JOHN CHILDS AND SON, PRINTERS.

By the same Author.

I.

DAYS NEAR ROME.

With numerous Illustrations. Two Vols., Crown 8vo.

II.

WANDERINGS IN SPAIN.

With Illustrations. Third Edition. Crown 8vo., 10s. 6d.

"We recollect no book that so vividly recalls the country to those who have visited it, and we should recommend intending tourists to carry it with them as a companion of travel."—Times.

"Mr Hare's book is admirable. We are sure no one will regret making it the companion of a Spanish journey. It will bear reading repeatedly when one is moving among the scenes it describes—no small advantage when the travelling library is scanty."—Saturday Review.

"Here is the ideal book of travel in Spain; the book which exactly anticipates the requirements of everybody who is fortunate enough to be going to that enchanted land; the book which ably consoles those who are not so happy, by supplying the imagination from the daintiest and most delicious of its stores."—Spectator.

"Since the publication of 'Castilian Days,' by the American diplomat, Mr John Hay, no pleasanter or more readable sketches have fallen under our notice."—Athenæum.

III.

MEMORIALS OF A QUIET LIFE.

WITH TWO STEEL PORTRAITS.

Twelfth Edition. Two Vols., Crown 8vo., 21s.

"The name of Hare is one deservedly to be honoured; and in these 'Memorials,' which are as true and satisfactory a biography as it is possible to write, the author places his readers in the heart of the family, and allows them to see the hidden sources of life and love by which it was nourished and sustained."—Athenæum.

"One of those books which it is impossible to read without pleasure. It conveys a sense of repose not unlike that which everybody must have felt out of service time in quiet little village churches. Its editor will receive the hearty thanks of every cultivated reader for these profoundly interesting 'Memorials' of two brothers, whose names and labours their universities and church have alike reason to cherish with affection and remember with pride, who have smoothed the path of faith to so many troubled wayfarers, strengthening the weary and confirming the weak."—Standard.

"The book is rich in insight and in contrast of character. It is varied and full of episodes, which few can fail to read with interest; and as exhibiting the sentiments and thoughts of a very influential circle of minds during a quarter of a century, it may be said to have a distinct historical value."—Nonconformist.

"A charming book, simply and gracefully recording the events of a simple and gracious life. Its connection with the beginning of a great movement in the English Church will make it to the thoughtful reader more profoundly suggestive than many biographies crowded and bustling with incident. It is almost the first of a class of books the Christian world just now greatly needs, as showing how the spiritual life was maintained amid the shaking of religious 'opinions'; how the life of the soul deepened as the thoughts of the mind broadened; and how, in their union, the two formed a volume of larger and more thoroughly vitalised Christian idea than the English people had witnessed for many days."—Glasgow Herald.

DALDY, ISBISTER & CO., 56, LUDGATE HILL.

Uniform with "Walks in Rome."

WALKS IN FLORENCE.

By SUSAN AND JOANNA HORNER.

With Illustrations. Second Edition.

Two Vols., Crown 8vo., 21s.

TIMES.

"No one can read it without wishing to visit Florence, and no one ought to visit Florence without having read it."

BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW.

"It will make one who has never seen the historic city of Dante as familiar with it as though he had spent years there. To visitors it will hereafter be almost a sine qua non as a hand-book."

GRAPHIC.

"A pleasanter literary companion could scarcely be found. Teeming with the results of observation, reading, and a sympathetical critical taste, its value is beyond question."

SPECTATOR.

"We have in these two volumes a valuable acquisition."

NONCONFORMIST.

"The book will hereafter be a sine qua non for English and American visitors to Florence, whose numbers, we are fain to think, it will also tend very considerably to increase."

GUARDIAN.

"A work which, by the accuracy of its information, the exactness of its detail, and the refined taste conspicuous in every page, proves its authors to be worthy inheritors of the honoured name they bear. Henceforward it will be as indispensable to every intelligent visitor to the 'City of Flowers' as Mr. Hare's is for 'The Eternal City.'"

DALDY, ISBISTER & CO., 56, LUDGATE HILL.


The following typographical error were corrected by the etext transcriber:
Palmegiani, 66 Piazzi di Spagna=>Palmegiani, 66 Piazza di Spagna
putatur is esse constitutus è marmore=>putatur is esse constitutus ex marmore
with vaulted cielings and beautiful frescoes=>with vaulted ceilings and beautiful frescoes
after his truimph for his=>after his triumph for his
la mémoire du frère quil avait=>la mémoire du frère qu'il avait
Madame de Stael=>Madame de Staël
cet egard du pauvre Capucin=>cet égard du pauvre Capucin
qui ne connâi de l'histoire des=>qui ne connâit de l'histoire des
dépuis les thermes de=>depuis les thermes de
Before he came to reside here he had been miracuously=>Before he came to reside here he had been miraculously
St. Cyprian and Justinian=>SS. Cyprian and Justinian
The interior of S. Sabba is in the basilica form=>The interior of St. Sabba is in the basilica form
Roma Sotteranea=>Roma Sotterranea
Il fut alors sollicite intérieurement=>Il fut alors sollicité intérieurement
litanies autour de ce tableau."—Stendal.=>litanies autour de ce tableau."—Stendhal.
se précipita dons ses bras,=>se précipita dans ses bras,
good terrra-cotta mouldings=>good terra-cotta mouldings
la visage sérieux=>le visage sérieux
On y voit une femme endormie dont l'attidude=>On y voit une femme endormie dont l'attitude
eyes in the rotonda of the Vatican=>eyes in the rotunda of the Vatican
île a été entrainée par la violence=>île a été entraînée par la violence
construire le palais Pamphili, a créer la villa Pamphili, et a pamphiliser=>construire le palais Pamphili, à créer la villa Pamphili, et à pamphiliser
S. Pancrado, ii. 452=>S. Pancrazio, ii. 452