Page:A history of booksellers, the old and the new.djvu/557

33 CHATTO 6* WINDUS, PICCADILLY. 33 Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Portrait and Facsimile, 12s. 6d. The Final Reliq^tes of Father Prout. Collected and Edited, from MSS. supplied by the family of the Rev. FRANCIS MAHONY, by BLANCHARD JERROLD. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, Js t 6d. The Pursuivant of Arms ; or, Heraldry founded upon Facts. A Popular Guide to the Science of Heraldry. By J. R. PLANCHE, Esq., Somerset Herald. With Coloured Frontispiece, Plates, and 200 Illustrations, Crown 8vo, cloth extra, "js. 6d. Rabelais' Works. Faithfully Translated from the French, with variorum Notes, and numerous Characteristic Illustrations by GUSTAVE DORE. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, with numerous Illustrations, and a beautifully executed Chart of the various Spectra, Js. 6d,, a New Edition of Rambosson 's Astronomy. By J. RAMBOSSON, Laureate of the Institute of France. Trans- lated by C. B. PITMAN. Profusely Illustrated. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s. Red-Spinner's By Stream and Sea : A Book for Wanderers and Anglers. By WILLIAM SENIOR (RED-SPINNER). " Mr. Senior has long been known as an interesting and original essayist. He is- a keen observer, a confessed lover 0/ ' the gentle sport? and combines "with a fine picturesgiie touch a quaint and efficient humour. All these qualities come o^lt in a most attractive manner in this delightful volume. . . . J 't is pre-eminently a bright and breezy book, full of nature and odd out-of-the-way references. . . We can conceive of no better book for the holiday tour or the seaside." NONCONFORMIST. " Very delightful reading; just the sort of book which an angler or a rambler will be glad to have in the side pocket of his jacket. A Itogether, ' BV Stream and Sea ' is one of the best books of its kind which ive have come across for many a long da" OXFORD UNIVERSITY HERALD. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 'js. 6d. Memoirs of the San son Family : Seven Generations of Executioners. By HENRI SANSON. Trans- lated from the French, with Introduction, by CAMILLE BARRERE. " A faithful translation of this ciirious work, which will certainly repay perusal not on the ground of its being full of horrors, for the original author seems to be rather ashamed of the technical aspect of his profession, and is commendably reticent as to its details, but because it contains a lucid account of tJie most notable causes celeb res from the time of Louis XIV. to a period within the memory of persons still living. . . . Can scarcely fail to be extremely entertaining.'" DAILY TELEGRAPH.