GUARDIAN.—“A delightful volume which will attract and interest any educated and thoughtful reader.”

SPEAKER.—“This delightful book, which leads us by the plain path of the calendar, illuminating every step with now a curious parallel from Samoa, now a pretty tale from Ovid, now an observation made in Oxfordshire. And it is not of every work that you can say with truth that it is the work of a scholar, a gentleman, a philosopher, a naturalist, and an understanding lover of the country.”

ACADEMY.—“A book with which every student of Roman religion will have to make his account.... Alike as a storehouse of critically-sifted facts and as a tentative essay towards the synthetic arrangement of these facts, Mr. Fowler’s book seems to us to mark a very distinct advance upon anything that has yet been done.”

GREEK SCULPTURE. By Prof. Ernest A. Gardner, M.A., University College, London. Part. I. 5s. Part II. 5s. Or in one volume. 10s. [Ready.

ATHENÆUM.—“The introduction alone, which runs to over forty pages, makes the book indispensable to every student of the subject.”

CLASSICAL REVIEW.—“The good qualities which were conspicuous in the first part of Prof Gardner’s handbook are as characteristic of the second, and it is not too much to say that the whole book easily takes rank before all other English elementary treatises on Greek sculpture.... There are few books of the kind which can be so freely recommended as Prof. Gardner’s.”

GUARDIAN.—“Mr. Gardner’s book may be confidently recommended as the best and most trustworthy sketch of Greek sculpture hitherto published in the English language.”

A HANDBOOK OF GREEK CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY. By A. H. J. Greenidge, M.A., Hertford College, Oxford. With Map. 5s. [Ready.

CLASSICAL REVIEW.—“He can be original even in the treatment of the most familiar themes; the style is fresh and vigorous, and the explanations are, as a rule, clear. The book is, from its nature, mainly intended for beginners, by whom it is likely to be extensively used, but at the same time more advanced students may gather not a few suggestive hints from its pages.”

SPEAKER.—“A really valuable handbook on the constitutional history of Greece.”