are not seldom talismans and spells. — Cowper : Task, ok. vi. line 96. Of the things which man can do or make here below, by far the most momentous, wonderful, and worthy, are the things we call books. — Carlyle. Every great book is an action, and every great action 1b a book. — LutTier. Nothing can supply the place of books. — Ghanning. A book's a book although there's nothing in't. — Lord Byron. Nothing is more delightful than to lie under a tree, in the summer, with a book, except to lie under a tree, in the summer, without a book. — G. J. Fox. III. How to Read Books. The substance op Bishop Potter's "Cautions and Coun- sels," prom his " Handbook for Readers and Students," New York, 1843. 1. Always have some useful and pleasant book ready to take up in " odd ends " of time. 2. Be not alarmed because so many books are recommended. 8. Do not attempt to read much or fast. 4. Do not be so enslaved by any system or course of study, as to think it may not be altered. 5. Beware, on the other hand, of frequent changes in youi plan of study. 314 THE BEST READING. 6. Read always the best and most recent book on the subject which you wish to investigate 7. Study subjects rather than books. 8. Seek opportunities to write and converse on subjects about which you read. 9. Refer what you read to the general head under which it belongs; if a fact, to the principle involved; if % principle, to the facts which follow. 10. Try to use your knowledge in practice. 11. Keep your knowledge at command, by reviewing it as much as you can. 12. Dare to be ignorant of many things. Tbere is no business, no avocation whatever, which will not permit a man, who has an inclination, to give a little time, every day, to the studies of his youth. — Wytteiibach. Nothing, in truth, has such a tendency to weaken, not only the powers of invention, but the intellectual powers in general, as a habit of extensive and various reading without reflection. The activity and force of mind are gradually impaired in conse- quence of disuse ; and, not unf requently, all our principles and opinions come to be lost in the infinite multiplicity and discor- dancy of our acquired ideas. — Dugald Stewart. Books have brought some men to knowledge, and some to madness. As fullness sometimes hurteth the stomach more than hunger, so fareth it with wits, and, as of meats, so, likewise, of books, the use ought to be limited according to the quality of him that useth them. — Petrarch : Twyne's tr., 1579,/. 62. Books cannot always please, however good ; Minds are not ever craving for their food. Orabbe : The Borough, Letter xxiv. : School*. Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested ; that is, some books are to be read only in parts ; others to be read, but not curiously ; and some few to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention. — Lord Bacon. READINGS ON HEADING 315 Histories make men wise ; poets, witty ; the mathematics, sub- tile ; natural philosophy, deep ; morals, grave ; logic and rhetoric, able to contend. — Same. Head, not to contradict and confute, nor to believe and take for granted, nor find talk and discourse, but to weigh and consider. — Same. How should we read? First, thoughtfully and critically ; secondly, in company with a friend, or your family ; thirdly, re peatedly ; fourthly, with pen in hand. — Dr. A. Potter. Study subjects rather than books: therefore, compare different authors on the same subjects ; the statements of authors, with information collected from other sources ; and the conclusions drawn by a writer, with the rules of sound logic. — Same. All who would study with advantage, in any art whatsoever, ought to betake themselves to the reading of some sure and cer- tain books oftentimes over ; for to read many books produceth confusion, rather than learning, like as those who dwell every- where are not anywhere at home. — Luther : Table-Talk. Those who have read of everything are thought to understand everything too ; but it is not always so. Reading furnishes the mind only with materials of knowledge ; it is thinking that makes what we read ours. We are of the ruminating kind, and it is not enough to cram ourselves with a great load of collections ; unless we chew them over again, they will not give us strength and nourishment. — Locke. The thoughts of our deliberation are most accurate ; Jiese we vent into our papers. What a happiness it is, that without all offence of necromancy, I may here call up any of the ancient worthies of learning, whether human or divine, and confer with them of all my doubts ! that I can at pleasure summon whole synods of reverend Fathers and acute doctors from all the coasts of the earth, to give their well-studied judgments in all points of question which I propose ! Neither can I cast my eye casually upon any of these silent masters but I must learn somewhat. No law binds us to read all ; but the more we can take in and digest the better-likins: must the mind needs be. — Bishop Hall. 316 THE BEST BEADING. — who reads Incessantly, and to his reading brings not A spirit and judgment equal or superior, Uncertain and unsettled still remains, Deep versed in books, but shallow in himself. — MUton : Paradise Regained. To call him well read who reads many authors is improper.— Bhaftetbwry. As concerns the quantity of what is to be read there is a single rule, — Bead much, but not many works (multum non inulta). — Sir W. Hamilton. Multum legendum esse non multa. — Quintilian. In reading authors, when you find Bright passages that strike your mind, And which, perhaps, you may have reason To think on at another season, Be not contented with the sight, But take them down in black and white. Such a respect is wisely shown As makes another's sense one's own. IV. How to Choose Books. Under our present enormous accumulation of books, I do affirm that a most miserable distraction of choice must be very generally incident to the times ; that the symptoms of it are in fact very prevalent, and that one of the chief symptoms is an enormous " gluttonism" for books. — De Quineey. A wise man can sooner gather gold out of the drossiest vol- ume than a fool wisdom out of Scripture. — MUton. Non refert quam multos libros sed quam honor habeas.— Btneea. READINGS ON HEADING. 317 For out of the old fieldes, as men saithe, Cometh al this new come fro yere to yere, And out of old bookes, in good faithe, Cometh al this new science that men lere. — Chaucer : Assembly of Foules, 1. 23. Old wood to burn ! Old wine to drink ! Old friends to trust I Old books to read ! — Alonzo of Aragon Books that you may carry to the fire and hold readily in youi hand are the most useful, after all. — Johnson. We ought to regard books as we do sweetmeats, not wholly to aim at the pleasantest, but chiefly to respect the wholesomest ; not forbidding either, but approving the latter most. — Plutarch, as quoted by FeUtham. A love of books can be acquired only by those who find pleasure in using them ; and hence, whoever would cultivate in himself or others this most desirable taste, should select, especially at first, such works as can be read with sustained and quickened attention. — Dr. Patter. Blessings be with them, and eternal praise, Who gave us nobler loves, and nobler cares, The Poets, who on earth have made us heirs Of truth and pure delight by heavenly lays ! (See further of it.) — Wordsworth : Personal Talk, at. 4. The novel, in its best form, I regard as one of the most powei- ful engines of civilization ever invented. — Sir J. Herschel. Novels are sweets. All people with healthy literary appetites love them — almost all women ; a vast number of clever, hard- headed men. Judges, bishops, chancellors, mathematicians, are notorious novel-readers, as well as young boys and sweet girls, and their kind, tender mothers. — Thackeray : Roundabout Papers. 318 THE BEST READING. Book-Buying. In starting a library, select from the accompanying list fifty, or a hundred, or more, volumes, and take your list to some re- sponsible bookseller, and he will fill it for you at a fair discount from the retail prices ; he can, of course, and will, furnish the whole list cheaper than he could by a single volume at a time. Then, by all means, keep an open account with him, and in the course of your reading, when you come across some volume you want, or some fact that should be hunted up, make a note of it, and procure the volume. A book read at the time your interest is excited will possess not only double its interest, but the facts It contains will be much more firmly impressed upon the mind. An account at your bookseller's is one that you should take pride in maintaining, in making it as large as your means will allow, and in paying promptly and willingly when due. Never buy books published in numbers; it is the most ex- pensive form, because the same book can generally be had bound, when finished, for the same price as published at in numbers ; be- cause, also, numbers will get lost and have to be replaced, at the additional cost ; or they will get torn or soiled ; and often, when sent to the binder's, they are returned bound in an unsatisfactory manner. — " An Old Bookseller." READING AHD COURSES OF EEADING BY FRED. B. PERKINS. Twenty thousand editions of books had issued from the press before the year 1500. In one public library (the Bibliotheque Imp6riale of Paris) there were, in 1858, it was claimed, only 142,000 volumes short of two million printed books, besides 86,000 MSS. A single separate collection of pamphlets in the British Museum about the English Rebellion only, contains 40,000 publications. Probably not less than 25,000 new books appear every year now. This does not include periodicals or news- papers. Now, an able and experienced old reader of the hard- going sort, Lenglet du Fresnoy, made a calculation that convinced him that nobody could read more than 900 folio volumes in a life-time. Roughly, this would allow 2,700 quartos, 8,100 octavos, and about 16,000 duodeci- mos — so that your life is gone in reading eight months* books — two-thirds the present annual reinforcement to literature of books alone. To keep up, alone, would require the reading of about sixty-eight volumes a day, without allowing for reading up such arrears as the classics, etc. 9 It is obvious enough, therefore, that any one who desires to read, or to buy books to the best advantage, will need to select with all the care and judgment he can muster, both within himself, or from friends, or paid experts. Is reading your most useful mental employment, after all ? There are speakers to hear ; conversation and de- 320 THE BEST READING. bate to maintain ; thinking of your own to elaborate. Are not there more real and profitable mental activities ; and is not reading rather to be made a last resort, when these are not practicable ? Plausible arguments may be found in favor of those suggestions, but weighty ones against them. Careful and thorough thinking to the utmost of our .ability should underlie and accompany the hearing of a speaker, conversation, debate and reading. Thinking — that is, the pursuit and attainment of truth on whatever subjects are before us — is indeed the object of them all. They are all useless without it, and entirely subordinate to it, except, of course, the case of mere amusement. Now, Reading is the best means of nourishing Thought. Oratory, on the other hand, is the worst, since it depends on moving the feelings, which disturb the reason. And even if the hearer can keep his feelings untouched, yet he may not object nor question. He is to sit unresisting, and drink in whatever is put down his throat. This is well enough for young robins and babies, but it is a ludicrous way of dieting for a grown man — for an en- lightened mind. Debating and conversation are better discipline than oratory, since they allow a comparison of views. Conversation especially, and most of all that form of it so highly prized by open minds, where one can resort to some wise friend and ask questions, and discuss them, is extremely useful. It is greatly superior to de- bate in this, that it is not so liable to excitements of the external sort, such as anger, desire to win, or desire to show off. But if only one of these kinds of mental exercise might be had, it should be books, books, books, a thou- sand times to one. Compared with books, public speak- ing is a war-dance, conversation a beating bushes for wild fruit ; well enough for savages and strays, but hav- KKADlNtt AND COURSES OF READING. 321 ing small place or power in the discipline of a cultured mind. And accordingly we find that they have been valued most when there were few books or no books, and that as books have multiplied and reading has become general, they have fallen from the rank of great civic and philosophic engineries, to mere accomplishments and public shows. To-day, it is Reading that furnishes both news and knowledge to the people at large, and that determines their opinions and their action. Con- versation is a meagre appendix to the use of books, periodicals, and newspapers, and seldom much besides a retailing of what they have furnished. Oratory exists only in the sermon, which is substantially assented to beforehand ; the political speech, which is more for amusement than for instruction ; and the lecture, which is for nothing but amusement. What shall I read ? Shall I pursue a general course ? Or shall I work at some department of knowledge ex- clusively ? What book shall I begin with ? What books shall I go on with ? Answer : Do you want to read as work or as relax- ation ? for accomplishment, or for knowledge ? What do you know already ? What have you read already ? The answer is only another question, for the questions supposed — they are the usual ones — could not be an- swered otherwise. They are like the well-known queries : How long is a string ? How much does a horse cost ? There are a great many people for whom the profundities of Tupper and Titcomb are the solidest reading that can be endured, and Southworth is splendid ! There are others who want Plato in the Greek and Kant in the German ; who, like Queen Caroline, take Butler's Analogy for their lisxht reading. I beg pardon ; that is not abreast 322 THE BEST READING with the Spirit of the Age. I ought to say, who read the Vedic hymns in the original Sanscrit for amusement; and decipher inscriptions in the arrow-headed character when they have five minutes* leisure, or as they ride in the street-care. Among the gayly variegated mosaic stuff" that con- stitutes a certain well-known pavement, I suppose there are as many Courses of Reading as good resolutions of any other kind. Perhaps as good a rule as any to begin reading with is : Don't pursue a course of reading. Or, rather, don't try to ; there's very little danger that you will. And yet it is very agreeable to sit down and plan out a full and rounded series of noble books, which shall train the mind into strength and swiftness and beauty. There is something extremely attractive, for instance, in the conception of a series of masterpieces, or Monumental Course of Reading, which shall acquaint the student with the great thoughts of the great men in historic order, and thus set before him a history of mankind in its noblest representations. Thus, for instance : [Filled out with a few titles in parentheses, as being either out of chronological order, or as connectives, etc. Translations are always meant, of non-Englisb books. Epithets and estimates are taken for granted.j First seize a few pictures of the pre-historio civiliza- tions, executed in the modern manner ; by reading Raw- linson's Five Great Monarchies and Wilkinson's Ancient Egyptians. This background laid in, read Bryant's Homer, and, along with it, dictionary- wise, Gladstone's Juventus Mundi. Follow with Greek historians: Hero- dotus (Rawlinson's), Thucydides, Xenophon's Anabasis. Now add the leading Greek philosophies of mind and action ; the Ethics and Politics of Aristotle, Plato's Dia- logues (Jowett's), and Xenophon's Memorabilia. Supple- READINGS AND COURSES OF READING. 323 uieift with Grote's Plato and the Companions of Socra- tes. Add the greatest Greek dramatists and an orator: iEschylus, Sophocles, Euripides ; Ai-istophanes, most wonderful of all; and Demosthenes. Then read Plu- tarch's Lives. Lastly, round up and vivify your knowl- edge of the Greek nation, and spirit by reading Grote's magnificent History of Greece. Next comes Rome. Read of the historians, Livy, Sal- lust. Caesar, Tacitus; of poets, Virgil (Conington's), Horace (Francis' or Martin's, or both) ; for oratory, philoso- phy, and belles-lettres, Cicero's writings. Supplement Greek and Roman antiquity together with Becker's Charicles, and his Gallus ; then revise and solidify your Rome by reading Mommsen, as Grote for Greece. But you will find it, though good, far inferior to Grote. Now comes the transition from heathen to Christi:. history. Read Gibbon's Decline and Fall. To keep your balance against the often denounced innuendoes of Mr. Gibbon, don't quiddle with the goody little notes to Gibbon, by Milman and others, but having let Gibbon poison you as much as he can — he won't hurt you if you have much intellect of your own — turn away and master at once the right side of the main question of Christ in History, by a thorough study and mental appropriation of Home's Introduction to the study of the Sacred Scrip- tures. I mean not the obsolete old edition, still obsti- nately and improperly kept in the American market to the exclusion of the proper one, but the last edition, with Home's own latest revisions, and with the addition, by first-class evangelical English scholars, of all the recent learning on the subject. No man of sound mind, having mastered Home, will ever be materially troubled by such little snips and sneers as Gibbon's, or by any othei attempt to destroy the historical argument for the sub- etantial truth of the Bible. 324 THK BEST READING. To further familiarize yourself with this great turning* point in the history of mankind, read Augustine's Con- fessions, and his City of God, as specimens of the best effects of the new religion upon a fervid and powerful and noble nature. Add for completeness Milman's First Three Centuries of the Christian Church, Merivale's Conversion of the Roman Empire, and his Conversion of the Northern Nations. Now, grasp at once the beginnings of modern history, by reading carefully Hallam's Middle Ages and Guizot's History of Civilization. Turn back a moment and sur- render yourself to one of the latest phases of heathen romance, in reading the Nibelungen Lied. (If you like to add a prose romance of the same key, but having also the transition to Christianity in it, read Fouque's Thio- dolf the Icelander.) Now, for two narrower pictures, yet full of bright, sharp drawing and character, read Thierry's Merovingians, and his Norman Conquest. Add Froissart ; for the chivalric romances, read Morte d' Arthur and Amadis de Gaul ; and for the times of the Crusades, take (history quite as much as romance) Ivan- hoe, The Talisman, and Quentin Durward. ■» Next comes the Great Awakening of the 15th Century. Yet Dante belongs earlier. Read, then, Dante (Long- fellow's) ; after him Ariosto (Rose's), and Tasso (Wif- fen's). (Now take d'Aubigne's spirited and graphio History of the Reformation, and follow it with Schiller's Thirty Years' War, and you have the transition from Catholic Europe to the Catholic-Protestant Europe of to-day For glimpses into ways of thought and speech, read Luther's Table-Talk ; and to fill out the whole with its immense and indispensable Fine Art portion, read Eastlake and Kugler's Hand-Books.) As the Nibelun- gen Lied marked in some sense a close of heathen national epios, so now read Don Quixote, to mark the READINGS AND COUBSK8 OP REAUINU. 325 extinction of the romance of chivalry. Follow it with Gil Bias, which establishes the transition to the earliest period of modern Fiction Proper, viz., the string-of-ad- ventures and character novel. (To fill out the historical impressions of that imperial time, read Prescott's Fer- dinand and Isabella, Philip II., Mexico and Peru, and Motley's Dutch Republic and United Netherlands.) Cross the channel, and come into the splendid blaze of the Elizabethan period. But it will bear, and, indeed, requires, ample introduction. This is the place to ascer- tain your views of English History ; you may come down well past it in that department, and then, returning, set your Elizabethan jewels all tbe more distinctly in the middle of the broad field. Read, therefore, Hume and Macaulay. Then take Hallam and May's Constitutional History ; add Blackstone's Commentaries, and De Lolme on the Constitution, because English history and English law are peculiarly interwoven. (To give breadth to your views, add also, here, Maine's two valuable works on Ancient Law, and on Municipal or Village Law in the East and West.) Now return to Queen Elizabeth. Specimens must do. So read Shakespeare (White's, if you can afford it; if not, any you can. Shakespeare can be bought almost as cheap as the Bible) ; Spenser, and Bacon, and Montaigne. Miss Aikin's Court and Times of Queen Elizabeth is picturesque and comprehensive for the general reader. Step forward two generations. Read Clarendon's His- tory of the Rebellion, Carlyle's Cromwell, Milton's Prose Works, and Forster's Statesmen of the Commonwealth. The Diaries of Evelyn and Pepys are instructive pictures of the times of Charles II. Then read Milton's Poetry, Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, and Holy War ; Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici and Urn-Burial, and (if jou can) Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy. Selden's Table-Talk 326 THE BEST READING. also belongs here ; you can read that, or else you have no business with this list. (For the state of things on the Continent, read Schiller's Thirty Years' War.) The Restoration and the Revolution of 1688 have been dealt with already in your historical reading, prefatory to the Elizabethan period. Omit, therefore, the war and politics of that stirring time, and consider next the lit- erary activity of the reign of Louis XIV. in France, and of Queen Anne in England. Read Corneille, Racine, and Moliere ; the Thoughts and Provincial Letters of Pascal ; the Letters of Madame de Sevigne" ; and — though he belongs a little later — the Maxims of La Rochefou- cauld. Read also the philosophical works of Locke, and those of Descartes. Then, for Queen Anne's time, read Swift, Addison, and Pope. (The writings of Bolingbroke might be added, and a notion of Marlborough may be obtained from Alison's Life.) We rapidly approach the modernest times, and to-day. After the wars of Queen Anne, the next historical epoch is that of the wars of Frederic the Great, of whom read Carlyle's Life. In the latter half of the century a slow, silent victory, yet greater than Prague or Rosbach, was won by Kant, whose Critique of Pure Reason and Meta- physics of Ethics should be read. Read also the first of human biographies, written by one of the last of men, Boswell's Johnson ; and Burke's Speeches, and Sheri- dan's Comedies, and Goldsmith's Works. Continue the philosophical strand of your cord, with Stewart, Brown, and Reid. Now prepare for the splitting off of the American Col- onies into an independent historical career. Read the Federalist, to show what the men meant who founded our polity, and De Tocqueville's Democracy in America, for a marvellous and only not prophetio exposition of what their purpose turned out to be. (While you are READINGS AND COURSES JF READING. &1&7 about it, shape our own history at once by reading Ban- croft's mammoth preparation to begin our history, and Hildreth's dense and full annals.) Make a backward step for France. Read De Tocque- ville's Ancient R6gime, to show you why the French Rev- olution broke out ; and then Thiers and Carlyle, to show what it did. Follow with Thiers' Consulate and Empire; read Napier's Peninsular War, a wonderfully clear and vigorous narrative of the military achievements which were the real entering wedge toward Napoleon's down- fall ; and avoid Scott's Life and Abbott's Life of Napo- leon. For German literature in these days, read Goethe (Taylor's Faust, the rest of his works as you can get them) ; Schiller — I mean both the Works and the Life of both. Then take up the literary harvest of England in the first part of this century. Read Scott's Works, and Lock- hart's Scott ; Byron, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, and Shelley ; and read after the writings of each a biography of each. Read also Lamb'j Writings, and those of Thomas de Quincey. Then opens out the vast arena of the present epoch, with its innumerable writers and its numerous entirely new departments of investigation. There is a sufficient conventional excuse for not venturing to even attempt to blaze out a path through such a crowded and luxuriant- forest. Yet, let the notice be ventured that the present age is notable most of all for advances in science, and what is closely related thereto: and (in belles-lettres), for prose fiction. I barely name Humboldt's Cosmos, Dar- win's Origin of Species and Descent of Man, Sir William Hamilton's Metaphysics and Logic, the writings of Her bert Spencer, Charles Dickens, W. M. Thackeray, and Nathaniel Hawthorne. As for all the rest, any one who has read according to this series down to this point, or 328 THK BEST READING. half-way down to it, with fair abilities and steady, care- ful attention, is by that time better able to choose both departments and authors for himself than I or any other guide. Then please to consider what a store of deep and broad and noble and beautiful thoughts, what a wide range of classes of literature, what a vast mass of facts, the knowledge of that series of books implies; and yet it is a pretty short " Course of Reading," as courses of reading go. But I will not say I recommend it. I will say that I would dearly love to begin at the beginning of it this very day, and go straight through to the end. Now I shall steal a little from Mr. Hale's " How to 1)0 it." His suggestion about courses of reading is, to know, first, the Bible (I take that for granted, observe). Second, the history of your own country, pretty well ; of your own State, better ; of your own town best of all. Third (for Americans), " a clear knowledge of the general features of the history of England." Fourth, most of Shakespeare's plays. Beyond this, says Mr. Hale, to begin with, make up your mind what you want to read about : Mary Queen of Scots, fly-fishing, hiero- glyphics, the Tenure of Office Bill, anything. Having reached this point, Mr. Hale's doctrine becomes both a Course of Reading and a Method of Reading. Take a blank book, he says, note down the chief significant words in the passage that you have read, on your chosen subject (he takes it for granted that you have read some- thing) ; and then rummage and search for more reading about the subject itself, or about the collateral subjects named by the entries in your blank-book. If any of these are debated subjects, read on both sides. Use Poole's Index to follow your subjects into the periodicals READINGS AND COURSES OF READING. 329 from 1802 to 1852, where that work ends. As fast as yon determine dates or other facts about your subjects, note them each under its proper word in your blank book. Note there, also, any authorities you find named. This way of searching and recording will branch out as fast and as far as anybody will pursue it. Some of Dr. Potter's shrewd " Cautions and Counsels" are quoted in our "Readings on Reading." Here are Mr. Emerson's three rules. They are not rules for select- ing a course of reading, but rules for not reading some kinds of books. 1. Never read any book that is not a year old. 2. Never read any but famed books. 3. Never read any books but what you like. Now I have not one word to say against those rules ; indeed, with a trifling addition, I adopt them as part of my system. This addition consists in appending to each rule the words " unless you choose." And last of all, Mr. Horace Greeley, in the New York Ledger^ comes and tells us what he knows about reading. First, he says, be where there are good books ; though how he reconciles this with his other advice to go west and buy a farm, I do not know. But if there are none, he says, ten dollars a year will get them. Begin with Chemistry, Geology, and Botany, and devote a year to each. " Obtain the best text-book of each as a founda- tion." Read slowly and thoughtfully; if you do not master the book at the first time, read it again, and so on. If puzzled, stop and work at the place till you under- stand it. Next, give a little time to Geography and Astronomy. After Science, read History ; then Biogra- phy. Poetry and Philosophy come last. Well — that course, also, I recommend not to pursue. If anything could be more hopeless, or more totally out of sight of the present methods of learning the physical 330 THE BEST READUHJ. sciences, than to read one year in books, I don't know what it is. Mr. Greeley might just as well recommend his customers to learn editing, or farming, by reading one year in a book, and stopping short at every puzzle until it is solved. It would not be very long before his constituency of readers would be every mother's son of them hanging motionless each at his puzzle, "silent, upon a peak in Darien," or just as far off from anything useful I shall close this " Course of Reading" discussion by one more outline of a course. It will at once be objected to, that it is not literature at all. So be it ; but it has the merit of recommending reading that will not do harm, and that will do good ; and that does not require Mr. Greeley's $10 a year, though it would admit of the use of much more ; and lastly, it affords a great breadth of reading that people will read, and more people, too, than can be induced to read anything else. COURSE. 1. Subscribe for a year, paying each in advance, to a weekly paper, secular rather than religious, which gives a great and varied breadth of news. If you absolutely must have stories, take also, not instead, a weekly story paper. The two which I recommend for this purpose are, The New York Weekly Tribune, and The New York Ledger. Take others if you prefer. 2. Read the former of these regularly and carefully ; keep up with the current of events, so as to observe the succession of causes and effects, and new discoveries and suggestions in the history that every day is bringing to pass before you. In this age of telegraphs and steam, we may know the world as well as the village. 3. When you come to anything that puzzles you, don't ■top and work at it — that is, more than a little while ; but go and find somebody or something that will explaifi HE AD IN OS AND COUBSES OF READING. 331 it. Whether it is the name of some public man whose previous career you want to know, or the name of a country, or of a metal, or a machine, or a party, or a philosophy, or a principle that you are not sufficiently well informed about, makes little difference. Fix deliber- ately on it, whatever it is, and then set to work to find out about it. Ask your father and mother. Get them to tell you about the person or thing, or to tell you where to read about it. Ask your employer ; ask other people in the shop ; I mean, always, so far as your acquaintance justifies you in asking. Ask the school-master or the school-mistress ; ask the minister. If you find that there i's a book to be read, and that you can with propriety borrow it, borrow; get it from a library if you can. And always, if there is a circulating library, or anything of that sort, belong to it. You will find, a little further on, how to make one that will do very well. If you find that there is nothing to be had about that subject, take another. 4. Having begun thus, there is no end. Before you have acquainted yourself with one thing, a hundred more will turn up. Tour difficulty will be to exclude things that you want to read about. For this I recommend a moderate degree of persistence, but not too exclusive de- votion to any one subject. That is, unless you come upon one that you particularly enjoy. Devote yourself to just as complete an acquaintance with that as you please. If you should even plan to master all that is known of it and then to carry human knowledge further in that direction, it is a noble and hopeful ambition. But you will be astonished to find how much has been put in books about most things. 5. For recording your knowledge, Mr. Hale's plan will do very well. Begin with a small blank-book. You are much more likely to fill first a small one and then a 332 THE BEST READING. large one, than a large one first. And if you fill neither, the small one wastes less. I do not recommend Todd's Index Reram. Now comes the question, How to read ? I refer again to Bishop Potter's " Cautions and Counsels," for hints. Mr. Hale says the first rules are : " Do not read too much at a time ; stop when you are tired ; and, in what- ever way, make some review of what you read, even as you go along." The handiest way to do this is, when you have got through with any separate step in the argu- ment or separate statement or division of the book, to look off it and say over to yourself in careful words — not mere indistinct thoughts, but framed sentences — the sub- stance of that step or statement or division. Do the same for the chapters or larger divisions. And do the same with the book itself at last. If the book belongs to you (this is a suggestion of Mr. Hale's, and a habit of my own, too), whenever you come to something whose place you want to remember, note the page in pencil on a blank leaf at the end of the book, and one or two words to remind you what the subject is. Choose these words carefully. These are plain hints; they are better than a more complex system ; if any peculiar modes of your own sug- gest themselves, try them ; one's own devices are often the best for such things. ^ It is very often useful to read what the printers call the "front matter;" that is, the title-page, preface, or introduction, and table of contents. In reading the lat- ter take, first, the main divisions, and if you have a few minutes to spare, and they are clear, commit them to memory ; they will make a convenient frame on which to hang the contents of the book, and perhaps of other '•ooks, too. You will very likely forget them after a READINGS AND COURSES OF READING). 333 time; but some neat classification or statement of thoughts will stick by you. When a new question comes before you, read both sides of it as well as you can, so as to preserve the judge's habit of mind rather than the lawyer's. Thus, for in- stance, on free-trade and protection, read, on the latter side, Mr. Greeley's book, and, if you can, the works of H. C. Carey; on the former, read Bastiat, Perry, aud Mill. On the woman suffrage question, read Dr. Bush- nell's " Woman Suffrage" against, and J. S. Mill's " Sub- jection of Woman" for, and so on. This method, prop- erly followed, gives great soundness and good sense to one's habits of mind. A number of very good and nourishing books can be had in pocket editions, such as Bacon's Essays, Locke on the Understanding, etc. If you once get into the habit of having such a book about you, to use at odd times, you will be very likely to keep it up ; it is a capital method of economizing time and thought. Sometimes a larger book can be managed by buying a copy in sheets, and carrying it about, a sheet at a time. It is of the first importance to have as many good reference books at hand, while you are reading, as pos- s.ble. If you can have but one, have Webster's Diction- ary — the unabridged pictorial, if possible ; and, if not, the next largest edition you can afford. They range from that imperial quarto, down to a square 16mo, at about 50 cents. The second should be an atlas, Black's, Colton's, or Mitchell's. There ai-e others, but being sold by subscription, they are practically not to be had. For three other reference books to come next, I recommend : 1. Bartlett's Dictionary of Quotations. 2. Hole and Wheeler's Brief Biographical Dictionary; or Godwin's Cyclopedia of Biography. 3. Haydn's Dictionary of Dates; or Putnam's " World's Progress." 334 THE BEST READING. Use these reference books as often as you can find an occasion to ; get into the habit of constantly using them. And use as many more reference books as you can afford. The physiology of reading includes a few hints about the use op the eyes, times and seasons, and other ques- tions of a physical nature. There is no room for a trea- tise, hardly for a paragraph. Until you are twenty years old, do not use yonr eyes before breakfast. All the system is relaxed then, and any exertion is unnatural and injurious. Do not read in a dim light, nor by a flickering light, nor by a light that shines into the eyes. The best light comes from above and behind the left shoulder. For those who have to read much a green shade over the eyes is a great economy of sight. Gas-light is of a harsh quality, and very hot. Besides, it is better not to deal with an irresponsible monopoly when you can help it. A far better light to read and study by is the still, soft, white light of the " German Student's Lamp." This lamp can be had for either kerosene or the finer vege- table oils. Learn to read whole words by their collective diagram or physiognomy on the paper. This is an immense relief to the eyes. One who has to read a great deal can read a good many books, not the hardest though — if printed in double columns or in a narrow page, not only by whole words, but a whole line at a time ; so that the eye, instead of skipping backward and forward thirty or forty times a page, moves, deliberately, straight down it. This is an additional economy of the eyes. Look no harder at the words than is necessary. By straining with an intense stare, one can tire out one's eyes very soon over the clearest print; while careful practice of HEADINGS AND COURSES OF READING. 335 these rules will enable any one with a reasonably good pair of eyes, to read in the railroad ears all day long, without harm. In this case, however, two other pre- cautions are necessary : sit erect and free from the back of the seat, and do not let the arm that holds the book touch anything else. This keeps the book at the end of a long spring, viz. : the length of the body and arm together, which reduces the jar of the cars to a minimum. Here are three rules for reading, which Professor "Whitaker, of Cambridge, gave to John Boyce, one of the translators of King James* Bible : 1. Study, chiefly, standing or walking. 2. Never study at a window. 3. Never go to bed with cold feet. Those are sensible rules, in part. Variety of posture gives great relief, but I should say a sitting posture was best for the most part, with standing or walking for a variety. The second rule is against drafts of cold air. The third is an excellent rule for those who do not read, as well as those who do. Another notion which will be convenient for a great many people, is, to have two or three books going at the same time; one for hard work, perhaps, another for another kind of hard work, and a second (or a third) for amusement. But this will not do for everybody. Some would be in danger of devoting all their reading-time to the amusing book. Others are not of the sort that can change readily from subject to subject, and this method might bother them more than it helped tbem. It should not, therefore, be followed unless it is found to succeed well in practice. Owning Books. As with reading, so with owning books. Nobody can own them all. An English nobleman once paid 336 THE BEST READING. more than $11,000 for one volume, and he was rich enough to be able to afford it. But he set out to make a complete collection of the editions of the writings of Martial. In spite of his wealth, and his steady pursuit, he was thirty years in doing it. So, you may imagine — or figure up, if you prefer arithmetic — how many hun- dred years it would take to collect all the works that have been published. Hardly anybody can expect to own more than a very few. That is all the more reason why they should be wisely chosen. Fifty volumes of good books is no bad library. A certain learned man of ancient times, owned but four books. The famous Leibnitz is said to have asserted that his library con- tained only these nine authors : Plato, Aristotle, Archime- des, Euclid, Plutarch, Sextus Empiricus, Pliny, Cicero, and Seneca. There is a ludicrous remark in one of Thackeray's novels, I believe, about some person whose library "consisted chiefly, of old boots." Robert Southey's " List of a Gentleman's Necessary Library" has four more items than Leibnitz's ; does not include a single one of Leibnitz's ; and the old boots would make, almost as good a library, for a good many "gentlemen," as either of them. This is Southey's list : Bible, Shakes- peare, Spenser's Faerie Queene, Sidney's Arcadia, Works of Sir Thos. Browne, Works of Rev. Cyril Jackson, Walton's Complete Angler, Clarendon's History, Milton, Chaucer, Jeremy Taylor, South's Sermon's, Fuller's Church History. Nearly all those are good books, no doubt ; but it is a fitter list for a superannuated clergy- man than for a man engaged in the work of the world. Private collections range all the way from the afore- said four volumes ; or, indeed, from one book up to a hundred thousand, or more. It is a strong scholar who can make full practical use of as many as twenty thou* sand volumes. For fifty thousand there must be a sena- BEADING AND COURSES OF HEADING. 337 rate building, and a librarian to take care of them. Five hundred volumes is as many as eould well be accommo- dated in the majority of American families. Fifty booka is a good deal more than American families will average. Probably they are as many as would be read in half of such families. A person with a turn for literature, and who can spend a little money in it, can get great comfort and advantage from a thousand or fifteen hundred well- chosen volumes. But it is best to read most of your books — except the strictly reference books, of course — or they make you ridiculous rather than respectable. It is impossible to go very far with a list of books of which the first shall be absolutely the best one book to own, the second the next best, and so on. After a very few items it becomes necessary to consider the prefer- ences of the owner ; and, therefore, books of very differ- ent sorts are equally good. However, let us begin. It will be very safe to procure books as follows : 1. The Bible. 2. Webster's Dictionary (the pictorial unabridged, if possible; if not, the largest edition you can afford). 3. Shakespeare. Thus far it is reasonably plain sailing, but now our troubles begin. 4. Cruden's Concordance is perhaps as good as any ; it is the best single help to Bible reading. Suppose that you have the means of borrowing a good deal of miscellaneous reading, from a public library or otherwise ; here is a short list of capital reference books, which are the best books to own in such a case : Haydn's Dictionary of Dates (or Putnam's World's Progress), Bart- lett's Dictionary of Quotations, Hole and Wheeler's Brief Biographies, Wheeler's Noted Names of Fiction, Walford's Men of the Time (pretty good for living foreign celebri- ties, but very poor for this country). That set of volumes contains, packed into a wonderfully small compass, a won- derful breadth of information, usually very correct. 338 THE BEST READING. If you have no access to libraries, however, you may feel unable to own so many reference books, having, in- stead, to own books for reading or study, rather than books for reference. It is in selecting these that no uni- versal list can be made out. I shall, however, add three books to the four already fixed on, viz. : Bible, Webster, Shakespeare, Cruden. These are : 5. A history of the United States (Hildreth's, 6 vols., 8vo, is the best ; if you cannot afford that, buy Willard's, in 1 voL, 8vo) ; and 6. " Smith's Student's Hume," or Lossing's History of Eng- land, for the history of England. It would be very useful to own, besides, and to know thoroughly. 7. Taylor's Manual of (ancient and modern) History. For 8, add Dana's excellent Household Book of Poetry ; and for additions to your poetical department, procure the com- plete poetical works of one or another of the poets whose writings you find that you enjoy in Dana's specimens. But if, instead of Poetry, you enjoy most researches and conclusions in Natural Science, get Humboldt's Cos- mos, and study that, through and through. Or, if you prefer, instead, political philosophy, get De Tocqueville's Democracy in America, and study it thoroughly. If prose fiction is your passion, by all means get a set of the Waverley Novels, and learn to enjoy them fully. They are the best English series of novels ; masterly in their kind ; and, moreover, they afford a thorough and decisive traiuing in novel-reading. The reader who has intellect enough to enjoy Scott's novels, may rely safely on his judgment in that department. A novel that he likes, he may be certain has merit ; one that he dislikes, he may be sure is a poor novel. If Mental Philosophy be your passion, it will be safest —in my opinion, it is necessary — to read two books, at least, to begin with. One should be a master of one of HEADINGS AND COURSES OF READING. 339 the later schools of metaphysical mental philosophy — Du- gald Stewart will do very well; Brown is unsafe; Reid is better than either; take Mill if you prefer him, or McCosh, or Noah Porter, though this last is not nearly so strong a specimen of the religious metaphysician as McCosh, who is a very keen and clear thinker. But whichever of these you select, read, after it, either Spurz- heim's Phrenology or Combe's Phrenology. You may or may not see cause to believe in their doctrine, that the head corresponds to the mind inside of it. But you will hardly care to reject their singularly clear and practical classification of the mental faculties. This can perfectly well be used in mental philosophy without the other. It is so obviously based on a congenital correspondence be- tween the mind of man and all the rest of the universe, that very few minds that once comprehend it will ever let it go. After your two first books, read in mental philoso- phy exactly what you wish ; but a good series to come next is the whole of Herbert Spencer, to be read, and clearly understood, and set down in brief abstracts of complete, carefully- worded sentences (not hints and half- spelled memorandums). The best general review of Phi- losophy is TTeberweg's History of Philosophy. But I am sliding back into Courses and Methods of Reading. I have said enough to show how difficult it must be— how out of the question, in fact, to give one single lot of even a dozen books which are the best dozen for everybody, because, long before the dozen is com- pleted, the preferences of the individual require to be considered. For the gratification of those, I must refer to the remainder of this little volume. I shall only say, in closing this chapter : Own all the books you can. Use all the books you own, and as many more as you can get. 340 THE BEST BEADING. See the hints about buying books, quoted at the end of the " Extracts," from " An Old Bookseller." They are very shrewd. Book Clttbs.* In small towns, or large ones either, where there are no public libraries, or where there are libraries which (as is often the case) cannot satisfy the demand for books, a very fair substitute can be found in the establishment of a Book Club. This is a set of about twenty persons (that is the most convenient number, and it is better to have two clubs of twenty than one of forty), who are organized for the purpose of obtaining good reading, somewhat as fol- lows: Somebody starts the club. This somebody must bo willing to do a quantity of running about and enlistment work — a hateful job, but often necessary. Suppose it is a lady ; she had better begin — perhaps with the help of her minister, or any well-acquainted friend — by making a list of thirty or forty people who will, perhaps, join. Most likely, half will refuse. If every one she asks con- sents, she stops at twenty or twenty-two. What does she say to her constituents ? She says — but in her own graceful and insinuating manner — in sub- stance, these things : We want a book club. We can get a great many new books with very little trouble and expense. We put in four dollars apiece to begin with. That will serve us for a year ; for the next year, we can pay another four dollars each, and add what our old books sell for, or we can keep down to that figure and deduct from our payments what they sell for. I will be secretary, unless you prefer somebody else. We will meet and con- sult what magazines to take, if any ; or each may send me a list and I will consolidate it ; and, in like manner, * Moat of the directions under this head are shaped from a paper o( tns same name, in a recent number of " Old and New." HEADING AND C0UK8ES OF HEADING. 341 we will decide what books to buy at once, and how much money to keep for new books as they appear ; or we can have a book committee to manage these matters. Then I will write to my booksellers, ordering the books, and they will come. I will put them in order for use, and will set them going among you. Books (each magazine number oounts as a book) are to be given out and to go round in the order of the residences of the members. This order might be called the Club Round ; and should be so laid out that the secretary can start a book to mem- ber No. 1, who will keep it five days, according to law, and carry it to No. 2, who will do the same for No. 3, and so on, in such a manner that each shall have the shortest distance possible to go. The whole should lie in a sort of ring, so that the last can conveniently hand the book back to the secretary. Twenty members at five days apiece; it is evident that the club will be through with each book in a hundred days. It then remains with the secretary (unless some member wants it for a second reading) until the time comes for disposing of the old books, in readiness for ihe second year's business, or as the club may prefer. Twenty members at four dollars each will give eighty dollars to begin with. Suppose you decide (Miss Secre- tary) to " club" for ten of the best monthly and quarterly magazines, American and English. This will take half your money, or thereabouts. Allow ten dollars for print- ing lists (of which shortly), cover-paper, etc. ; and order fifteen dollars' worth of books. This will give you, as books run, perhaps ten volumes. When these books and magazines reach you, take stout brown paper and cover the books in a serviceable manner. Make paste- board covers, as neat as time and skill permit, for the magazines; without them, they will be but a ragged regiment when they have gone the rounds. These paste- 342 TIIK BEST READING. board covers can of course be used for successive num- bers. Then you paste inside of the cover of each book, a copy of the book-list, of which you have had a supply printed — say two hundred and fifty. The Putnams or others will do it for you, and send you the printed lists all ready, by mail, prepaid, for for the 250 copies, if you can't get it done any nearer home. This list has the rules at the top, and below a column for the names of the members, one for dates of books received by each, and one for dates of passing the books to the next in order. It will be as follows, except that instead of five names, there will be room for twenty-two, besides a little margin at foot : HARDREADING BOOK-CLUB LIST. This book may be kept five days. Each member will enter date of receiving and passing. Two cents fine for each day's detention beyond the time allowed. Those wishing a second reading will enter their names at the foot of the list. Names. Received. Passed. Mary Arthur Feb. 1,187 Feb. 6,187 " 6, " 11. " 11, ■ 16, " 16, " 21, Dr. Jas. Farnsworth . " 21, • 26, 2d Reading : Mary Arthur ; E. Depew. This list, filled as above, means that Miss Arthur got the book from the Secretary on Feb. 1st, the Secretary entering that date. Miss Arthur read it and passed it to Mr. Barnard, entering Feb. 6 opposite her name. Mr. Barnard in turn enters date of receipt, and then of passing to Mrs. Chauncy, and so on ; so that when the book gets round to the Secretary, each member has writ- ten in a date, or dates. Miss Arthur is to have it for » RRADING AND COURSES OF READING. 34JJ second reading, and E. Depew after her ; then it goes to the Secretary for safe keeping until further orders. At the end of the year, sell the books and magazines by auction to the members, or to outsiders ; or dispose of them as the club may direct ; collect the subscription for the new year, or more, if you can ; also the fines, of which you have kept a record ; renew your subscriptions, and begin again. And success attend you. Newspapers and periodicals usually print lists of new publications, but they are not to be relied upon as being complete, as they often include only such books as have been advertised in each particular paper. There are, however, two or three bibliographical peri- odicals, which give full lists of new publications in the United States, and partial lists of those in Great Britain, besides advertisements, book notices, and miscellaneous literary matter of considerable service to librarians and book-readers. The oldest of these, Childs' Publisher's Circular, is now united with Leypoldt's Literary Bulletin, and issued weekly in New York, under the title of the Pub- lisher's Weekly. The American Bookseller's Guide, published monthly in New York, also gives lists of pub- .ications and literary items. In addition to the above, G. P. Putnam's Sons now issue a Quarterly Summary of the " Best Reading " in English and American Literature, containing classified and priced lists of the publications of the quarter year, and containing also brief characteri- sations of the representative books, which will attempt to give some impression of their nature, relative im portance, and special value. This Summary is published under the title of Thb Library Companion, and is mailed to subscribers at the price of 50 cents a year. ) LOS ANGELES CAL R»£ [ILL** 95 ™** ' Form L-ft 25wi-10. °1I(2I3I) AT LOS ANGELES LIBRARY UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 000 124 419 3 Z 1035 B46 1887