SMITH, ELDER, & CO.'S NEW BOOKS. With ? Portraits Young and Old (Young —from a Drawing in the possession of the family; Old by VON LKNUACH), and a Facsimile of Handwriting, a vols, Hcmy Bvo. price ;;;*J. BISMARCK: the Man and the Statesman. Being the Reflections and Kcminj«:enrcs of Otto, Prince von Bismarck, Written and Dedicated by himself ujtcr his retirement from office. Translated from the German under the supervision of A. J. Bin t.KK, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. '* AA* iLt>~At>iNti AKTICI.K). 'Of ^reat and enduring interest, and must be read us long as the. wurUi continues u> interest itself in history and its makers." /«/ /V'VC.r/'f'AVC.™"' Bi%murck's own "Reflections and Recollections" will rank, we think, with thai small and schet row of b >ol/\. ' We- do not hoitate to say that, however fully a man may think himnrlf informed on South African affairs, he will do well to study Mr. Thomson's IHH»U. . . , Mr. Thomson's attitude is eminently judicial, and his views are expressed with great moderation. He is in no sense tx " crank" or a faddist,' INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF THE RENAISSANCE. By Mrs, LILIAN K. KIKI.U. Crown 8vo, 64?. **ItVI/>AM/J". — * Mr^. Field seems to us to luivc acoomplished her difficult task very wrlL Tht* hook is capitally ordered and arranged ; the essential is properly kept in the foreground, and the writing ^ clear, .sympathetic, and scholarly.' THE SEPOY MUTINY, as seen by a Subaltern from Delhi to Lucknow. By <'olonrl Knw-\Kt» VIHAUT. With a Portraits, a Plan, and 10 Illustrations, I,iuv,«* crowu Hv.t. y.v, ft,/. .'I AM/ J * A .V/> A'.-l r J " r/M/f A' TTK. ' It holds the reader spell bound by its intensity of fVrHug iUul lUUI.Ulvr p:)\V*'t'/ CHARLES LAMB AND THE LLOYDS. Kditcd by F, V. LUCAS. With PoiUatt*. iuitl a l''*u'similr Letter. Small post Hvo (\s. 4/,j A'< 7//"'.V77',7v* (itfAt\mAX,> 'It is difficult to maintain critical composure and (Ici'uruiti on H «Ji»H'ovrt y likn ilu-*, and the*. dUliculty brcomcs an iinpossihility when it ih fiiiind (tt.it th*"»r addition** to thr canon of Lamb'M writings are not inferior in bauity iitnt tntrrcnt to eh'i hrM ofhi«» pub!i%hcd work/ IDLEHURST : ti Journal krpt in the Country. By JOHN HAI.SHAM, C'rttwu tivi*. fax* /VIA/. .V.'IA/. 6* /I/A' 7*77',*. ' \Yry rluvrming, . . . The best advice we can give to them; whw like io rr.td *damt the sountry is to g«;l " hllchur?.t " for themselves.' THE POETICAL WORKS OF ROBERT BRIDGES. Vol. I. COM ttNTH. PronH'thrUH tht Fire-giver; Eros and Pt-ythc ; und The (Jrowth of Lov<*. Sm.dl crnwu 8vu, 4s. Ai'A/*/''M}\ 'In thn edition Mr. HridgfH ;it on«ft innkcs his bow to the general juihtU', ittnl at tl»c stutte lime uriitnues the honuius of an establlbhed and recogni«d poet.1 BRITISH RULE AND MODERN POLITICS: an Historical Study. By the lion. A. S. U. CANNINC;, Author of 'The Divided Irish/ 'History in Fat't and Fkiuw.' Large* crown 8vo. 7*,