Life, 1883-01-04 · page 2 of 18
Life — January 4, 1883 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Advertisement Page Analysis This page is **primarily a publisher's advertisement** for Henry Holt & Co.'s books, not satirical content. It lists recent publications including works on Italian Renaissance, learning revival, and fine arts. The page includes testimonial quotes praising books like Symonds's *Renaissance in Italy* and *Christ's Christianity*. One notable advertised work is *English Colonies in America* by J.A. Doyle. The right column features *Young Folks' Cyclopædias* with endorsements from *The Evening Post*, emphasizing the books' educational value for children. **No political cartoons or satire appear on this page.** This is a straightforward late-19th or early-20th century publisher's catalog page, typical of *Life* magazine's back matter, designed to promote educational and literary titles to readers.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
NRE: HENRY H SYMONDS’S RENAISSANCE IN ITALY. Travian Literature, By J, A, SyMonps. 2 vols., Svo. With portrait of the author, $7. These volumes complete Mr. Symonds’s great work on the RENAISSANCE IN ITALy, the previously published volumes being : THE AGE OF THE DESPOTS. $3.50. THE REVIVAL OF LEARNING. §3.50. THE FINE ARTS. $3.50. “* The exposition of the evolution of the modern idea out of the medieval idea—a clear and symmetrical narrative ina very pleas ing style, The tone of Mr. Symonds is philosophic, and his air for the most part temperate and discriminating. Yet'he is not lacking in warm apprectations, which, upon occasion, find ex- pression in picturesque and glowing passages. Presenta- tion, at a single view, of materials net otherwise accessible without the expenditure of much time and pains.’'—Atlantic Monthly. “ Two volumes on Italian Literature bring to a close the noble and brilliant work of Mr. Simonds on ‘Renaissance in Italy.’ Mr. Symonds is an earnest and brilliant writer; his labor in reading and preparation for this work has been immense ; but out of his labor, out of the mass of material that he gathered, ve come volumes full of learning and life, full of broad vi pa judgment, discrimination in character, analysis and criticism. The books are fascinating, Mr. Symonds describes admirably is never dull, however grave and earnest he may be; he often rises to enthusiasm and to stirring eloquence ; but he is never senti- mental."—Boston Advertiser, | “Mr. Symonds's monumental work. His style ts clear and flowing, conveying rich stores of information with graphic power and much lilerary charm. . Every chapter is Sut of interest to all lovers of literature and learning... author has crowned his tribute to Italian history and art with ie eloquent volumes upon its literature."—N. Y. Observer. Christ’s Christianity. Being the Precepts and Doctrines recorded in Matthew, Mark. Luke and John as taught by Jesus Christ. Analysed’and ar- ranged according to subjects, by ALBERT H. WALKER. 12mo. $1.25. “In this work, which is by a layman, the words and precepts of our Lord are separated from the statements concerning what He did. The author has gone through the four Gospels, and gathered out of them all the words there “recorded, as having been uttered by Christ; and has grouped them under fourteen different topics ; ‘such, for example, as‘ The Holy Spirit;" “ The New Birth," “The Christian Life ;"" “The Person and Mission of Jesus ;" “ The Commandments,” It will be seen at once that a work of this kind involves serious and peculiar difficulties. ‘ Notwithstanding all the difficulties resulting from the nature of the author's purpose and plan, he has succeeded remark. ably well, Any book of this kind, though imperfect, would be of some service to all students of the Gospels. And the present work has been so carefully prepared, that it cannot fail to be of very great value."”—The Churchman. English Colonies in America. Virginia, Maryland and the Carolinas By J. A. Dove, author of History of United States in Freeman's Historical Course. Fellow of All Souls’ College, Oxford, &c. 8vo, with map, $3.50. “He is orderly and systematic in his literary studies, persevering and laborious in his researches, just and impartial in his judg- | SOME RECENT AND STANDARD PUBLICATIONS OF OLT | torical study. | ‘possible earnestness to every parent.” & CY. ments and reflections, and clear and precise in his style. A compact, orderly and thoroughly useful contribution to his» Mr. Doyle's work is designed primarily Sor students of political institutions, and inasmuch as his main parpose is comprehensively outlined, his opening volume possesses unity and definiteness without being a@ dry and abstract study of constitutional principle. N. Y. Tribune. Von Falke’s Greece and Rome. Superbly Illustrated. Quarto, $15. Heine’s Romantic School. § Translated by $. L. FLEISHMAN. 12m0. $1.5¢. Fanny Kemble’s Records of Later Life. T2mo (uniform with * Records of a Girlhood”), $2.50. On Horseback in the School and on the Road. $1.50. Game of Twenty Questions. go Cents. Mitchell's Summer School of Philosophy at Mount Desert. 24 Pen-and-Ink Drawings, $3.50. In Leisure Hour Series, $1.00 each. : Hardy's Two on a Tower. Mrs, Parr's Robin. Stevenson’s New Arabian Nights, Mrs, Alexander's Look Before You Leap. Kinley Hollow. A New England Story. YOUNG FOLKS’ CYCLOPZEDIAS OF Common Things. Illustrated, $3.00 Persons & Places. “ $3.50 ‘The Evening Post says of these: “We know copies of the work which are in daily use, and to which their young owners turn instantly for information upon every theme about which they have questions to ask. More than this, we know that some of these ¢o, epics are read daily as well as consulted, that their owners turn the leaves as they might those of @ fairy ‘book, reading intently articles of which they had not thought before seeing them, and treating the book simply as one capable of furnishing the rarest enteriainment in exhaustless quantities. 5 In every way, therefore, we regard the publication of this Young Folks’ Cyclopedia as an occasion of re~ Joicing, and in the interest of education we commend tt with all Young Folks’ History of the War for the Union. “ Were we making @ selection of a book for @ boy between the ages of ten and seventeen, we should choose, out of a multitude of books for children, ‘The Young Folks’ History of the War for the Union.” — Chicago’ Alliance. “Calculated to hold the attention of young readers; its narratives of campaigns and battles, and its sketches of the principal characters engaged in the struggle, are compact, vivid, and accurate, and its numzrous illustrations add greatly to its value and interest.” —N. Y. Tribune. FOR SALE AT ALL THE BOOKSTORES. comicbooks.com