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SMITH, ELDER AND CO. mioxU of jmr. Husliin. III. MODERN PAINTERS. Imperial 8vo. Vol. I., Fi/tb Edition, iSs. cloth. Vol. 11., Third Edition, lOs. 6d. cloth. " Mr. Ruskin's work will send the painter more than ever to the study of nature j will train men who have always been delighted spectators of nature, to be also attentive observers. Our critics will learn to admire, and mere ad- mirers will learn how to criticise : thus a public will be educated. It is the object of Mr. Ruskin, in his first volume of ' Modern Painters,' to shew what the artist has to do in his imitation of nature. In his second volume, he ex- plains the theory of the beautiful." — Blackwood's Magazine. IV. PRE-RAPHAELITISM. 8vo, 2s. sewed. " We wish that this pamphlet might be largely read by our art-patrons, and studied by our art-critics. There is much to be collected from it which it is very important to remember." — Guardian. V. THE KING OF THE GOLDEN RIVER ; or, The Black Brothers. With 22 Illustrations by Richard Doyle. 25, 6d. " This little fairy tale is by a master-hand. The story has a charming moral, and the writing is so excellent, that it would be hard to say which it will give most pleasure to, the very wise man or the very simple child." — Examiner. " Full of exquisite little pictures, with an under-current of humour floating through, and bearing a moral which can never be repeated too often." — Fraser^s Magazine. VI. NOTES on the CONSTRUCTION OF SHEEP- FOLDS. 8V0, IS. " A pamphlet on the doctrine and discipline of the Church of Christ." — Britannia.