This section is from the book "Hypnotism", by Dr. Albert Moll. Also available from Amazon: Hypnotism.
Life of Mill. By W. L. Courtney.
"A most sympathetic and discriminating memoir." - Glasgow Herald.
Life of Milton. By Richard Garnett, LL.D.
"Within equal compass the life-story of the great poet of Puritanism has never been more charmingly or adequately told." - Scottish Leader.
Life of Renan. By Francis Espinasse.
"Sufficiently full in details to give us a living picture of the great scholar, . . . and never tiresome or dull." - Westminster Review.
Life of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. By J. Knight.
"Mr. Knight's picture of the great poet and painter is the fullest and best yet presented to the public." - The Graphic.
Life of Schiller. By Henry W. Nevinson.
"This is a well-writ ten little volume, which presents the leading facts of the poet's life in a neatly rounded picture." - Scotsman.
" Mr. Nevinson has added much to the charm of his book by his spirited translations, which give excellently both the ring and sense of the original." - Manchester Guardian.
Life of Arthur Schopenhauer. By William Wallace.
"The series of Great Writers has hardly had a contribution of more marked and peculiar excellence than the book which the Whyte Professor of Moral Philosophy at Oxford has written for it on the attractive and still (in England) little-known subject of Schopenhauer." - Manchester Guardian.
Life of Scott. By Professor Yonge.
"For readers and lovers of the poems and novels of Sir Walter Scott this is a most enjoyable book." - Aberdeen Free Press.
Life of Shelley. By William Sharp
"The criticisms . . . entitle this capital monograph to be ranked with the best biographies of Shelley." - Westminster Review.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
Life of Sheridan. By Lloyd Sanders.
"To say that Mr. Lloyd Sanders, in this volume, has produced the best existing memoir of Sheridan is really to award much fainter praise than the book deserves." - Manchester Guardian,
"Rapid and workmanlike in style, the author has evidently a good practical knowledge of the stage of Sheridan's day." - Saturday Review.
Life of Adam Smith. By R. B. Haldane, M.P,
"Written with a perspicuity seldom exemplified when dealing with economic science." - Scotsman.
"Mr. Haldane's handling of his subject impresses us as that of a man who well understands his theme, and who knows how to elucidate it." - Scottish Leader.
"A beginner in political economy might easily do worse than take Mr. Haldane's book as his first text-book." - Graphic.
Life of Smollett. By David Hannay.
" A capital record of a writer who still remains one of the great masters of the English novel." - Saturday Review.
"Mr. Hannay is excellently equipped for writing the life of Smollett. As a specialist on the history of the eighteenth century navy, he is at a great advantage in handling works so full of the sea and sailors as Smollett's three principal novels. Moreover, he has a complete acquaintance with the Spanish romancers, from whom Smollett drew so much of his inspiration. His criticism is generally acute and discriminating; and his narrative is well arranged, compact, and accurate." - St. James's Gazette,
Life of Thackeray. By Herman Merivale and Frank T. Marzials.
"The bock, with its excellent bibliography, is one which neither the student nor the general reader can well afford to miss.2 - Fax Mail Gazette.
"The last bock published by Messrs. Merivale and Marziais is full of very real and true things." - Mrs. Anne Thackeray Ritchie on "Thackeray and his Biographers," in Illustrated London News.
Life of Thoreau. By H. S. Salt.
"Mr. Salt's volume ought to do much towards widening the knowledge and appreciation in England of one of the most original men ever produced by the United States." - Illustrated London News.
Life of Voltaire. By Francis Espinasse.
"Up to date, accurate, impartial, and bright without any trace of affectation." - Academy.
Life of Whittier. By W. J. Linton.
"Mr. Linton is a sympathetic and yet judicious critic of Whittier." - World.
Complete Bibliography to each volume, by J. P. Anderson, British Museum, London.
* TO-DAY'S ADDITION: - LIFE OF RUSKIN. By Ashmore Wingate.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
"An excellent series" - Telegraph.
"Excellently translated, beautifully bound, and elegantly printed." -Liverpool Mercury.
"Notable for the high standard of taste and excellent judgment thai characterise their editing, as well as for the brilliancy of the literature that they contain" - Boston Gazette, U.S.A.
Library of Humour.
Cloth Elegant, Large 12 mo, Price $1.25 per vol.
VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED.
The Humour of France Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by Elizabeth Lee. With numerous Illustrations by Pac-Frenzeny.
The Humour of Germany. Translated, with an Introduc tion and Notes, by Hans Muller-Casenov. With numerous Ilus-trations by C. E. Brock.
The Humour of Italy Translated, with an Introduction an: Notes, by A. Werner. With 50 Illustrations and a Frontispiece Arturo Fieldi.
The Humour of America Selected, with a copious Biographical Index of American Humorists, by James Barr.
The Humour of Holland Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by A. Werner. With numerous Illustrations by Dudle Hardy.
The Humour of Ireland. Selected by D. J. O'Donoghui
With numerous Illustrations by Oliver Paque.
The Humour of Spain. Translated, with an Introduced and Notes, by Susbtte M. Taylor. With numerous Illustrations H. R. Millar.
The Humour of Russia Translated, with Notes,
E. L. Boole, and an Introduction by Stepniak. With 50 lllustra-tions by Paul Frenzeny.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
In One Volume. Crown 8vo, Cloth, Richly Gilt. Price $1.25.
 
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