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"The translator, besides producing a thoroughly readable version of pieces that must have given trouble, presents a sketch of Leopardi's life which throws no little light on the character of his thought, much as Leopardi himself protested against the notion that its pessimistic cast is in any way referable to his personal misfortunes and sufferings.”– Mind.

SCHOPENHAUER writes:-"No one has treated the subject (The Misery of Life) so thoroughly and exhaustively as Leopardi in our own days. He is wholly filled and fermented with it; everywhere the mockery and misery of this existence are his theme; on every page of his works he represents them, but with such diversity of form and expression, with such wealth of illustration, that he never wearies, but rather entertains and stimulates us throughout."

VOL. XVIII.]

Post 8vo, pp. xii.—178, cloth, 68.

RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY IN GERMANY:

A FRAGMENT.

By HEINRICH HEINE.

Translated by JOHN SNODGRASS,

Translator of "Wit, Wisdom, and Pathos from the Prose of Heinrich Heine."

"Nowhere is the singular charm of this writer more marked than in the vivid pages of this work. Irrespective of subject, there is a charm about whatever Heine wrote that captivates the reader and wins his sympathies before criticism steps in. But there can be none who would fail to admit the power as well as the beauty of the wide-ranging pictures of the intellectual development of the country of deep thinkers. Beneath his grace the writer holds a mighty grip of fact, stripped of all disguise and made patent over all confusing surroundings." -Bookseller.

"No better selection could have been made from the prose writings of an author who, though until lately known in this country only, or at least chiefly, as a song-writer, produced as much German prose as fills nearly a score of volumes."-North British Daily Mail.

Vol. XIX.]

NEARLY READY.

Post 8vo, about 320 pp., with Portrait, 108. 6d.
EMERSON AT HOME AND ABROAD.

By MONCURE D. CONWAY.

Author of "The Sacred Anthology," "The Wandering Jew," "Thomas Carlyle," &c.

This book is the work of one who was personally well acquainted with Emerson for nearly thirty years, and with the eminent persons (Hawthorne, Thoreau, and others) who in that time surrounded him at Concord, Mass., U.S.A.; it reviews the personal and general history of the so-called "Transcendental" movement in America; and it contains various letters by Emerson not before published, as well as personal recollections of his lectures and conversations. A full Biographical Sketch is given of Emerson, of his visits to England, his lectures, and of his friendship with Carlyle and others in this country. The work will contain studies of Emerson's relation to religious movements and tendencies, and of his ethical, philosophical, and scientific opinions. His influence on the mind and character of America, and of his connection with its social and political progress are fully reviewed.

"... The loftiest, purest, and most penetrating spirit that had ever shone in American literature."-Professor Tyndall.

VOLS. I.-II.]

EXTRA SERIES.

Two Volumes, post 8vo, pp. 348 and 374, with Portrait, cloth, 218.
LESSING: His Life and Writings.

By JAMES SIME, M.A.
Second Edition.

"It is to Lessing that an Englishman would turn with readiest affection. We cannot but wonder that more of this man is not known amongst us."-THOMAS CARLYLE.

"But to Mr. James Sime has been reserved the honour of presenting to the English public a full-length portrait of Lessing, in which no portion of the canvas is uncovered, and in which there is hardly a touch but tells. He has studied his subject with that patient care which only reverence and sympathy can support; he has attained the true proportion which can alone be gained by penetration and clear insight into motive and purposes. We can say that a clearer or more compact piece of biographic criticism has not been produced in England for many a day."- Westminster Review.

"An account of Lessing's life and work on the scale which he deserves is now for the first time offered to English readers. Mr. Sime has performed his task with industry, knowledge, and sympathy; qualities which must concur to make a successful biographer."-Pall Mall Gazette.

"This is an admirable book. It lacks no quality that a oiography ought to have. Its method is excellent, its theme is profoundly interesting: its tone is the happiest mixture of sympathy and discrimination: its style is clear, masculine, free from effort or affectation, yet eloquent by its very sincerity. It is not a page too long; and though the reader closes it with regret, the critic must own that it is not a page too short."-Standard.

"He has given a life of Lessing clear, interesting, and full, while he has given a study of his writings which bears distinct marks of an intimate acquaintance with his subject, and of a solid and appreciative judgment."-Scotsman.

VOL. III.]

Vol. I., post 8vo, pp. 264, cloth, 7s. 6d.

AN ACCOUNT OF THE POLYNESIAN RACE:

ITS ORIGIN AND MIGRATIONS,

AND THE ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE HAWAIIAN PEOPLE TO THE TIMES OF KAMEHAMEHA I.

By ABRAHAM FORNANDER, Circuit Judge of the Island of Maui, H.I. "Mr. Fornander has evidently enjoyed excellent opportunities for promoting the study which has produced this work. Unlike most foreign residents in Polynesia, he has acquired a good knowledge of the language spoken by the people among whom he dwelt. This has enabled him, during his thirty-four years' residence in the Hawaiian Islands, to collect material which could be obtained only by a person possessing such an advantage. It is so seldom that a private settler in the Polynesian Islands takes an intelligent interest in local ethnology and archæology, and makes use of the advantage he possesses, that we feel especially thankful to Mr. Fornander for his labours in this comparatively little known field of research."-Academy.

VOLS. IV., V.] In Two Volumes, post 8vo, pp. viii.—408; viii.—402, cloth, 218. ORIENTAL RELIGIONS,

AND THEIR RELATION TO UNIVERSAL RELIGION.

By SAMUEL JOHNSON.

I. INDIA,

VOL. VI.]

Vol. II., post 8vo, pp. 408, cloth, 10s. 6d.

AN ACCOUNT OF THE POLYNESIAN RACE:

ITS ORIGIN AND MIGRATIONS,

AND THE ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE HAWAIIAN PEOPLE TO THE TIMES KAMEHAMEHA I.

By ABRAHAM FORNANDER, Circuit Judge of the Island of Maui, H.I.

THE FOLLOWING VOLUMES ARE IN PREPARATION :

In Three Volumes, post 8vo, cloth.

THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE UNCONSCIOUS.

By EDWARD VON HARTMANN.

Translated from the German.

In Three Volumes, post 8vo, cloth.

THE WORLD AS WILL AND REPRESENTATION.

By ARTHUR SCHOPENHAUER.

Translated from the German.

Post 8vo, cloth.

THE LIFE AND WORKS OF GIORDANO BRUNO.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., LUDGATE HILL.

500-3/11/82.

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11.12-06-0

JAN 191363

(Vol. XIX.)

Ballantyne Press

BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO.
EDINBURGH AND LONDON

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