National Life and Character/End matter

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1728827National Life and Character — End matterCharles Henry Pearson

MESSRS. MACMILLAN AND CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.

Now Publishing. Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. each.

TWELVE ENGLISH STATESMEN.

***A Series of Short Biographies, not designed to be a complete roll of famous Statesmen, but to present in historic order the lives and work of those leading actors in our affairs who by their direct influence have left an abiding mark on the policy, the institutions, and the position of Great Britain among States.

WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR By Edward A. Freeman, D.C. L., LL.D., Regius Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford.
TIMES:— "Gives with great picturesqueness . . . the dramatic incidents of a memorable career far removed from our times and our manner of thinking."

HENRY II. By Mrs. J. R. Green. TIMES:—"It is delightfully real and readable, and in spite of severe compression has the charm of a mediaeval romance."

EDWARD I. By Professor Tout.

HENRY VII. By James Gairdner.
ATHENÆUM: " the best account of Henry VII. that has yet appeared."

CARDINAL WOLSEY. By Bishop Creighton, D.D., late Dixie Professor of Ecclesiastical History in the University of Cambridge.
SATURDAY REVIEW:—"Is exactly what one of a series of short biographies of English Statesmen ought to be."

ELIZABETH. By E. S. Beesly, M.A., Professor of Modern History, University College, London.

OLIVER CROMWELL. By Fredric Harrison.
TIMES:—"Gives a wonderfully vivid picture of events."
ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE:— "A model biography of its kind."

WILLIAM III. By H. D. Traill.
CAMBRIDGE REVIEW:—"Mr. Traill has discharged a difficult task well, and has thoroughly succeeded."

WALPOLE. By John Morley.
ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE:—"It deserves to be read, not only as the work of one of the most prominent politicians of the day, but for its intrinsic merits. It is a clever, thoughtful, and interesting biography."
WORLD:— "This admirable little book is in style, arrangement, and proportion the model of what history on such a scale should be."

CHATHAM. By John Morley.[In the Press.

PITT. By Lord Rosebery.

PEEL. By J. R. Thursfield, M.A., late Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford.
DAILY NEWS:—"A model of what such a book should be. We can give it no higher praise than to say that it is worthy to rank with Mr. John Morley's Walpole in the same series."

ENGLISH MEN OF ACTION SERIES.

CAPTAIN COOK. By Mr. Walter Besant.
SCOTTISH LEADER:—"It is simply the best and most readable account of the great navigator yet published."

CLIVE. By Colonel Sir Charles Wilson.

DAMPIER. By Mr. W. Clark Rusell.
ATHENÆUM:—"As a commentary on Dampier's voyages this little book is among the best."

DRAKE. By Mr. Julian Corbett.
SCOTTISH LEADER:—" Perhaps the most fascinating of all the fifteen that have so far appeared."

GENERAL GORDON. By Colonel Sir William Butler.
SPECTATOR: "This is beyond all question the best of the narratives of the career of General Gordon that have yet been published."

HENRY V. By the Rev. A. J. CHURCH.

LIVINGSTONE. By Mr. THOMAS HUGHES.
SPECTATOR:—"An excellent instance of miniature biography."

LORD LAWRENCE. By Sir Richard Temple.
LEEDS MERCURY:—"Lucid, temperate, and impressive."

MONK. By Mr. Julian Corbett.

MONTROSE. By Mr. Mowbray Morris.

PETERBOROUGH. By Mr. W. Stebbing
SATURDAY REVIEW: "An excellent piece of work."

RODNEY. By Mr. David Hannay.

SIR CHARLES NAPIER. By Colonel Sir Wlliam Butler.

SIR HENRY HAVELOCK. By Mr. Archibald Forbes.

STRAFFORD. By Mr. H. D. Traill.
ATHENÆUM:—"Clear and accurate."

WARREN HASTINGS. By Sir Alfred Lyall.
DAILY NEWS:—"The final and decisive verdict of history on the conduct and career of Hastings."

WARWICK, THE KING-MAKER. By Mr. C. W. Oman.
ANTI-JACOBIN:—"It is beyond question the best book which has yet appeared on the Wars of the Roses."

WELLINGTON. By Mr. George Hooper.

And the undermentioned are in the Press or in Preparation.

MARLBOROUGH. By Colonel Sir William Butler.[In Preparation.

SIR JOHN MOORE. By Colonel Maurice.[In the Press.

MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.