- BEN.J. R. TUCKER'S Unicrue Catalogue of Advanced Literature º -- THE LITERATURE THAT MAKES FOR EGOISM IN PHILOSOPHY ANARCHISM IN POLITICS ICON OCLASM IN ART NEW YORK CITY 225 Fourth Avenue, Room 13 1906 | - BENJ. R. TUCKER, Editor An Anarchistic journal, expounding the doctrine - that in Equal Liberty is to be found the most satis- factory solution of social questions, and that ma- - jority rule, or democracy, equally with monarchical rule, is a denial of Equal Liberty. APPRECIATIONS G. BERNARD SHAW, author of “Man and Superman”: “Liberty is a lively paper, in which the usual propor- - tions of a half-pennyworth of discussion to an intolerable deal of balderdash are reversed.” WILLIAM DOUGLAS O'CONNOR, author of “The Good Gray Poet": “The editor of Liberty would be the Gavroche of the - Revolution, if he were not its Enjolras.” FRANK STEPHENS, well-known Single-Taa’ champion, Philadelphia: * Liberty is a paper which reforms reformers.” BOLTON HALL, author of “Even As You and I’’: “Liberty shows us the profit of Anarchy, and is the rophet of Anarchy.” ALLEN KELLY, formerly chief editorial writer on the Phila- delphia “North American *: “Liberty is my philosophical Polaris. I ascertain the variations of my economic compass by taking a sight at her whenever she is visible.” SAMUEL W. COOPER, counsellor at law, Philadelphia: “Liberty is a journal that Thomas Jefferson would have loved.” EDWARD OSGOOD BROWN, Judge of the Illinois Circuit Court: “I have seen much in Liberty that I agreed with, and much that I disagreed with, but I never saw any cant, hypocrisy, or insincerity in it, which makes it an almost unique publication.” Published Bimonthly. Twelve Issues, $1.00 Alon-ss- - Single Copies, 10 Cents BENJ. R. TUCKER, P. O. Box 1312, New York City - BENJ. R. TUCKER'S OWN LIST. AUGUST, 1906. The books listed in this section of the catalogue are either published or exclusively controlled by Benj. R. Tucker. Any of them will be sent anywhere, carriage free, on receipt of price. Any bookseller or publisher may deduct one-third from the price, when remitting. Any bookseller or publisher purchasing one hundred dollars' worth or more, at net prices, dº. any calendar year, will receive at the end. 9 that year a credit memorandum for an amount equal to ten per cent of his }. purchases, which memorandum will be receivable in payment, for uture purchases. In other words, dealers buying at least one hundred dollars' worth a Y. will get, in the end, a discount of forty per cent., while other dealers will get a discount of only thirty-three and one-third per cent. No credit will be extended to any one, either in the trade or out of it. But any person choosing to do so may make an advance deposit and order against it until it is exhausted. All mail orders should be addressed to Benj. R. Tucker, P.O. Box 1,312. New York City. ALEXANDRE, ARSENE. The Thirty-six Trades of the State. Translated from the French by Benj. R. Tucker. 10 pages. 2 cents. AMES, SARAH E. Why the Undertone? An Open Letter to Judge Joseph E. Gary, who in 1893 seeks to justify his participation (in 1887) in the lynching, under the hypocritical guise of the law, of men who entertained and expressed unpopu- lar opinions. 19 pages. 5 cents. BADCOCK, Jr., JOHN. Slaves to Duty. A lecture. 41 pages. Paper covers. 5 cents. “Society may be everything to me, but it is nothing to me except in so far as it furnishes me with material for my happiness." -The Author. “In place of duty I put-nothing...Superstitions never want replacing, or we should never advance in freedom.”-J. Badcock, Jr. 3 4. “Materialism denies free will and ends in the establishment of liberty; idealism, in the name of human dignity, proclaims free will, and on the ruins of every liberty founds authority.”-Bakoumine. BAKOUNINE, MICHAEL. God and the State. With a preface by Carlo Cafiero and Elisée Reclus. Translated from the French by Benj. R. Tucker. 52 pages. 15 cents. “One of the most eloquent pleas for liberty ever written. Paine's "Age of Reason" and “Rights of Man" consolidated and improved. It stirs the pulse like a trumpet-call."—The Truth Seeker. BLUNT, WILFRID SCAWEN. The Wind and the Whirlwind. A poem of 412 lines. Red line edition. Parchment covers. 30 pages. 10 cents. This poem was inspired by the bombardment of Alexandria by Eng- land under Gladstone. Though but little known, it is one of the greatest poems written in the nineteenth century. BURKE, EDMUND. A Vindication of Natural Society. Pamphlet. 36 pages. 10 cents. “In vain you tell me that artificial government is good, but that I fall out only with the abuse. The thing-the thing itself is the abuse.”–From the above pamphlet. This was Burke's first work, and remains his most remarkable work. He afterward claimed that he wrote it as a satire, but there is nothing in it to excite even a suspicion of satirical purpose. At any rate, Anarchists are very glad to put it forward as an unanswerable argument for the abo- lition of government. William Godwin said that it proved in good earnest the very things which under the guise of satire it labored to refute. DANA, CHARLES A. Proudhon and His “Bank of the People.” 74 pages. Leath- erette, 10 cents; paper, 5 cents. A defence of the great French Anarchist, P. J. Proudhon: showing the evils of a specie currency, and that interest on capital can and ought to be abolished by a system of free and mutual banking. The series of newspaper articles composing this pamphlet appeared originally in the New York." Tribune," of which Mr. Dana was then managing editor, and a little later in the “Spirit of the Age," a weekly paper pub. lished in New York in 1849, by Fowlers & Wells, and edited by Rev. Will- lam Henry Channing. Editor Channing accompanied the publication of the series by a footnote, in which he stated that the articles had already appeared in the “Tribune," but that "Mr. Dana, judging them worthy of being preserved in a form convenient for binding, has consented to revise them for our paper." FISKE, STEPHEN. Holiday Stories. Cloth. 208 pages. 20 cents. **Touch prºperty, and you touch marriage; touch marriage, and you touch property.”-Wm. B. Greene. 5 -- “A country which pays even five per cent. interest, to say nothin of the rates of Wall Street, must from time to time commit bankruptcy.”-Chas. A. --- GREENE, WILLIAM B. Mutual Banking. Showing the radical deficiency of the present circulating medium and the advantages of a free currency. Portrait. 104 pages. Paper covers. 10 cents. This book, which demonstrates the justice, and the possibility, of abol- ishing interest on money, is the most important work on finance ever pub- lished in the English language. Socialistic, Communistic, Mutualistic, and Financial Frag- ments. Comprising, among other things, a short History of Marriage, and the Address of the Working-People's International Association. Cloth. 271 pages. 50 cents. HERBERT, AUBERON. A Politician in Sight of Haven. Being a Protest against the Government of Man by Man. 24 pages. Paper cov- ers. 10 cents. “Whatever be the issue of the present, that the world will remain in Socialism—of that I can have no fear. The system is doomed by the great laws as inexorably as the Tower of Babel."—The Author. HEYWOOD INDIGNATION MEETING. Proceedings of the Indignation Meeting held in Faneuil Hall, Thursday evening, August 1, 1878, to protest against the injury done to the freedom of the press by the con- viction and imprisonment of Ezra H. Heywood. 68 pages. Paper covers. 5 cents. This pamphlet, which will soon be out of print, contains addresses by Elizur Wright, J. H. W. Toohey, Thaddeus B. Wakeman, J. M. L. Babcock, Laura Kendrick, A. L. Rawson, and Moses Hull, and letters from Alfred E. Giles, Theron C. Leland, Parker Pillsbury, A. J. Grover, and D. M. Bennett. INGALLS, J. K. Work and Wealth. 13 pages. Paper covers. 5 cents. KOROLENKO, VLADIMIR. A Nation Kneeling at the Cannon’s Mouth. Together with James Thomson's poem, “L’Ancien Régime.” 28 pages. 10 cents. An open letter from the author to State Councillor Filonoſt, who was “How to be defended against the governors? Quis custodiet ºpsos cus- todes?”-Edmund Burke. 6 “A man has a right to threaten what he has a right to execute. ... The boundary-line of justifiable boycotting is fixed by the nature of the threat used.”-Benj. R. Tucker. assassinated shortly after its publication. It is a graphic revelation of the tragic situation of the Russian people, and rivals in power and significance Zola's famous "J'accuse.” LLOYD, J. WILLIAM. Anarchists' March. A 4-page sheet of music. Tune: Björneborgarnes Marsch (Finnish War Song). 5 cents. MACKAY, JOHN HENRY. Sturm. Poems in German. 127 pages. Cloth, 50 cents; paper, 25 cents. “In Titanic wrath Mackay shakes at the foundations on which society imagines that it lives securely, with sublime courage he hurls mighty war songs against a hated order of the world."-Gabriele Reuter. MORSE, SIDNEY H. So the Railway Kings Itch for an Empire, Do They? By “A Red-Hot Striker,” of Scranton, Pa. 12 pages. 5 cents. SPOONER, LYSANDER. Free Political Institutions: Their Nature, Essence, and Maintenance. An abridgment and rearrangement by Victor Yarros of the author's work, “Trial by Jury." 47 pages. Paper covers. 15 cents. “If the jury have no right to judge of the justice of a law of the gov- ernment, they plainly can do nothing to protect the people against the op- pressions of the government: for there are no oppressions which the gov- ernment may not authorize by law."—The Author. Illegality of the Trial of John W. Webster. 16 pages. Pa- per covers. 10 cents. “The law does not require a man to cease to be a man, and act without regard to consequences, when he becomes a juror."-The Author. The Unconstitutionality of the Laws of Congress Prohibiting Private Mails. 24 pages. Paper covers. 5 cents. “Any law which compels a man to pay a certain sum of money to the flºº for the privilege of speaking to a distant individual, or which ebars him of the right of employing such a messenger as he prefers to en- º with his communications, ‘abridges' his "freedom of speech.'"-The uthor. - A Letter to Thomas F. Bayard. Challenging his right, and “When supernaturalism fell, as fallen it has for reasoning creatures, asceticism fell with it.”-Grant Allen. 7 “The pursuit of politics is almost entirely abandoned to lawyers, and gen- erally it is the career of those who are least successful in that profession.”- Stephen Pearl Andrews. that of all the other so-called senators and representatives in congress, to exercise any legislative power whatever over the people of the United States. 11 pages. 2 cents. “No man can delegate, or give to another, any right of arbitrary do- minion."—The Author. No Treason. No. II. The Constitution. 16 pages. 5 cents. “All governments, the worst on earth and the most tyrannical on earth, are free governments to that portion of the people who voluntarily support them."—The Author. No Treason. No. VI. The Constitution of no authority. 59 pages. 10 cents. “All restraints upon men's natural liberty, not necessary for the simple maintenance of justice, are of the nature of slavery, and differ from each other only in degree."—The Author. Address of the Free Constitutionalists to the People of the United States. 54 pages. 5 cents. “Juries, and not congresses and judges, are the palladium of our liber- ties." -The Author. A New Banking System. 77 pages. Paper covers. 5 cents. “There can be no such thing as freedom of industry where there is no freedom to lend and hire capital for such industry.”—The Author. TANDY, FRANCIS D. Voluntary Socialism. A sketch. 228 pages. 75 cents. “Let every proposed reform be judged by this one principle: Is it an extension of individual liberty?"-The Author, TARN, ALBERT. The State: Its Origin, Its Nature, and Its Abolition. 19 pages. 3 cents. TUCKER, BENJAMIN R. Instead of a Book. By a man too busy to write one. A fragmentary exposition of Philosophical Anarchism. Portrait. 522 pages. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 cents. “The only protection which honest people need is protection against “The beginning of all wisdom is to look fixedly on clothes, or even with armed eyesight, till they become transparent.”-Carlyle. - s “If any ordinary man ever said that he was horrified by the subjects dis- cussed in Ibsen or Maupassant, or by the plain º by which they are spoken of, that ordinary man was lying.”-G. K. Chesterton. that vast Society for the Creation of Theft which is euphemistically desig- nated as the State."—The Author. State Socialism and Anarchism: How Far They Agree, and Wherein They Differ. 33 pages. 5 cents. “The Anarchists are simply unterrified Jeffersonian Democrats."- The Author. A Blow at Trial by Jury. An examination of the special jury law passed by the New York Legislature in 1896. 46 pages. 5 cents. - - “With the monstrous and ridiculous laws that year by year are accumu- lating on our statute-books, one may safely say that the mºn who is not a confirmed criminai is scarcely fit to live among decent people."--The Author. The Attitude of Anarchism Toward Industrial Combinations. 20 pages. 5 cents. “Free access to the world of matter, abolishing land monopoly: free access to the world of mind, abolishing idea monopoly; free access to an untaxed and unprivileged market, abolishing tariff monopoly and money ºpºly-secure these, and all the rest shall be added unto you."—The uthor. Henry George, Traitor. 15 pages. 2 cents. WILDE, OSCAR. The Ballad of Reading Gaol. By C. 3. 3. 44 pages. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 10 cents. “But this I know, that every Law That men have made for Man, Since first Man took his brother's life, And the sad world began, But straws the wheat and saves the chaft With a most evil fan." -The Author. ZOLA, EMILE. Modern Marriage. Translated by Benj. R. Tucker. 42 pages. Paper covers. 10 cents. “Anything is good enough for the man who believes in it, and the first step upward is not abolition, but disbelief.”-Ernest Crosby -- -- BENJ. R. TUCKER'S RETAIL STOCK. AUGUST, 1906. THE books listed in this section of the catalogue are sold at retail prices by Benj. R. Tucker, but are not published by him. Each of these books is carried constantly in stock, and may be seen at Benj. R. Tucker's bookstore, 225 Fourth Avenue, Room 13, New York City. It is the most complete line of advanced literature in the English language offered for sale at any one place in the entire world. Any of the books will be sent anywhere, carriage free, on receipt of price. On these books no discount is allowed to booksellers or publishers. All mail orders should be addressed to Benj. R. Tucker, P. O. Box 1,312, New York City. ALEMAN, MATEO. See Mendoza, Don Diego Hurtado de. ALLEN, GRANT. The New Hedonism. 30 pages. 5 cents. Contrasting especially the hedonistic and ascetic conceptions on marital and parental relationship. The Woman Who Did. 223 pages. $1.00. “Written at Perugia, Spring 1893, for the first time in my life wholly and solely to satisfy my own taste and my own conscience."—The Author. The Evolution of the Idea of God: An Inquiry into the Origins of Religion. 456 pages. $3.00. “This work contains, I believe, the first extended effort to trace the genesis of the belief in a God from its earliest origin in the mind of primitive man up to its fullest development in advanced and etherealized Christian theology.”–From the Preface. ALTGELD, JOHN P. Reasons for Pardoning Fielden, Neebe, and Schwab. 63 pages. 10 cents. This unanswerable official document, perhaps the bravest act ever per- “Th’Apostles' Creed niver was as con-vincin' to me afther I larned to r-read it as it was whin I cudden't read it, but believed it.”—Mr. Dooley. 9 10 “Thought makes everything fit for use. The vocabulary of an omnis- cient man would embrace words and images excluded from polite conver- sation.”-Emerson. formed by an American politician, revolutionized public opinion regarding the trial, conviction, and execution of the Chicago Communists. Live Questions. Containing the author's papers, speeches, and interviews, his messages to the legislature of Illinois, and a statement of the facts which influenced his course as governor on several famous occasions. Portraits and illustrations. 1,009 pages. $1.80. AMERICAN FAMILIAR VERSE. Edited, with an introduction, by Brander Matthews. 328 pages. $1.53. AMERICAN LITERARY CRITICISM. Selected and edited, with an Introductory Essay, by William Morton Payne. From twelve authors. 330 pages. $1.52. AMERICAN SHORT STORIES. Selected and edited, with an Introductory Essay on the Short Story, by Charles Sears Baldwin. Fifteen stories by Irving, Hawthorne, Longfellow, Poe, Willis, Bret Harte, and others. 333 pages. $1.53. - ANDREWS, STEPHEN PEARL. The Science of Society. Consisting of two essays bearing the following titles respectively: “The True Constitution of Government in the Sovereignty of the Individual as the Final Development of Protestantism, Democracy, and Socialism”; “Cost the Limit of Price: A Scientific Meas- ure of Honesty in Trade as One of the Fundamental Prin- ciples in the Solution of the Social Problem." Paper covers. 165 pages. 50 cents. lºan Warren considered this the best exposition of his teachings ever --- ANITCHKOW, MICHAEL. War and Labor. 578 pages. $5.00. "Only when all government activity in legal and independent kingdoms is full of the consciousness of the necessity of free and energetic coºperation, universal and social, then only will war disappear, as slavery has disap- peared."-From the Preface. “The invention of ‘printing,” though Hºus compared with the in- vention of ‘letters,” is no great matter.”-Hobbes. 11 -- “He who desires a lifetime of happiness with a beautiful woman desires to *g the taste of wine by keeping his mouth always full of it.”—G. Ber- -arº al- ARNOLD, A. S. The Story of Thomas Carlyle. Illustrated. 335 pages. $1.00. AUSTEN, JANE. Novels. Illustrated with 12 photogravure plates from draw- ings by Edmund H. Garrett, 6 vols., of about 300 pages each. Decorated cloth, gilt top, in box, $6.00. Sold separately at $1.00 per volume. 1. Sense and Sensibility. 4. Mansfield Park. 2. Pride and Prejudice. §: Emma. 3. Northanger Abbey, and . Lady Susan, The Wat- Persuasion. sons, Letters, etc. “I have now read again all Miss Austen's novels; charming they are. There are in the world no compositions which approach nearer to perfec- tion."-Lord Macaulay. AUSTIN, GEORGE LOWELL. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips. Steel portrait and illustrations. 431 pages. $1.50. BAGEHOT, WALTER. Literary Studies. Edited, with a Prefatory Memoir, by Richard Holt Hutton. Portrait. 3 vols. 1,105 pages. Sold only in sets. $3.75 the set CoNTENTs: “Hartley Coleridge": “Shakspºre-th? Man”; “William Cowper'': "The First Edinburgh Reviewers": "Edward Gibbon": "Percy Bysshe Shelley”; “Thomas Babington Macaulay”; “Beranger”; “The Wa- verley Novels”: “Charles Dickens”: “John Milton": “Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.”: “Clough's Poems": “Sterne and Thackeray”; “Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Browning": “Letters on the Coup d'Etat of 1851"; “Caesar- 1sm as it Existed in 1865"; “Oxford”; “Bishop Butler”; “The Ignorance of Man"; “On the Emotion of Conviction"; “The Metaphysical Basis of Toleration"; “The Public worship Regulation Bill": “Henry Crabb Rob- Inson”; “Bad Lawyers or Good?” “The Crédit Mobiller and Banking Com- panies in France”; “Memoir of the Right Honorable James Wilson." Economic Studies. Edited by Richard Holt Hutton. 286 pages. $1.25. Biographical Studies. Edited by Richard Holt Hutton. 398 pages. $1.25. “The restraint we put on ourselves to remain faithful to a person we love is scarcely better than an infidelity.”-Rochefoucauld. 12 “The slow finger of Heredity Writes on the forehead of each living man, Strive as he may, “His mother was a cook!” —Charlotte Perkins Gilman. BAILIE, WILLIAM. Josiah Warren, the First American Anarchist. With an introductory essay on the Anarchist Spirit. A biogra- phy and a sociological study. Two portraits. 173 pages. $1.00. BALZAC, HONORE DE. - La Comédie Humaine. Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley. Centenary Edition. Illustrated with nearly 100 photogravure plates by French artists. 34 vols., of about 500 pages each. Cloth, extra, gilt top, in boxes, $51.00. Sold separately at $1.50 per volume. 1. Père Goriot. The Marriage 13. Lucien de Rubempre. Contract. The Duchesse de Lan- 2. Memoirs of Two Young eais. Married Women. Albert 14. The Last Incarnation of Savarus. Vautrin. Ferragus, Chief 3. Fame and Sorrow. The of the Devorants. Gob- Purse. The Rural Ball. seck. Comedies Played Colonel Chabert. The Gratis. Atheist's Mass. La 15. Rise and Fall of Cesar Grande Bretéche. La Birotteau. Nucingen and Grenadière. A Double Co., Bankers. nother Life. The Deserted Study of Woman. Woman. 16. Bureaucracy. The Secrets 4. Modeste Mignon. A of the Princesse Cadig- Daughter of Eve. The man- Unconscious Peace of a Home. Comedians. Pierre 5. A Start in Life. Vendetta. Grasson. A Study of a Woman. 17. The Lesser Bourgeoisie. The Message. Paz. Ma- 18. Cousin Bette. dame Firmiani. 19. Cousin Pons. 6. Beatrix. A Commission 2d. The Chouans. A Passion in Lunacy. in the Desert. 7. Eugènie Grandet. Pier- 21. An Historical Mystery. rette. An Episode under the 8. The Two Brothers. An Old Terror. Maid. 22. The Brotherhood of Con- 9. The Lily of the Valley. The solation. Z. Marcas. Gallery of Antiquities. 23. The Deputy of Arcis. ro. Ursula. The Vicar of 24. The Country Doctor. Tours. : The Village Rector. 11. Lost Illusions. The Illus- 26. Sons of the Soil. trious Gaudissart. 27. Catherine de' Medici. 12. A Great Man of the Prov- 28. The Magic Skin. The inces in Paris. Hidden Masterpiece. “Any man's becoming a clergyman in these days implies that, at best, his sentiment has overpowered his intellect.”-Ruskin. “Bombs are not more dispassionate than thunder; In such rude strife we pardon a false blow To gods above, and demigods below.” -Hugo. 29. Louis Lambert. Facius Cane. Gambara. Mel- moth Absolved. Jesus Christ in Flanders. The Exiles. 3o. Seraphita. The Alkahest. 31. Juana. Adieu. A Drama on the Seashore. The Red Inn. The Recruit. of Life. The Hated Son. Maitre Cornélius. 32. Balzac: A Memoir. By Katharine Prescott Wormeley. 33. The Personal Opinions of Honoré de Balzac. 34. The Letters of Honoré de Balzac to Madame El Verdugo. The Elixir Hanska. Works. Introductions by Prof. W. P. Trent. Photogra- vure frontispieces and numerous half-tones. 18, vols., extra cloth, in boxes. $18.00 the set. BARBOU, ALFRED. Victor Hugo and His Time. Illustrated with 120 draw- ings by M.M. Emile Bayard, Clerget, Fichel, Jules Gar- nier, Gervex, Giacomelli, Ch. Gosselin, Jean Paul Laurens, Lix, Olivier Merson, H. Meyer, Ed. Morin, Scott, Vogel, Zier, etc., and a great number of drawings by Victor Hugo, engraved by Méaulle. Translated by Ellen E. Frewer. 276 pages. $2.50. BAX, ERNEST BELFORT. Jean Paul Marat, the People's Friend. Photogravure por- trait, illustrations, and fac-similes. 348 pages. $1.50. An important contribution to the history of the French Revolution and of democracy, written in the light of the most recent historical research, and with an earnest purpose to vindicate the character of the “best abused man in modern history." BEESLY, A. H. Life of Danton. $2.00. “Few such remarkable men have been left so obscure to us as this Titan of the Revolution."-Carlule. BELL, MRS. ARTHUR. James McNeill Whistler. Portrait and illustrations. leather, 72 pages, $1.00. Sold only in sets. Portrait and illustrations. 354 pages. Full “My self-interest teaches me to respect the liberty of others, as the cheapest way to get my own respected.”-J. Badcock, Jr. 14 “In history the name of God is the terrible club with which men vari- ously inspired, great geniuses, have beaten down the liberty, dignity, reason. and prosperity of men.”—Bakownine. BELLOC, HILAIRE. Robespierre: A Study. Portrait. 400 pages. $2.16. "To arrive at the sharp truth with regard to this man, who, at the Renaissance of European democracy, was made for a few months a kind of god, is to understand perhaps the problem which the immediate future presents to us.”-From the Preface. Danton: A Study. Portrait. 453 pages. $2.50. BENSON, ARTHUR C. Rossetti. 238 pages. 83 cents. BETTANY, G. T. Life of Charles Darwin. 205 pages. $1.00. BIBELOT, THE. A reprint of poetry and prose for book-lovers, chosen in part from scarce editions and sources not generally known. 1895–1905. 11 vols., of about 400 pages each. Antique boards. $26.54 the set. Vol. I, $3.28; Vol. II, $3.28; Vol. III, $1.68; Vol. IV, $1.68; Vol. V, $2.75; Vol. VI, $3.29; Vol. VII, $3.29; Vol. VIII, $2.23; Vol. IX, $1.69; Vol. X, $1.69; Vol. XI, $1.68. BIELSCHOWSKY, ALBERT. The Life of Goethe. Authorized translation by William A. Cooper. Illustrated. 3 vols. Vol. I now ready, 1749– 1788, from birth to the return from Italy. Cloth, gilt top. 455 pages. $3.73. The leading German papers are unanimous in declaring this to be the most important life of Goethe, from the standpoint of scholarship, sympa- thetic interpretation, and literary art. BIGELOW, JOHN. The Life of Samuel J. Tilden. Illustrated. 2 vols. 872 pages. $6.00. BILSE, EX-LIEUTENANT. A Little Garrison. Authorized translation by Wolf von “Mutualism operates, by its very nature, to render political government founded on arbitrary force, superfluous.”-Wm. B. Greene. - 15 “A republic, as an ancient philosopher has observed, is no one species of government, but a º: of every species; here you find every sort of it, and that in the worst form.”—Edmund Burke. Schierbrand, with an introduction by the translator. 337 pages. $1.50. That this story of German army life, which is told in the form of a realistic novel, went home to the German people is proved by the fact that within two weeks after its publication more than 100,000 copies had been sold. The book caused the author's imprisonment, and formed the theme of heated debates in the Reichstag. “Everything that is “bad form" elsewhere is a matter of every-day oc- currence in a small garrison town in Germany. . . . The first inference is that the German army can no longer be very formidable as an engine of destruction. . . . The second inference is that militarism in Germany can- not last very much longer."-London Outlook. Dear Fatherland. 257 pages. $1.50. A story which forcibly depicts the immorality prevalent in the German military set. BINNS, HENRY BRYAN. A Life of Walt Whitman. 33 illustrations. 397 pages. $3.14. BIRUKOFF, PAUL. Leo Tolstoi: His Life and Work. Autobiographical me- moirs, letters, and biographical material, compiled by Paul Birukoff, and revised by Leo Tolstoi. Illustrated. 3 vols. Vol. I now ready. 396 pages. $1.64. This work will probably prove the most authentic source of informa- tion regarding Tolstoi. BjöRNSON, BjöRNSTJERNE. Synnøve Solbakken. Translated by Julie Sutter. With an essay on the writings of Björnson by Edmund Gosse. 268 pages. $1.25. Arne. Translated by Walter Low, 228 pages. $1.25. A Happy Boy. Translated by Mrs. W. Archer. 182 pages. $1.25. - The Fisher Lass. 291 pages. $1.25. The Bridal March, and One Day. 197 pages. $1.25. Magnhild, and Dust. 318 pages. $1.25. “The privileged and powerful, by whatever name they are called, do not yield their privileges except as they are compelled.”-Chas. A. Dana. 16 “No individual has a right to do any act which is invasive, but any num- ber of individuals may ºutly “conspire' to commit any act which is non- invasive.”—Benj. R. Tucker, Captain Mansana, and Mother's Hands. 224 pages. $1.25. Absalom's Hair, and A Painful Memory. 210 pages. $1.25. Novels. Authorized translation by Prof. R. B. Anderson. Biographical sketch by the translator. Portrait and illustrations. 3 vols. 1,523 pages. Sold only in sets. $4.50 the set. Sigurd Slembe. A Dramatic º: Translated by illiam Morton Payne. Preface by translator. 330 pages. $1.50. “Of the long series of dramatic works in prose and verse which Björn- son has produced, the trilogy of “Sigurd Slembe' is altogether the finest; it is characterized by the greatest breadth of treatment, by the most mas- terly delineation of character, and by the highest poetic truth.”—From Translator's Preface. BLACKIE, JOHN STUART. Life of Robert Burns. With bibliography. 231 pages. $1.00. BLANCHARD, CALVIN. The Life of Thomas Paine. Portrait. 110 pages. Paper covers. 25 cents. BLIND, MATHILDE. George Eliot. With a critical estimate of George Eliot's writings and supplementary chapters on her methods of work and her friends and home life by Frank Waldo and T. A. Turkington. Also an exhaustive bibliography. Portrait and illustrations. 405 pages. $1.25. Madame Roland. 318 pages. $1.00. “The thrilling story of Madame Roland's genius, nobility, self-sacri- fice, and death loses nothing in its retelling here.”-Christian Union. BLISSARD, W. 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Gilt top. $1.50. “I am inclined to believe that this great story of youthful folly will out- live any of the other creations of its gifted and marvellously versatile au- thor." -James L. Ford. Kings in Exile. Translated by Katharine Prescott Worm- “We have more power than will; and it is often by way of excuse to our- selves that we fancy things are impossible.”-Rochefoucauld. 32 “The free governments, for the point of their space, and the moment of their duration, have felt more confusion, and committed more flagrant acts of tyranny, than the most perfect despotic governments which we have ever known.”-Edmund Burke. eley. With an introduction by Charles De Kay. Illus- trated. 422 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “No novelist has had a happier inspiration than that which gave us * Kings in Exile," a splendid subject, splendidly handled, and lending itself perfectly to the display of Daudet's best qualities, his º his ability to seize the actual, and his power of dealing with material such as the elder Dumas would have delighted in with a restraint and a logic the younger Dumas would have admired.”—Brander Matthews. Little What's-His-Name, and Scenes and Fancies. Trans- lated by Jane Minot Sedgwick. With an introduction by W. P. Trent. Illustrated. 542 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “As a specimen of what one may perhaps call intimate, confidential prose it can have few rivals.”–W. P. Trent. Tartarin of Tarascon, and Tartarin on the Alps. Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley. With an introduction by W. P. Trent. Illustrated. 371 pages. 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Translated by Katharine Prescott Wormeley. “We recognize the absolute authority of science, but we reject the in- fallibility and universality of the savant.”-Bakoumine. 33 “The rule of majorities is a compromise enforced by temporary expe- diency—a sort of half-way station-house between Despotism, which is Indi- viduality in the concrete, and the Sovereignty of the Individual, which is Individuality in the discrete form.”—Stephen Pearl Andrews. With an introduction by W. P. Trent. Illustrated. 452 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “One wonders that the anti-expansionists in the United States have not made the book one of their campaign documents.”—W. P. Trent. Memories of a Man of Letters, Ultima, and Artists' Wives. Translated by George Burnham Ives. Also Notes on Life. Translated by Mary Hendee. With introduction by Mr. Ives. Illustrated. 475 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. Daudet refers to “Artists' Wives" as “one of the less known books, which I recommend to connoisseurs." Monday Tales. Translated by Marian McIntyre. With an introduction by the translator. Illustrated. 361 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. - “Daudet was perhaps the first to apply this form of literary art [the short story) to a passing phase of thought, to a momentary emotion, and to incidents that are psychological in character, rather than anecdotic."- Marian McIntyre. Letters from My Mill, Letters to an Absent One, Scenes and Fancies, and other short stories. Translated by Katha- rine Prescott Wormeley. Illustrated. 429 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. The Evangelist. Translated by Olive Edwards Palmer. Also Rose and Ninette. Translated by Charles De Kay. With an introduction by W. P. Trent. Illustrated. 462 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “Daudet's most pessimistic, not to say tragical, story.”—W. P. Trent. Jack. Translated by Marian McIntyre. With an intro- duction by the translator. Illustrated. 2 vols. 753 pages. Gilt top. $3.00. George Sand was so moved upon ending the book that for three days she was unable to resume work, or write a single line. The Immortal, and The Struggle for Life. Translated by George Burnham Ives. Illustrated. 480 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. *A book like this is accumulated and condensed sensitiveness, a lit- erary Leyden jar. The pleasure it causes one is almost too intense; there Is in it a touch of the discomfort one feels on stormy days; as you turn the leaves, it seems that your fingers strike fire."-Jules Lemaitre. “The idea of the essential impurity and danger of sex began with the savage.”-Grant Allen. 34 “May it please your Serene Highnesses, your Majesties, Lordships, and Law–wardships, the proper Epic of this world is not now “Arms and the Man i. how much less, ‘Shirt-frills and the Man: no, it is now “Tools and the Man.’” —Carlyle. The Support of the Family. Translated by George Burn- ham Ives. Illustrated. 419 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. The 20 volumes enumerated above are issued in uniform style, and are sold at $30.00 the set. The Temple Edition of Daudet. 10 vols., comprising Tar- tarin of Tarascon, Tartarin on the Alps, Kings ºl. Artists' Wives, Recollections of a Literary Life, Thirty Years of Paris, Jack (2 vols.), Robert Helmont, and Sappho. Boxed. 3,222 pages. Gilt top. Profusely illustrated. $5.00 the set. he volumes sold separately at 50 cents each. Tartarin of Tarascon, Tartarin on the Alps, and La Belle Nivernaise. Illustrated. 3 vols. Half leather, gilt º 696 pages. $3.00 the set. The volumes sold separately at $1.25 each. The Handy Library Edition of Daudet. 16 photogravure plates and 32 full-page pictures. 16 vols. Cloth, gilt top, in box. $16.00. he volumes sold separately at $1.00 each. DAVITT, MICHAEL. The Fall of Feudalism in Ireland; or, the story of the Land League Revolution. 769 pages. $2.67. 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Theodore Watts-Dunton: Poet, Novelist, Critic. Illus- trated. 495 pages. $3.69. DOWDEN, EDWARD. A History of French Literature. 452 pages. $1.50. Tº Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Portrait. 610 pages. 5.00. “Nobody can be progressive without being doctrinal.”—G. K. Chesterton. 36 “I doubt not, but if it had been a thing contrary to any man's right of dominion, or to the interest of men that have dominion, “that the three angles of a triangle, should be equal to two angles of a square;’ that doctrine should have been, if not disputed, yet by the burning of all books of geometry, sup- pressed, as far as he whom it concerned was able.”-Hobbes. DRAPER, JOHN WILLIAM. History of the Conflict between Religion and Science. 396 pages. $1.75. History of the Intellectual Development of Europe. 2 vols., boxed. 894 pages. $3.00 DUNBAR, WILLIAM H. Government by Injunction. 43 pages. Paper covers. 59 cents. An able legal argument against the latest effort to abolish trial by jury. 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A clever and searching criticism of the civilization of the late century through the medium of a supposed discussion, centuries hence, between two students of antiquities. EMERSON, EDWARD WALDO. Emerson in Concord. A memoir. Written for the “Social Circle” in Concord, Mass. Portrait. 266 pages. $1.75. EMERSON, RALPH WALDO. Nature. Addresses and lectures. With biographical sketch. Portrait. 503 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. Essays, 2 vols. 803 pages. Gilt top. $3.50. Representative Men. Seven lectures. 378 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. - “I count him a great man who inhabits a higher sphere of thought, into which other men rise with labor and difficulty."-Emerson. English Traits. Portrait. 406 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. The Conduct of Life. Portrait. 434 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. Society and Solitude. 451 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. Letters and Social Aims. 441 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. Poems. Portrait. 548 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. Lectures and Biographical Sketches. Portrait. 623 pages. Gilt top. $1.75. 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Sold only in sets. $10.00 the set. Novels. With biographical sketch by Alfred Trumble. “It is the characteristic of privilege and of every privileged position to kill the mind and heart of men.”—Bakoumine. 40 “The whole business of the poor is to administer to the idleness, folly, and luxury of the rich, and that of the rich, in return, is to find the best methods of confirming the slavery and increasing the burdens of the poor.” -Edmund Burke. 48 steel and wood engravings. 7 vols., boxed. Silk ribbed cloth, gilt top. Sold only in sets. $7.00 the set. “Henry Fielding was not only the first great English novelist, but he remains to this day one of the greatest."-Trumble. FINCK, HENRY T. Wagner and His Works. The story of his life. With critical comments. Portraits. 2 vols. 1,012 pages. Gilt top. $4.00. FISKE, JOHN. Edward Livingston Youmans. 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Gilt top. $1.44. “These are genuine letters, written by the Sibyl of New England tran- scendentalists. They reveal purity of thought, beauty of sentiment, sweet- ness of nature, and exquisite refinement of style.”-New York Tribune. GAPON, GEORGE. The Story of My Life. Illustrated. 267 pages. $3.13. Facts that have transpired since the publication of this volume indicate that Father Gapon is (or was) anything but an admirable character: still, his book is interesting as the autobiography of a prominent factor in the Russian revolution. “A man that's broke can’t be square. He's got too much to do payin' taxes.”—Mr. Dooley. - - 42 “At the ratio of depreciation actually progressing, office-holding of all sorts, in these United States, from the president down to the constable, will. in a few years more, be ranked in the public mind as positively disreputable.” —Stephen Pearl Andrews. GARNETT, RICHARD. Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson. With bibliography. 221 pages. 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INGALLS, J. K. Economic Equities. A compend of the natural laws of industrial production and exchange. 63 pages. Paper covers. 25 cents. - “Only a monopoly which prevented a free supply could for any length of * tº and tribute for the use of land, money, plant, or commodities." -The Author. “The motto on our flag is not “Liberty a Natural Right," but “Liberty the Mother of Order.””-Benj. R. Tucker. 63 “If there were no privileges to be protected, the necessities for political government would go on gradually diminishing; and the social º of the people would gradually establish itself outside of the government.”-Wm. B. Greene. INGERSOLL, ROBERT G. - Works. Dresden Edition. Comprising The Gods; Hum- boldt; Thomas Paine; Individuality; Heretics and Here- sies; The Ghosts; The Liberty of Man, Woman, and Child; About Farming in Illinois; What Must We Do to Be Saved?; Some Mistakes of Moses; Some Reasons Why; Orthodoxy; Myth and Miracle; Shakspere; Robert Burns; Abraham Lincoln; Voltaire; Liberty in Literature; The Great Infidels; Which Way?; About the Holy Bible; Why I Am an Agnostic; The Truth; How to Reform Man- kind; A Thanksgiving Sermon; A Lay Sermon; The Foun- dations of Faith; Šiº. The Devil; Progress; What is Religion?; Six Interviews on Talmage; The Tal- magian Catechism; A Vindication of Thomas Paine; The Christian Religion [controversy with Judge Jeremiah S. Black]; The Field-Ingersoll Discussion; Colonel Ingersoll on Christianity [controversy with W. E. Gladstone]; Rome or Reason [reply to Cardinal Manning]; Is Divorce Wrong? 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Trans- lated by Alexander Tille. 502 pages. $2.50. “The world doth not revolve round the inventors of new noise, but round the inventors of new values: inaudibly it turneth."--The Author. A Genealogy of Morals. Translated by William A. Hause- mann. Including Poems, translated by John Gray. “In these modern days there are many Foulons, some of whom may yet eat grass.”-Benj. R. Tucker. 88 “A king nowadays is no more thin a hitchin' post fºr wan pollytician afther another. He ain't allowed to move himsilf, but anny crazy polly- tician that ties up to him is apt to pull him out be th’ roots.”—Mr. Dooley. With an introduction by Alexander Tille. 308 pages. $2.00. “The ascetic ideal contains in itself something mortally inimical to all good manners-lack of measure, aversion from measure; it is itself a ‘ne plus ultra.''' -The Author. The Case of Wagner. The Twilight of the Idols. Nietzsche contra Wagner. The Antichrist. Translated by Thomas Common. 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Portraits. 577 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. Eureka. Marginalia. A Chapter on Autography. The Literati. Illustrated. 576 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “The modern reformist, Philosophy, which annihilates the individual § way of aiding the mass, and the late reformist, Legislation, which pro- hibits pleasure with the view of advancing happiness, seem to be chips of that old block of a French feudal law which, to prevent young partridges ſº being disturbed, imposed penalties upon hoeing and weeding."—The uthor. The 6 volumes enumerated above are issued in uniform style, and sold In sets, boxed, at $9.00 the set. POLLOCK, FREDERICK. Spinoza: His Life and Philosophy. 427 pages. Gilt top. $3.00. “The natural right of the whole of nature, and by consequence of each several individual, doth extend so far forth as its power; consequently what- ever every man does by the rules of his own nature, that he does by perfect nº. right, and hath right over nature so far as by his power he prevails." -Spinoza. 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With a biography by J. A. Langlois. 498 pages. $2.00. “In a given society the authority of man over man is inversely pro- portional to the stage of intellectual development which that society has reached." -The Author. “That element in the idea of property which is necessary, immutable, and absolute is reducible to individual and transmissible possession, sus- ceptible of exchange but not of alienation, founded on labor, and not on fictitious occupancy or idle caprice."—The Author. PUTNAM, SAMUEL P. Four Hundred Years of Freethought. 146 portraits. 874 pages. Marble edges. $5.00. RABELAIS, FRANÇois. - Gargantua and Pantagruel. Translated by Sir Thomas Urquhart and Peter Le Motteux. With introductions by Charles Whibley. Including other pieces in verse and prose, and the historical letters. 3 vols. 1,158 pages. $22.90 the set. “Rabelais, with an intellectual courage which he shares with Lucian º killed with laughter the vain ignorance of his generation."- eu. Works. 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Gilt top. $2.16. “Patriotism as it is understood to-day is a fashion which lasts for fifty years. In a century, when it shall have drenched Europe with blood, it will be no more understood than we now understand the dynastic ideas of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries."—The Author. Lectures on the Influence of the Institutions, Thought, and Culture of Rome on Christianity and the Development of the Catholic Church. Translated by Charles Beard. 213 pages. $1.58. “Liberty is the great dissolvent of all fanaticisms. When I claim lib- erty for my foe, for the man who would put me down if he had the power. I really offer him the most fatal of all gifts."—The Author. ROBERTSON, JOHN M. Modern Humanists. Sociological studies of Carlyle, Mill, Emerson, Arnold, Ruskin, and Spencer. With an epi- logue on social reconstruction. 281 pages. $1.00. “The good of mankind is a dream if it is not to be secured by preservº- ing for all men the possible maximum of liberty of action and of freedom of thought." -The Author. New Essays Towards a Critical Method. 388 pages. $2.09. "A man who refuses to accept the test of consistency as a criterion of truth is either confused by words or confused in the very faculty of judg- ment." -The Author. Montaigne and Shakspere. 169 pages. Gilt top. $2.12. A Short History of Freethought, Ancient and Modern. 459 pages. $3.00. “Th’ hand that rocks th’ scales in th’ grocery store is th’ hand that rules th" wurruld.”—Mr. Dooley. 96 “Gilt edges, vellum and morocco, and presentation-copies to all the libra- º: will not preserve a book in circulation beyond its intrinsic date.”- -en-soº. ROBINSON, A. MARY F. 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Illustrated. 5 vols. 2,275 pages. Gilt top. $7.50. “There is no process of amalgamation by which opinions, wrong indi- vidually, can become right merely by their multitude."—The Author. The Stones of Venice. Illustrated. 3 vols. 1,211 pages. Gilt top. $4.50. “The whole human race may at present be regarded as just emergent from childhood, and beginning for the first time to feel their strength, to stretch their limbs, and explore the creation around them.”—The Author. The Laws of Fésole. A Joy Forever. Our Fathers Have Told Us. Inaugural Address. Illustrated. 435 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “The use of objects of real or supposed value for currency is barbar- ous." -The Author. “A greater equality than is compatible with liberty is undesirable.”- Benj. R. Tucker. 97 “I’ll niver go down again to see sojers off to th' war. But ye’ll see me at th' depot with a brass band whin th’ men that causes wars starts fºr th’ scene iv carnage.”-Mr. Dooley. Deucalion. The King of the Golden River. 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Gilt top. $1.50. “There is no wealth but life."—The Author. The Crown of Wild Olive. Munera Pulveris. Pre-Raphael- itism. Aratra Pentelici. Illustrated. 458 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “The currency of any country consists of every document acknowl- edging debt, which is transferable in the country.”—The Author. The Ethics of the Dust. Fiction, Fair and Foul. The Ele- ments of Drawing. Illustrated. 413 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “The sin of the whole world is essentially the sin of Judas. Men do not disbelieve their Christ: but they sell Him."-The Author. Proserpina. Ariadne Florentina. The Opening of the Crystal Palace. Illustrated. 424 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. "There is no space of neglected land which is not in some way modify- ing the atmosphere of all the world.”—the Author. “Human virtue demands her champions and martyrs, and the trial of persecution always proceeds.”-Emerson. - 98 “Those who hold the º in the means of living will inevitably hold the property in life itself.”—Benj. R. 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Gilt top. $1.50. “Popular or classic, temporary or eternal, all good art is more or less didactic."—The Author. Praeterita. Outlines of scenes and thoughts, perhaps worthy of memory, in my past life. Frontispiece. 459 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. Fors Clavigera. Letters to the Workmen and Laborers of Great Britain. 4 vols. 1,726 pages. Gilt top. $6.00. “Not all the lying lips of commercial Europe can much longer deceive the people in their rapidly increasing distress, nor arrest their straight battle with the cause of it. Through what confused noise and garments rolled in blood, through what burning and fuel of fire, they will work out their vic- tory, God only knows, nor what they will do to Barabbas, when they have found out that he is a Robber, and not a King. But that discovery of his character and capacity draws very near; and no less change in the world's ways than the former fall of Feudalism itself."—The Author. The Poetry of Architecture. Poems. Giotto and His Works in Padua. Illustrated. 389 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. The 26 volumes enumerated above are issued in uniform style and sold in sets, boxed, at $39.00 the set. - “If I cud ſº to sleep th’ minyit I go to bed, I wudden't care who done me votin’?”—Mr. Dooley. 99 “Sin, seen from the thought, is a diminution, or less; seen from the con- science or will, it is pravity or bad.”—Emerson. Complete Works. Illustrated. 15 vols., of about 900 pages each. Boxed. $15.00 the set. “All usury is increase to one person only by decrease to another; and every grain of calculated Increment to the Rich is balanced by its mathe- matical equivalent of Decrement to the Poor."-The Author. The Crown of Wild Olive. Four lectures on Work, Traffic, War, and The Future of England. Portrait. 190 pages. Cloth, red top. 35 cents. “The poor vagrants by the roadside suffer now quite as much from the bar-baron as ever they did from the crag-baron. Bags and crags have just the same result on rags."—The Author. Letters to M. G. and H. G. With preface by George Wynd- ham. Portrait. 164 pages. ilt top. $1.25. Letters to Charles Eliot Norton. Portraits, 2 vols. 530 pages. Gilt top. Boxed. $4.26. “That I am no more immortal than a gnat, or a bell of heath, all na- ture, as far as I can read it, teaches me."—The Author. RUSSIAN AUTHORS, STORIES BY. Comprising Mumu, by Ivan Tourguéneff; The Shot, b Alexander Poushkin; St. John's Eve, by Nikolai Vasil- ievitch Gogol; and An Old Acquaintance, by Lyof N. Tolstoi. Portrait of Tourguéneff. 163 pages. 75 cents. SAINTE-BEUVE, C. A. Portraits of the Seventeenth º, Historic and liter- o ary. Translated by Katharine P. rmeley. Portraits. 2 vols. 918 pages. Gilt top. Boxed. $5.32. Portraits of the Eighteenth Century. Historic and literary. Translated by Katharine P. Wormeley. Portraits. 2 vols. 961 pages. Gilt top. Boxed. $5.34. SALT, HENRY S. Life of Henry David Thoreau. Bibliography. 218 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. “Thoreau has set forth the gospel of the higher intellectual individ- ualism with more force and ability than any modern writer.”—The Author. “There is no such depth of poltroonery as that of the man who does not dare to run.”-Benj. R. Tucker. 100 “Whin a man begins makin' money in his youth at º but games iv chance, he niver can become gin’rous late in life.”—Mr. Dooley. SALTUS, EDGAR EVERTSON. Balzac. With bibliography. 199 pages. Gilt top. $1.25. SANBORN, ALVAN FRANCIS. Paris and the Social Revolution. A study of the revolu- tionary elements in the various classes of Parisian soci- ety. With drawings by Vaughan Trowbridge. 423 pages. Gilt top. $3.75. SANBORN, F. B. Henry D. Thoreau. 332 pages. Gilt top. $1.25. “Thoreau's strength was in his moral nature, and in his obstinate re- fusal to mortgage himself, his time, or his opinions, even to the State or the Church."--The Author. The Genius and Character of Emerson. Lectures at the Concord School of Philosophy. Edited by F. B. Sanborn. Portrait. 469 pages. $2.00. The Life and Letters of John Brown, Liberator of Kansas and Martyr of Virginia. Portraits. 653 pages. $2.15. Ralph Waldo Emerson. 140 pages. Gilt top. 75 cents. SAND, GEORGE. Mauprat. Frontispiece. 324 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. Antonia. Frontispiece. With sketch of the author by Justin McCarthy, 274 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. "The influence of Madame Roland was but a glittering unreality, that of Madame de Staël only a boudoir and coterie success, when compared with the power exercised over literature, human feeling, and social law, by the energy, the courage, the genius, even the very errors and extravagances of George Sand."-McCarthy. Monsieur Sylvestre, the Hermit. Frontispiece. 327 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. The Snow Man Frontispiece. 555 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. - The Miller of Angibault. Frontispiece. 320 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. “The wise know that foolish legislation is a rope of sand which perishes in the twisting.”-Emerson. 101 - “Reason devoted to politics fights for its own dethronement.”-Benj. R. Tucker. The Bagpipers. Frontispiece. 400 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. Nanon. Frontispiece. 325 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. Fadette. Frontispiece. 295 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. “Preaching unity to men who are cutting one another's throats is cry- ing in the wilderness."—The Author. - François the Waif. Frontispiece. 243 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. “Nothing is more difficult than to teach self-respect and the love of work to children who have already begun understandingly to live upon alms."—The Author. The Master Mosaic-workers and the Devil’s Pool. Fron- tispiece. 429 pages. Gilt top. $1.00. The 10 volumes enumerated above are issued in uniform style, and sold, boxed, at $10.00 the set. SANTAYANA, GEORGE. Reason in Common Sense. 300 pages. $1.34. “In spiritual life heteronomy is suicide."—The Author. 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The 5 volumes enumerated above are issued in uniform style under the general title of “The Life of Reason; or, The Phases of Human Progress," and are sold at $6.70 the set. “Laws ar—re made to throuble people, an' th' more throuble they make th’ longer they stay on th” stachoo books.”—Mr. Dooley. 102 “The conservative assumes sickness as a necessity, and his social frame is a hospital, his total legislation is for the present distress, a universe in slippers and flannels, with bib and pap-spoon, swallowingpills and herb-tea.”-Emerson. SCANDINAVIAN AUTHORS, STORIES BY. Comprising The Father, by Björnstjerne Björnson; When Father Brought Home the Lamp, by Juhani Aho: The Flying Mail, by M. Goldschmidt; The Railroad and the Churchyard, by Björnstjerne Björnson; Two Friends, by Alexander Kielland; and Hopes, by Frederika Bremer. Portrait of Björnson. 179 pages. 75 cents. SCHERGER, GEORGE L. The Evolution of Modern Liberty. 298 pages. $1.20. “It is doubtful whether any tyranny can be worse than that exercised In the name of the sovereignty of the people." -The Author. SCHOPENHAUER, ARTHUR. The World as Will and Idea. Translated by R. B. Hal- dane and J. Kemp. 3 vols. 1,585 pages. $15.50. “Mannerisms are just the old cast-off garments of the last manifesta- tion of the spirit that existed and was recognized."—The Author. On Human Nature. Essays (partly posthumous) in ethics and politics. Translated by Thomas Bailey Saunders. 132 pages. 90 cents. “What is our civilized world but a big masquerade?"-The Author. Studies in Pessimism. A series of essays. Translated by Thomas Bailey Saunders. 142 pages. Cloth, 90 cents; paper, 25 cents. “None but the votaries of monothelstic religions look upon suicide as a crime." -The Author. Religion: A Dialogue. And other essays. Translated by Thomas Bailey Saunders. 140 pages. 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Miscellanies. “To give a man an office jus’ because he's honest is like ilictin’ him to Congress because he's a pathrite.”-Mr. Dooley. 107 it.” º, and bankin' is th” only two games where age has th” best iv t.”—Mr. Dooley. SPANISH AUTHORS, STORIES BY. Comprising The Tall Woman, by Pédro Antonio de Alarcón; The White Butterfly, by José Selgas; The Organist, by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer; Moors and Christians, by Pédro Antonio de Alarcón; and Bread Cast Upon the Waters, by Fº Caballero. Portrait of Alarcón. 219 pages. cents. SPENCER, HERBERT. First Principles. Portrait. 568 pages. $2.00. “Matter, motion, and force are but symbols of the unknown reality.” -The Author. The Principles of Biology. 2 vols. 1,393 pages. $4.00. “Organic evolution is a progress towards a moving equilibrium com- pletely adjusted to environing actions.”—the Author. tº: Principles of Psychology. 2 vols. 1,358 pages. 400. 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The function of true liberalism in the future will be that of putting a limit to the powers of parliaments.”-The Author. “The less gºvernment we have the better-the fewer laws, and the less confided power.”-Emerson. 108 “We live in a very low state of the world, and pay unwilling tribute to governments founded on force.”-Emerson. The Study of Sociology. 421 pages. $1.50. “The belief in the innate virtues of constitutions is as baseless as was the belief in the natural superiorities of royal personages."—The Author. Education: Intellectual, Moral, and Physical. 307 pages. $1.25. "As long as the acquisition of knowledge is rendered habitually repug- nant, so long will there be a prevailing tendency to discontinue it when free from the coercion of parents and masters."—The Author. Various Fragments. 209 pages. $1.25. 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Limited edition of 450 pages, on hand-made paper. $2.77. “The union is only perfect when all the uniters are isolated.”-Emerson. 112 “The first reason for all wars, and for the necessity of national defences, is that the majority of persons, high and low, in all European nations, are Thieves, and, in their hearts, greedy of their neighbors’ goods, land, and fame.”-Ruskin. SYMONDS, JOHN ADDINGTON. Shelley. 189 pages. 75 cents. TAINE, HIPPOLYTE ADOLPHE. Italy: Rome and Naples. Translated by J. Durand. 374 pages. $2.50. “A temporal government in the hands of ecclesiastics develops into a mild, petty, listless, respectable, monkish Invincible despotism just as any plant develops into its flower.”—The Author. Italy: Florence and Venice. Translated by J. Durand. 394 pages. $2.50. Notes on England. With an introduction by the translator, W. F. Rae. Portrait. 436 pages. $2.50. A Tour through the Pyrenees. Translated by J. Safford Fiske. 355 pages. $2.50. Notes on Paris. The Life and Opinions of M. Frederic- Thomas Graindorge, Doctor of 'º, at the Uni- versity of Jena, Special Partner in the House of Grain- dorge & Co., Oils and Salt Pork, Cincinnati, U. S. A. Collected and published by H. Taine, Executor. Trans- lated, with notes, by John Austin Stevens. 381 pages. $2.50. “The best of men in Paris lie ten times a day, the best of women twenty times a day, the fashionable man a hundred times a day. No estimate has ever º, made as to how many times a day a fashionable woman lies."— The Author. History of English Literature. Translated by H. Van Laun. 2 vols. 1,310 pages. $5.00. “It is mainly in studying literature that we are able to produce moral history, and arrive at some knowledge of the psychological laws on which events depend."—The Author. The French Revolution. 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Gilt top. $3.66. “With a laugh and blasphemy on his lips, but with eyes and soul afºre and the nervous, tireless hands trembling with eagerness, the most daunt: less, passionate, dogged little worker in all human history hewed and hacked at the monstrous tyrannies of centuries, and flung them, dead, from the fair and beautiful soil they had usurped."-The Author THOMAS, BERTHA. George Sand. 310 pages. $1.00. THOMPSON, DANIEL GREENLEAF. A System of Psychology. 2 vols. 1,224 pages. $7.50. The Problem of Evil. An introduction to the practical sci- ences. 289 pages. $2.00. “The wealthy and the Fº are usually reluctant to acknowl- edge that anybody is responsible for poverty but the poor.”-The Author. Politics in a Democracy. 190 pages. Gilt top. $1.25. “The ideal of the perfection of democracy as a form of government *:::::::: in that of a situation where there is no government at all." -The r. Social Progress. 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Gilt top. $1.50. “I have interest but for six feet of star, and that interest is transient.” -The Author. Walden; or, Life in the Woods. 522 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “God is only the president of the day, and Webster is his orator.”- The Author. The Maine Woods. 452 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. Cape Cod. 331 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. Early Spring in Massachusetts. From Thoreau's “Journal.” Edited by H. G. O. Blake. Portrait. 364 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “He for whom the law is made, who does not obey the law, but whom the law obeys, reclines on pillows of down, and is wafted at will whither he pleases: for man is superior to all laws, both of heaven and earth, when he takes his liberty."—The Author. Summer. From Thoreau's “Journal.” Edited by H. G. O. Blake. 389 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “The priest is the fungus of the graveyard, of the tomb."—The Author. Autumn. From Thoreau's “Journal.” Edited by H. G. O. Blake. 478 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “The judges may discuss the question of the courts and law over their nuts and raisins, and mumble for the decision, that “substantial justice is done," but I must believe they mean that they really get paid a “substantial" salary."—The Author. “Th’ modhren idee iv gover"mint is “Snub th’ people, buy th’ people, jaw th’ people.’”—Mr. Dooley. 115 - - “I care not who makes th’ laws iv a nation, if I can get out an injunc- tion.”—Mr. Dooley. Winter. From Thoreau's “Journal.” Edited by H. G. O. Blake. 447 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. ''The heart is only for rare occasions; the intellect affords the most unfailing entertainment.”—The Author. Excursions. 482 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “It is impossible to give the soldier a good education without making º: deserter. His natural foe is the government that drills him."—The uthor. Miscellanies. With a biographical sketch by Ralph Waldo Emerson. Portrait. 440 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. "If a man who has no property refuses but once to earn nine shillings for the State, he is put in prison for a period unlimited by any law that I know; but if he should steal ninety times nine shillings from the state, he is soon permitted to go at large again.”—the author. Familiar Letters. Edited, with an introduction and notes, § F. B. Sanborn. Portrait. 495 pages. Gilt top. 1.50. “If I could be brought to believe in the things which they [the Spirit- ualists] believe, I should make haste to get rid of my certificate of stock in this and the next world's enterprises, and buy a share in the first Immedi- ate Annihilation Company that offered.”—the Author. The 11 volumes enumerated above constitute the Riverside Edition of Thoreau's works, and are sold, boxed, at $16.50 the set. Walden; or, Life in the Woods. with an introduction by Charles G. D. Roberts. Portrait. 365 pages. 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Boxed. $1.61. “The mayflower is for modesty! How fit That such a plant should have its habitat Within the proudest land beneath the skies! This is a stroke, I think, of Nature's witH To show us how much blinder than a bat The glitter of our gold has made our eyes!” -The Author. ToLSToi, LYOF N. War and Peace. Translated by Nathan Haskell Dole. 2 vols. 805 pages. $3.00. “If among all possible directions I choose one, then I choose it because there were less obstacles in that direction. In order that my action should be free, it would be indispensable that it should meet no obstacles at all." -The Author. Anna Karénina. Translated by Nathan Haskell Dole. 780 pages. $1.25. Resurrection. Translated by Louise Maude. Illustrated. 529 pages. Gilt top. $1.50. “Nekhludoff saw that cannibalism did not commence in the marshes, but in the ministry. He saw that his brother-in-law, for example, and, in fact, all the lawyers and officials, from the usher to the minister, do not care in the least for justice or the good of the people about whom they spoke, but only for the roubles they were paid for doing the things that Xº source whence all this degradation and suffering flowed." -The ut - TourguéNEFF, Ivan. Rudin. Translated by Constance Garnett. With an in- troduction by Stepniak. Portrait. 288 pages. Gilt top. $1.25. “Every educated Russian of our time has a bit of Dmitri Rudin in him.” -The Author. A House of Gentlefolk. Translated by Constance Garnett. With an introduction by Stepniak. 330 pages. Gilt top. $1.25. On the Eve. Translated by Constance Garnett. With an introduction by Edward Garnett. 306 pages. 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