Note.—The numerals refer to the Introduction; the common figures to the English Translation; and the ancient figures to the corresponding Original Gaelic. Transcriber's Notes for the INDEX: The numbers followed by an italicized “n” refer to footnotes on the specified page. Since all footnotes are collected at the end of the book, the link takes you to the appropriate footnote, rather than the specified page. The original text uses “common” and “ancient” numerals to distinguish between references to the English or Gaelic versions. In this index, bold signifies the English text and normal indicates the Gaelic. Achilles, 33n. xxxiii. lxxxii., 7n, 11, 8, 9. ERRATA. ENGLISH.
GAELIC.
LIST OF WORKS published by EDMONSTON AND DOUGLAS, 88 Princes Street, Edinburgh. Lord Dunfermline. Memoir of Lieutenant-General Sir Ralph Abercromby, K. B., 1793-1801. By his Son James Lord Dunfermline. In 1 vol. demy 8vo. “It is peculiarly refreshing to meet with a biography of an individual so illustrious as Sir Ralph Abercromby, from the pen of one so eminent in many respects as the late Lord Dunfermline.”—Caledonian Mercury, October 3. “His grandson, the present Lord Dunfermline, by causing this memoir to be printed and published, has conferred a benefit upon all—and they are fortunately many—who treasure the memory of distinguished men.”—Literary Gazette, October 5. John Abercrombie, M.D., Late First Physician to the Queen for Scotland. Essays and Tracts:—
John Anderson, D.D., F.G.S., E.P.S., &c., Author of ’The Course of Creation,’ ’Geology of Scotland,’ &c. Dura Den, a Monograph of the Yellow Sandstone and its remarkable Fossil remains. Royal 8vo, cloth, 10s. 6d. ArchÆological Catalogue:— A Catalogue of Antiquities, Works of Arts, and Historical Scottish Relics, exhibited in Museum of the ArchÆological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland during their annual meeting, held in Edinburgh, July 1856, under the patronage of H. R. H. The Prince Consort, K.G., comprising notices of the portraits of Mary Queen of Scots, collected on that occasion. Illustrated, royal 8vo, cloth, 21s. Angelo Sanmartino, a Tale of Lombardy in 1859. Crown 8vo, cloth, 10s. 6d. “A pretty story enough, and vraisemblable enough for the effect desired to be produced by the author, which is to awaken in the minds of ordinary English novel readers a lively feeling for the cause of Italian independence.”—Spectator, December 29. “We admire the character of Angelo, and heartily commend it to public favour; it is admirably written; the subject is one dear to every lover of freedom and honour.—Commonwealth, December 15, 1860. Odal Rights and Feudal Wrongs: a Memorial for Orkney. “We gather from the book that Mr. Balfour is an Orcadian Laird, Odaller, or whatever the proper title may be now-a-days. Certainly he is a sound and careful antiquary, well versed in the local history of the old Jarldom, and fully entitled to a hearing for anything which he may say about it.”—Saturday Review, March 1861. “To antiquarians, and especially those connected with Orkney, this book will be a rich acquisition.—Orkney Herald, October 23, 1860. “This book is an interesting contribution to Scottish history.”—AthenÆum, January 27. James Ballantine. Poems. Fcap. 8vo, cloth extra, 3s. 6d. R. M. Ballantyne. How Not to Do It. A Manual for the Awkward Squad; or, A Handbook of Directions, written for the instruction of Raw Recruits in our Rifle Volunteer Regiments. With Illustrations. Fcap., sewed, 6d. The Volunteer Levee; or, the Remarkable Experience of Ensign Sopht. Written and Illustrated by Himself. Edited by the Author of ’How Not to do It.’ Fcap. 8vo, sewed, 1s. Catharine D. Bell, Author of ’Cousin Kate’s Story,’ ’Margaret Cecil,’ &c. Aunt Ailie. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 5s. M. 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Crown 8vo, cloth, 9s. “To say of this book, that it is written in a style which is worthy of its theme is no greater praise than it merits.”—Morning Post, January 10. “The kindly and generous spirit of the book, its quiet and impressive religiousness, the earnestness which characterizes every page, and the sunny cheerfulness which make it the pleasantest of reading, cannot fail to endear it to many of those for whom it has been written. We thank Mrs. Gordon for this last and best of her books most sincerely and cordially.”—The Scottish Press, January 9. Letters from Cannes and Nice. Illustrated by a Lady. 8vo, cloth, 12s. Work; or, Plenty to do and How to do it. Thirty-second thousand. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 2s. 6d. Little Millie and her Four Places. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d. —— Cheap Edition. Forty-second thousand. Limp, 1s. Sunbeams in the Cottage; or, What Women may do. A narrative chiefly addressed to the Working Classes. Cheap Edition. Thirty-sixth thousand. Cloth limp, 1s. 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In 2 vols. 8vo, with Maps and Plans, price 28s. “Considered as a picture of manners, customs, and characters, the Njala has a merit equal in our eyes to that of the Homeric poems themselves.”—Edinburgh Review, October 1861. “The majority of English readers would have been surprised to be told that in the literature of Iceland there was preserved a story of life and manners in the heroic age, which for simple force and truthfulness is, as far as we know, unequalled in European history and poetry, and is not unworthy of being compared, not indeed for its poetic richness and power, but for the insight which it gives into ancient society, with the Homeric poems.”—Guardian, May 1. “A work, of which we gladly repeat the judgment of a distinguished American writer, that it is unsurpassed by any existing monument in the narrative department of any literature, ancient or modern.”—Saturday Review. “An historical romance of the tenth century, first narrated almost at the very time and by the very people to whom it refers, nearly true as to essential facts, and quite true in its pictures of the customs and the temper of the old Norsemen, about whom it tells, is in these volumes edited with the soundest scholarship by Dr. Dasent. There was need of a thorough study of the life and language of the early colonists of Iceland for the effective setting forth of this Njala, or saga of Njal.”—Examiner, March 30. “This ’Story of Burnt Njal’ is worthy of the translator of the Norse Tales: a work of interest to the antiquary and the lover of legendary lore—that is, to every one capable of appreciating those sources of history which are at once the most poetic and the most illustrative of the character and growth of nations. The events of the story happened while the conflict of the two creeds of Christ and Odin was yet going on in the minds of the Northmen. 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In one vol., 8vo, price 16s. “It is since Scottish writers have abandoned the search of a lost political history, have dropped their enthusiasm for a timid and turbulent ecclesiastical history, and have been content to depict the domestic annals of the people, to enter their shops and their houses, to follow them in the streets and the fields, and to record their everyday life—their eating and their drinking, their dress, their pleasures, their marriages, their wealth and their science—that Scottish history has become an enticing study. . . . In this new path none has been more active than Mr. Cosmo Innes.”—Times, April 3. “This is a valuable collection of materials, from which future historians of Scotland may extract a solid basis for many portions of their work. . . . This recapitulation of the contents of the volume before us shews that it is a treasury of valuable documents, from which may be framed a better domestic history of Scotland during the middle ages than we yet possess. 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