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A COLLECTION OF ANCIENT HINDU HYMNS, Constituting the Sixth and Part of the Seventh Ashtaka of the Rig-Veda.

Translated from the Original Sanskrit
By H. H. WILSON, M.A., F.R.S.
Edited by E. B. COWELL, M.A., Professor of Sanskrit in
the University of Cambridge, and

W. F. WEBSTER, M.A., late Sanskrit Exhibitioner,
Trin. Coll., Camb.

8vo. cloth, pp. xv. and 95, with Table. Price 45. 6d. THE EVOLUTION OF THE CHINESE LANGUAGE.

As Exemplifying the Origin and Growth of Human Speech. By JOSEPH EDKINS, D.D., Author of "Religion in China," "Chinese Buddhism," "Grammar of the Mandarin Language,' ""China's Place in Philology,'

etc.

Reprinted from the Journal of the Pekin Oriental Society, 1887.

8vo. cloth, pp. 118. Price 7s. 6d.

THE OLD BAMBOO-HEWER'S STORY. (TAKETORI NO OKINA NO MONOGATARI).

The Earliest of the Japanese Romances, written in the Tenth Century.

Translated, with Observations and Notes,

By F. VICTOR DICKINS.

With Three Chromo-lithographic Illustrations taken from Japanese Makimono. To which is added the Original Text in Roman, with Grammar, Analytical Notes and Vocabulary.

4to. boards, pp. 42, Illustrated. Price 12s.
A SEASON IN EGYPT, 1887.

By W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE, Author of "Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh," "Tanis I. and II.," "Naukratis," etc.

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KABAIL VOCABULARY. SUPPLEMENTED BY AID OF A NEW SOURCE. By FRANCIS WILLIAM NEWMAN, Emeritus Professor of University College, London; formerly Fellow of Balliol College; and now M.R.A.S.

Foolscap 4to. sewed, pp. iv. and 46. Price 35. COMMON NATIVE INSECTS OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA.

A Popular Guide to South Australian Entomology. By J. G. O. TEPPER, F.L.S.

Part I. Coleoptera or Beetles.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 120. Price 5s. AN ELEMENTARY GRAMMAR OF THE

JAPANESE LANGUAGE.

With Easy Progressive Exercises.

By TATUI BABA.

Second and Enlarged Edition.

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Second Edition, with a new Introduction.
Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. lxxvii. and 314. Price 65.
CETYWAYO

AND HIS WHITE NEIGHBOURS ;

OR, REMARKS ON RECENT EVENTS IN ZULULAND, NATAL, AND THE TRANSVAAL.

By H. RIDER HAGGARD,

Author of "
Royal 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 328. Price 18s.
THE MINERALS OF

King Solomon's Mines," "She," etc., etc.

NEW SOUTH WALES, Etc. By A. LIVERSIDGE, M.A., F.R.S., Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy in the University of Sydney.

Scotsman.-"Students of mineralogy and of geology will welcome the appearance of the new edition of Professor Liversidge's account of the minerals of New South Wales. The new

edition has been so far enlarged as to be brought well down to date. It is specially valuable for the particular attention devoted to chemical analyses of the minerals described. Its equipment of maps and statistical tables is excellent."

8vo. paper, pp. 129. Price Is. 6d.

IN PURSUIT OF A SHADOW.

By A LADY ASTRONOMER. Chap. I. Hull to Christiania.-II. Christiania to Stockholm. III. Stockholm.-IV. St. Petersburg.-V. Moscow. VI. Pogost.-VII. Nijni Novgorod and Smolensk. Demy 8vo. paper, pp. 150. Price 3s. 6d. A HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY.

WRITTEN AS A

PRACTICAL GUIDE AND AN INTRODUCTION
TO ITS LATEST DEVELOPMENTS.
By W. JEROME HARRISON, F.G.S.,
With an Appendix by Dr. Maddox on the Discovery of the
Gelatino-Bromide Process.

Contents.-Introduction.-The Origin of Photography.Some Pioneers of Photography: Wedgwood and Niepce.The Daguerreotype Process.-Fox-Talbot and the Calotype Process.-Scott-Archer and the Collodion Process.-Collodion Dry Plates with the Bath.-Collodion Emulsion.Gelatine Emulsion with Bromide of Silver.-Introduction of Gelatino-Bromide Emulsion as an Article of Commerce by Burgess and by Kennett.-Gelatine Displaces Collodion. History of Photographic Printing Processes.-History of Roller Slides, and of Negative-Making on Paper and on Films. History of Photography in Colours.-History of the Introduction of Developers. - Summing up. Dr. Maddox on the Discovery of the Gelatino-Bromide Process. 8vo. paper, pp. 56. Price Is. THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC

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IN BRITISH INDIA;

OR, HAS THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT DONE ITS DUTY?
An Answer to Venerable Archdeacon Farrar and
Mr. Samuel Smith, M. P.

By ROBERT NEEDHAM CUST, LL.D.,
Late Member of H.M. Indian Civil Service, Member of
the Committees of the British and Foreign Bible Society
and the Church Missionary Society, Honorary
Secretary of the Royal Asiatic Society, and
J.P. for the County of Middlesex and
Liberty of Westminster.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

TRÜBNER AND

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8vo. cloth, pp. xx. and 562. Price 18s. ELEMENTS OF THE COMPARATIVE GRAMMAR OF THE INDO-GERMANIC LANGUAGES.

A CONCISE EXPOSITION OF THE HISTORY OF SANSKRIT,
OLD IRANIAN (AVESTIC AND OLD PERSIAN), OLD
ARMENIAN, OLD GREEK, LATIN, UMBRIAN-
SAMNITIC, OLD IRISH, GOthic, Old
HIGH GERMAN, LITHUANIAN, AND
OLD BULGARIAN.

By KARL BRUGMANN,

Professor of Comparative Philology in the University of Leipzig.

Vol. I. Introduction and Phonology.

Translated from the German by JOSEPH WRIGHT, Ph.D. Those who have impartially followed the development of comparative philology in the last twenty years will be aware of the great progress it has made in the interval. In both the scope and the nature of its work it has shown all the elasticity and creative vigour of a science that is still young in spite of its seventy years. That its diverse and scattered details need to be once again brought together under one systematic arrangement will hardly be doubted by any competent judge, and it is hoped that this work, of which the first volume is now presented to English readers, will meet a real need.

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VERNER'S LAW IN ITALY.
AN ESSAY IN THE HISTORY OF THE INDO-EUROPEAN
SIBILANTS.

By R. SEYMOUR CONWAY,
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.

With a Dialect Map of Italy

by E. HEAWOOD, B.A., F.R.G.S.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. vi. and 225. Price 5s.
THE FORTUNES OF WORDS.
LETTERS TO A LADY.

By FEDERICO GARLANDA, Ph.D.

Pall Mall Gazette.-" A popular treatise upon the science of language in the form of twenty letters addressed to a lady, chapters which discuss the subject of roots, the derivation and meaning of familiar words, and the application of linguistic to prehistoric studies, together with chapters on slang, synonyms, etc.'

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. vi. and 294. Price 5s. THE PHILOSOPHY OF WORDS. A Popular Introduction to the Science of Language. By FEDERICO GARLANDA, Ph.D. Scotsman." Likely to interest any reader in its subject. It is never technical, but always simple, intelligible, and straightforward. It condenses into small space a great deal of information, and puts the results of more erudite works into a form which will attract general readers. The book is admirably well fitted to be put into the hands of young students who are beginning work in this interesting branch of science."

Demy 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 360. Price 18s. THE ORIGIN OF GREEK & LATIN ROOTS. By JAMES BYRNE, M.A., Dean of Clonfert; Ex-Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin. Author of "General Principles of the Structure of

Language."

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Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 117. Price 5s. ABRIDGED GRAMMARS of the LANGUAGES OF THE CUNEIFORM INSCRIPTIONS. Containing-I. A Sumero-Akkadian Grammar. II. An Assyro-Babylonian Grammar. III. A Vannic Grammar. IV. A Medic Grammar. V. An Old Persian Grammar. By Professor G. BERTIN.

8vo. cloth, pp. 47, 71, and 54 (text). Price 12s. 6d.

Luiores Assos fios

A TREATISE ON SYRIAC GRAMMAR.

By MÂR(I) ELIA OF SÔBHÂ.

Edited and Translated from the Manuscripts in the Berlin Royal Library

By RICHARD J. H. GOTTHEIL.

Post 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 97. Price 6s.

A LANGUAGE-STUDY BASED ON BANTU ;

OR,

AN INQUIRY INTO THE LAWS OF ROOT-FORMATION. The Original Plural, the Sexual Dual and the Principles of Word Comparison. With Tables Illustrating the Primitive Pronominal System restored in the African Bantu Family of Speech.

By the Rev. F. W. KOLBE,

Of the London Missionary Society, formerly of the Rhenish Herero Mission; Author of "An English-Herero Dictionary."

Demy 8vo. pp. xxiv. and 718, with Table of Concords. Price £I IS.

DICTIONARY AND GRAMMAR OF THE KONGO LANGUAGE,

AS SPOKEN AT SAN SALVADOR, THE ANCIENT CAPITAL OF THE OLD KONGO EMPIRE, WEST AFRICA. Compiled and Prepared for the Baptist Mission on the Kongo River, West Africa,

By the REV. W. HOLMAN BENTLEY, Missionary of the Baptist Missionary Society on the Kongo. With an Introduction by R. N. CUST, Hon. Secretary of the Royal Asiatic Society.

The grammar, originally intended as a separate publication, is included in this volume, which contains also Appendices of English and Kongo words acquired since the complete work was sent to press, Special lists containing the names of Games, Quadrupeds, Reptiles, Fish, Invertebrates, Insects, Foods, Trees and Shrubs, Plants, Creepers, Ferns and Grasses, Diseases and Medicines, Dances, Titles and Oaths, and an Account of Native Customs and Super

stitions.

The language, thus reduced for the first time, belongs to the Bantu family. With dialectic differences it is spoken over the whole region from the Coast to Stanley Pool, at the head of the cataract region of the Kongo River.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

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By JAMES SAMUELSON,

Of the Middle Temple, Barrister-at-Law, Author of "Roumania Past and Present," etc.

Illustrated with Map of United Bulgaria, Collotype Views and Portraits from seventeen Photographs by Karastojanoff of Sofia, Cavra of Philippopolis, and O Marcolesco of Tirnova, and numerous Woodcuts and Vignettes Engraved from Original Sketches by the Author. PART I.-HISTORICAL. PART II.-BULGARIA TO-DAY. Athenæum.-"Most excellent in substance, and thoroughly readable. . . . Mr. Samuelson gives the earlier portion of his volume to an easy historical survey of the Bulgarian past, followed by an accurate account of the reign of Prince Alexander, the Russian intrigues, the Servian war, and the accession of Prince Ferdinand.

Our author's last chapter upon the present condition of Bulgarian trade and finance, and his chapter on travelling, describing the most interesting spots within the country, are full of sympathy and of insight; yet he gives the reader the impression of being a perfectly fair writer. . . The volume is well illustrated

from photographs and sketches of places and of men."

Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria has written to the author of this work, giving it his approval; and whilst he refers to the sympathy which has been shown for the national cause by the "noble English people," he expresses his deep gratitude to Mr. Samuelson for giving Englishmen the opportunity of making themselves acquainted with Bulgarian politics.

Volume I. Demy 8vo. cloth, pp. xiv. and 488. Price 15s. HISTORY OF CANADA.

By WILLIAM KINGSFORD.

This Volume includes the period previous to the descent of the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico by De la Salle on 9th April, 1682.

Vols. II. and III. are in preparation.

Quebec Chronicle.-" We must confess to having derived a great amount of pleasure from the perusal of Mr. Kingsford's scholarly and brilliant work. We shall look with interest for the succeeding volumes, and recommend the history with confidence to our readers."

The Montreal Gazette.-" When completed, it will be a most valuable addition to our library of historical literature.'

Toronto World.-" It is certain to be referred to as the standard authority on many hitherto disputed points."

The Week (Toronto).-" A work of considerable value."

Demy 8vo. cloth, pp. xxxii. and 420. Price £1 5s. SOCIAL HISTORY OF

THE RACES OF MANKIND. SECOND DIVISION: PART II.

OCEANO-MELANESIANS.

By A. FEATHERMAN.

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General Character. Tahitans. Marquesans. Nukahivahs. Pomotoos.-Waihus. - Tongas.- Rotumas.— Samoans. Maoris.- Hawaiians. - Malagassees. - Ipalacos.-Palos.-Chamorres.-Tarawas. - Radak-raliks. Athenæum.-" Mr. Featherman has set himself a long and laborious task. To digest from the travellers' tales of the last two centuries, the reports of missionaries, and the more formal observations of recent explorers, all that can be ascertained of the social life of every tribe of the many races of mankind; to reconcile the contradictions of these various authorities; and to discriminate where prejudice or credulity may have led them wrong, are undertakings that demand a vast expenditure of time, a great accumulation of knowledge, and some critical acumen. Mr. Featherman is well equipped in these respects. He justly repudiates the faint praise that would damn him as a mere collector of facts, and give him credit for nothing but industry in collecting them. He claims that he is writing, on the basis of facts collected from original authorities, a history of the peoples in their social capacity, including their manners and customs, their government, their religion, their superstitions, and their literary, artistic, and scientific advancement. He is, at any rate, engaged on a work which is such a storehouse of facts as the student of comparative sociology will not meet with elsewhere, arranged with simplicity and clearness. He takes the wise course of stating the travellers' tales and missionary assertions in which he does not believe; so that those who have more robust faith or who distrust his critical judgment have the opportunity of accepting them if they think fit."

LONDON TRÜBNER & CO.,

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8vo. cloth, pp. vii. and 632. Price 15s.

A POPULAR HISTORY OF THE MEXICAN PEOPLE.

By HUBERT HOWE BANCROFT.

With Numerous Illustrations.

Mr. Bancroft has prepared this work from the materials accumulated for his larger histories, and has produced a book giving the leading incidents in the history of a great people, faithfully, graphically, yet impartially portrayed, in a popular and compact form, well written and finely illustrated, and at a moderate price, so as to place it within the reach of all interested in the romantic history and marvellous resources of this country. The book is brought down to 1887, and closes with an excellent review of the Revenue, Commerce and Communication.

Sanctioned for Use in the Royal Navy.

Royal 8vo. cloth, pp. xxviii. and 584. Price 16s. NAUTICAL TABLES DESIGNED FOR THE USE OF BRITISH SEAMEN.

By the Rev. JAMES INMAN, D.D., Late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge; and Professor of Mathematics at the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth. Edited by the Rev. H. T. INMAN, M.A., Rector of Woolston, near Bletchley; late Diocesan Inspector of Schools.

NEW EDITION,

REVISED, REARRANGED, AND ENLARGED.

In addition to the new tables and new introduction, the whole book has been remodelled and repaged; every page has been marked with the number of the table; there are nearly fifty more pages; it is printed on better and larger paper, and it is bound with greater strength.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. vii. and 152. Price 3s. 6d. PRACTICAL VALUE OF CHRISTIANITY. Two PRIZE ESSAYS.

By Rev. J. BROADHURST NICHOLS and CHARLES WILLIAM DYMOND, F.S.A. This Volume contains the Prize Essays for which Two Prizes of Twenty Guineas each were offered, for the best Essay on the subject: "Assuming the Tenets of Christianity to be disproved, what would be the social and moral effects of the discontinuance of its teachings and the abolition of its institutions?" one Essay to be from the orthodox, and one from the sceptical standpoint. Fifty-five essays were sent in, and the adjudicators, the Rev. Septimus Hansard, M.A., the Rectory, Bethnal Green, and Clare J. Grece, Esq., LL.D., Redhill, Surrey, after careful perusal, awarded the prizes to the gentlemen named.

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TRÜBNER AND CO.'S

NOW READY.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. vii. and 327. Price 7s. 6d.

ESSAYS.

By the Late CLEMENT MANSFIELD INGLEBY,
M.A., LL.D., V. P. R.S.L.

Edited by his SON.

On Some Traces of the Authorship of the Works attributed to Shakespeare.- On the Mutual Relations of Theory and Practice.A Dialogue on the Perception of Objects.-The Ideality of the Rainbow. Law and Religion. - Romantic History. - Francis Bacon, Parts I. and II.-Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the Poet.Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the Divine.-An Estimate of Wordsworth.-Thomas de Quincey.-Henry Thomas Buckle.-A Voice for the Mute Creation.

Scotsman.-" Dr. Ingleby writes often with deep philosophical insight, and with good sense always, so that it need not be said that he refrains from ascribing the authorship of Shakespeare's plays to Lord Bacon. He has occasion, however, to allude to the controversy, as it was raised some thirty years ago by the American lady, Miss Delia Bacon, who gave her mind so thoroughly to the question that she had none of it left for herself, and lost her reason. In view of the new avatar of the theory, it may not be without interest to note what Dr. Ingleby has to say about the Baconians of his time. This essay, like the others, is thoughtful and acute in criticism. All the papers are worthy of preservation, and the volume will be read with pleasure by any lover of literature who takes it up.

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LIST.

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Athenæum.-" Mr. Snodgrass has produced a book in which lazy people will find a deal to please them. They can take it up at any moment and open it on any page with the certainty of finding some bright epigram; they need not turn down the page on shutting up the volume, as it matters little where they resume. There is nothing jarring in the whole book."

Contemporary Review.-"No Englishman of culture who is unacquainted with Heine can fail to derive a new intellectual pleasure from Mr. Snodgrass's pages."

SIR EDWIN ARNOLD'S WORKS.

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(From the Sanskrit.)

WITH SOME SELECTED POEMS.

By Sir EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I., &c.

Post 8vo. cloth, pp. xii. and 282. Price 7s. 6d.
INDIAN IDYLLS.

(From the Sanskrit of the Mahâbhârata.)

By Sir EDWIN ARNOLD, M. A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I. &c.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. xiv. and 320, with green borders.
Price 7s. 6d.

PEARLS OF THE FAITH;
OR, ISLAM'S ROSARY.

Being the Ninety-nine Beautiful Names of Allah
(Asmâ-el-'Husná).

With Comments in Verse from various Oriental Sources.
As made by an Indian Mussulman.

By Sir EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I., &c.
Post 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 270. Price 75. 6d.
INDIAN POETRY:

Containing "The Indian Song of Songs,"
From the Sanskrit of the "Gita Govinda" of Jayadeva ;
Two Books from "The Iliad of India" (Mahâbhârata),
"Proverbial Wisdom" from the Shlokas of the Hito-
padesa, and other Oriental Poems.

By Sir EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I., &c.

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By Sir EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I., &c. UNIFORM EDITION OF SIR EDWIN ARNOLD'S POETICAL WORKS.

The above Seven Volumes, uniformly bound in cloth, Crown 8vo., in box. Price £2 25. Sold only in Sets.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. 324. Price 7s. 6d.

INDIA

REVISITED.

BY

SIR EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I., &c.

With Thirty-two Full-page Illustrations, from Photographs selected by the Author.

Crown 8vo. cloth, pp. 62. Price Is. 6d.
DEATH-AND AFTERWARDS.

By Sir EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., K.C.I.E., C.S.I., &c.
Author of "The Light of Asia," etc.

Reprinted, with Supplementary Comments, from the
Fortnightly Review.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

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Times.-"A knowledge of the commonplace, at least, of Oriental literature, philosophy, and religion is as necessary to the general reader of the present day as an acquaintance with the Latin and Greek Classics was a generation or so ago. Immense strides have been made within the present century in these branches of learning; Sanskrit has been brought within the range of accurate philology, and its invaluable ancient literature thoroughly investigated; the language and sacred books of the Zoroastrians have been laid bare; Egyptian, Assyrian and other records of the remote past have been deciphered, and a group of scholars speak of still more recondite Accadian and Hittite monuments; but the results of all the scholarship that has been devoted to these subjects have been almost inaccessible to the public because they were contained for the most part in learned or expensive works, or scattered throughout the numbers of scientific periodicals. Messrs. TRÜBNER & CO., in a spirit of enterprise which does them infinite credit, have determined to supply the constantly-increasing want, and to give in a popular, or, at least, a comprehensive form, all this mass of knowledge to the world."

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Post 8vo. pp. xxxii. and 330, cloth. Price 7s. 6d.
MASNAVI I MA'NAVI:

The Spiritual Couplets of Maulána Jalálu-'d-Din
Muhammad-i-Rúmí.

Translated and Abridged

By E. H. WHINFIELD, M.A.,
Late of H. M. Bengal Civil Service.

Post 8vo. cloth, pp. viii. and 346. Price 10s. 6d.
MANAVA-DHARMA-CASTRA:
THE CODE OF MANU.

ORIGINAL SANSKRIT TEXT, WITH CRITICAL NOTES.
By J. JOLLY, Ph.D.,

Professor of Sanskrit in the University of Würzburg; late
Tagore Professor of Law in the University of Calcutta.

Post 8vo. cloth, pp. 215. Price 7s. 6d.
LEAVES FROM MY CHINESE
SCRAP-BOOK.

By FREDERIC HENRY BALFOUR,
Author of "Waifs and Strays from the Far East,"
"The Divine Classic of Nan Hua," "Taoist Texts,"
"Idiomatic Phrases in the Peking Colloquial,"
etc., etc.

Saturday Review.-"That there are great countries in the world with long and eventful histories of which not one man in ten thousand knows the smallest trifle is a statement which no one acquainted with China will dispute.' So says Mr. Balfour in the first chapter of his entertaining volume, and before we have read many pages we are convinced that he is one of the few who have something new to say about the Middle Kingdom."

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INTERCOURSE OF THE CHINESE WITH
WESTERN COUNTRIES

IN THE MIDDLE AGES, AND ON KINDRED SUBJECTS.
By E. BRETSCHNEIDER, M.D.
Physician of the Russian Legation at Pekin.

Post 8vo.

THE LIFE OF HIUEN TSIANG.
By the SHAMANS HWUI LI and YEN-TSUNG.
With a Preface containing an account of the
Works of I-TSING.

By SAMUEL BEAL, B.A.

(Trin. Coll. Camb.); Professor of Chinese, University
College, London; Rector of Wark, Northumber-
land, etc. Author of "Buddhist Records of
the Western World," "The Romantic
Legend of Sakya Buddha," etc.

Post 8vo.

A SKETCH OF THE

MODERN LANGUAGES OF OCEANIA.

By R. N. CUST, LL.D.

Author of "Modern Languages of the East," "Modern
Languages of Africa," etc.

LONDON: TRÜBNER & CO., 57 AND 59, LUDGATE HILL.

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