The Mind of the Child Part 34
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With 3 Plates and 288 Ill.u.s.trations. 8vo. Cloth, $4.50.
"M. Flammarion has produced a work that charms while it interests. He has cla.s.sified astronomy so perfectly that any person of ordinary intelligence may learn from this book practically all that the men in the observatories know."--_New York Times_.
"The fullest and most elaborate compendium of popular astronomy.... The book might reasonably be p.r.o.nounced the most desirable of its kind."--_New York Sun_.
_LIFE OF SIR RICHARD OWEN_. By Rev. RICHARD OWEN. With an Introduction by T. H. HUXLEY. 2 vols. 12mo. Cloth, $7.50.
"The value of these memoirs is that they disclose with great minuteness the daily labors and occupations of one of the foremost men of science of England."--_Boston Herald_.
"A noteworthy contribution to biographical literature."--_Philadelphia Press_.
_DEAN BUCKLAND_. The Life and Correspondence of WILLIAM BUCKLAND, D. D., F. R. S., sometime Dean of Westminster, twice President of the Theological Society, and first President of the British a.s.sociation. By his Daughter, Mrs. GORDON. With Portraits and Ill.u.s.trations. 8vo.
Buckram, $3.50.
"Next to Charles Darwin, Dean Buckland is certainly the most interesting personality in the field of natural science that the present century has produced."--_London Daily News_.
"A very readable book, for it gives an excellent account, without any padding or unnecessary detail, of a most original man."--_Westminster Gazette._
_THE ICE AGE IN NORTH AMERICA, and its Bearings upon the Antiquity of Man_. By G. FREDERICK WRIGHT, D. D., LL. D., F. G. S. A., Professor in Oberlin Theological Seminary; a.s.sistant on the United States Geological Survey. With an appendix on "The Probable Cause of Glaciation," by WARREN UPHAM, F. G. S. A., a.s.sistant on the Geological Surveys of New Hamps.h.i.+re, Minnesota, and the United States. New and enlarged edition.
With 150 Maps and Ill.u.s.trations. 8vo, 625 pages, and Index. Cloth, $5.00.
"Not a novel in all the list of this year's publications has in it any pages of more thrilling interest than can be found in this book by Professor Wright. There is nothing pedantic in the narrative, and the most serious themes and startling discoveries are treated with such charming naturalness and simplicity that boys and girls, as well as their seniors, will be attracted to the story, and find it difficult to lay it aside."--_New York Journal of Commerce_.
"One of the most absorbing and interesting of all the recent issues in the department of popular science."--_Chicago Herald_.
"Though his subject is a very deep one, his style is so very unaffected and perspicuous that even the unscientific reader can peruse it with intelligence and profit. In reading such a book we are led almost to wonder that so much that is scientific can be put in language so comparatively simple."--_New York Observer_.
"The author has seen with his own eyes the most important phenomena of the Ice age on this continent from Maine to Alaska. In the work itself, elementary description is combined with a broad, scientific, and philosophic method, without abandoning for a moment the purely scientific character. Professor Wright has contrived to give the whole a philosophical direction which lends interest and inspiration to it, and which in the chapters on Man and the Glacial Period rises to something like dramatic intensity."--_The Independent_.
"... To the great advance that has been made in late years in the accuracy and cheapness of processes of photographic reproduction is due a further signal advantage that Dr. Wright's work possesses over his predecessors'. He has thus been able to ill.u.s.trate most of the natural phenomena to which he refers by views taken in the field, many of which have been generously loaned by the United States Geological Survey, in some cases from unpublished material; and he has admirably supplemented them by numerous maps and diagrams."--_The Nation_.
_MAN AND THE GLACIAL PERIOD_. By G. FREDERICK WRIGHT, D. D., LL. D., author of "The Ice Age in North America," "Logic of Christian Evidences," etc. International Scientific Series. With numerous Ill.u.s.trations. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
"It may be described in a word as the best summary of scientific conclusions concerning the question of man's antiquity as affected by his known relations to geological time."--_Philadelphia Press_.
"The earlier chapters describing glacial action, and the traces of it in North America--especially the defining of its limits, such as the terminal moraine of the great movement itself--are of great interest and value. The maps and diagrams are of much a.s.sistance in enabling the reader to grasp the vast extent of the movement."--_London Spectator_.
RICHARD A. PROCTOR'S WORKS.
_OTHER WORLDS THAN OURS: The Plurality of Worlds, Studied under the Light of Recent Scientific Researches_. By RICHARD ANTHONY PROCTOR. With Ill.u.s.trations, some colored. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
CONTENTS.--Introduction.--What the Earth teaches us.--What we learn from the Sun.--The Inferior Planets.--Mars, the Miniature of our Earth.--Jupiter, the Giant of the Solar System.--Saturn, the Ringed World.--Ura.n.u.s and Neptune, the Arctic Planets.--The Moon and other Satellites.--Meteors and Comets: their Office in the Solar System.--Other Suns than Ours.--Of Minor stars, and of the Distribution of Stars in s.p.a.ce.--The Nebulae: are they External Galaxies?--Supervision and Control.
_OUR PLACE AMONG INFINITIES_. A Series of Essays contrasting our Little Abode in s.p.a.ce and Time with the Infinities around us. To which are added Essays on the Jewish Sabbath and Astrology. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
CONTENTS.--Past and Future of the Earth.--Seeming Wastes in Nature.--New Theory of Life in other Worlds.--A Missing Comet.--The Lost Comet and its Meteor Train.--Jupiter.--Saturn and its System.--A Giant Sun.--The Star Depths.--Star Gauging.--Saturn and the Sabbath of the Jews.--Thoughts on Astrology.
_THE EXPANSE OF HEAVEN_. A Series of Essays on the Wonders of the Firmament. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00.
CONTENTS.--A Dream that was not all a Dream.--The Sun.--The Queen of Night.--The Evening Star.--The Ruddy Planet.--Life in the Ruddy Planet.--The Prince of Planets.--Jupiter's Family of Moons.--The Ring-Girdled Planet.--Newton and the Law of the Universe.--The Discovery of Two Giant Planets.--The Lost Comet.--Visitants from the Star Depths.--Whence come the Comets?--The Comet Families of the Giant Planets.--The Earth's Journey through Showers.--How the Planets Grew.--Our Daily Light.--The Flight of Light.--A Cl.u.s.ter of Suns.--Worlds ruled by Colored Suns.--The King of Suns.--Four Orders of Suns.--The Depths of s.p.a.ce.--Charting the Star Depths.--The Star Depths Astir with Life.--The Drifting Stars.--The Milky Way.
_THE MOON: Her Motions, Aspect, Scenery, and Physical Conditions_. With Three Lunar Photographs, Map, and many Plates, Charts, etc. 12mo. Cloth, $2.00.
CONTENTS.--The Moon's Distance, Size, and Ma.s.s.--The Moon's Motions.--The Moon's Changes of Aspect, Rotation, Libration, etc.--Study of the Moon's Surface.--Lunar Celestial Phenomena.--Condition of the Moon's Surface.--Index to the Map of the Moon.
_LIGHT SCIENCE FOR LEISURE HOURS_. A Series of Familiar Essays on Scientific Subjects, Natural Phenomena, etc. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
[Ill.u.s.tration: JOHN BACH McMASTER.]
_HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES_, from the Revolution to the Civil War. By JOHN BACH McMASTER. To be completed in six volumes. Vols.
I, II, III, and IV now ready. 8vo, cloth, gilt top, $2.50 each.
In the course of this narrative much is written of wars, conspiracies, and rebellions; of Presidents, of Congresses, of emba.s.sies, of treaties, of the ambition of political leaders, and of the rise of great parties in the nation. Yet the history of the people is the chief theme. At every stage of the splendid progress which separates the America of Was.h.i.+ngton and Adams from the America in which we live, it has been the author's purpose to describe the dress, the occupations, the amus.e.m.e.nts, the literary canons of the times; to note the changes of manners and morals; to trace the growth of that humane spirit which abolished punishment for debt, and reformed the discipline of prisons and of jails; to recount the manifold improvements which, in a thousand ways, have multiplied the conveniences of life and ministered to the happiness of our race; to describe the rise and progress of that long series of mechanical inventions and discoveries which is now the admiration of the world, and our just pride and boast; to tell how, under the benign influence of liberty and peace, there sprang up, in the course of a single century, a prosperity unparalleled in the annals of human affairs.
"The pledge given by Mr. McMaster, that 'the history of the people shall be the chief theme,' is punctiliously and satisfactorily fulfilled. He carries out his promise in a complete, vivid, and delightful way. We should add that the literary execution of the work is worthy of the indefatigable industry and unceasing vigilance with which the stores of historical material have been acc.u.mulated, weighed, and sifted. The cardinal qualities of style, lucidity, animation, and energy, are everywhere present. Seldom indeed has a book in which matter of substantial value has been so happily united to attractiveness of form been offered by an American author to his fellow-citizens."--_New York Sun_.
"To recount the marvelous progress of the American people, to describe their life, their literature, their occupations, their amus.e.m.e.nts, is Mr. McMaster's object. His theme is an important one, and we congratulate him on his success. It has rarely been our province to notice a book with so many excellences and so few defects."--_New York Herald_.
"Mr. McMaster at once shows his grasp of the various themes and his special capacity as a historian of the people. His aim is high, but he hits the mark."--_New York Journal of Commerce_.
"... The author's pages abound, too, with ill.u.s.trations of the best kind of historical work, that of unearthing hidden sources of information and employing them, not after the modern style of historical writing, in a mere report, but with the true artistic method, in a well-digested narrative.... If Mr. McMaster finishes his work in the spirit and with the thoroughness and skill with which it has begun, it will take its place among the cla.s.sics of American literature."--_Christian Union_.
New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 72 Fifth Avenue.
The Mind of the Child Part 34
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