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1. The Chinese Classics, by James Legge, D.D., late Professor of
Chinese at Oxford.
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A translation of the whole of the Confucian Canon, comprising the Four
Books in which are given the discourses of Confucius and Mencius, the
Book of History, the Odes, the Annals of Confucius' native State, the
Book of Rites, and the Book of Changes.
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2. The Ancient History of China, by F. Hirth, Ph.D., Professor of
Chinese at Columbia University, New York.
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A sketch of Chinese history from fabulous ages down to 221 B.C.,
containing a good deal of information of an antiquarian character, and
altogether placing in its most attractive light what must necessarily
be rather a dull period for the general reader.
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3. China, by E. H. Parker, Professor of Chinese at Victoria
University, Manchester.
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A general account of China, chiefly valuable for commercial and
statistical information, sketch-maps of ancient trade-routes, etc.
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4. A Chinese Biographical Dictionary, by H. A. Giles, LL.D.,
Professor of Chinese at the University of Cambridge.
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This work contains 2579 short lives of Chinese Emperors, statesmen,
generals, scholars, priests, and other classes, including some women,
from the earliest times down to the present day, arranged
alphabetically.
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5. A Comprehensive Geography of the Chinese Empire, by L. Richard.
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This work is rightly named "comprehensive," for it contains a great
deal of information which cannot be strictly classed as geographical,
all of which, however, is of considerable value to the student.
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6. Descriptive Sociology (Chinese), by E. T. C. Werner, H.B.M.
Consul at Foochow.
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A volume of the series initiated by Herbert Spenger. It consists of a
large number of sociological facts grouped and arranged in
chronological order, and is of course purely a work of reference.
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7. A History of Chinese Literature, by H. A. Giles.
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Notes on two or three hundred writers of history, philosophy,
biography, travel, poetry, plays, fiction, etc., with a large number
of translated extracts grouped under the above headings and arranged
in chronological order.
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8. Chinese Poetry in English Verse, by H. A. Giles.
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Rhymed translations of nearly two hundred short poems from the
earliest ages down to the present times.
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9. An Introduction to the History of Chinese Pictorial Art, by H.
A. Giles.
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Notes on the lives and works of over three hundred painters of all
ages, chiefly translated from the writings of Chinese art-critics,
with sixteen reproductions of famous Chinese pictures.
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10. Scraps from a Collector's Note-book, by F. Hirth.
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Chiefly devoted to notes on painters of the present dynasty, 1644-
1905, with twenty-one reproductions of famous pictures, forming a
complementary supplement to No. 9.
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11. Religions of Ancient China, by H. A. Giles.
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A short account of the early worship of one God, followed by brief
notices of Taoism, Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity, Mahommedanism,
and other less well-known faiths which have been introduced at various
dates into China.
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12. Chinese Characteristics, by the Rev. Arthur Smith, D.D.
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A humorous but at the same time serious examination into the modes of
thought and springs of action which peculiarly distinguish the Chinese
people.
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13. Village Life in China, by the Rev. Arthur Smith.
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The scope of this work is sufficiently indicated by its title.
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14. China under the Empress Dowager, by J. O. Bland, and E.
Backhouse.
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An interesting account of Chinese Court Life between 1860 and 1908,
with important sidelights on the Boxer troubles and the Siege of the
Legations in 1900.
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15. The Imperial History of China, by Rev. J. Macgowan.
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A short and compact work on a subject which has not been successfully
handled.
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16. Indiscreet Letters from Peking, by B. Putnam Weale.
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Though too outspoken to meet with general approbation, this work is
considered by many to give the most faithful account of the Siege of
the Legations, as seen by an independent witness.
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17. Buddhism as a Religion, by H. Hackmann, Lic. Theol.
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A very useful volume, translated from the German, showing the various
developments of Buddhism in different parts of the world.
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18. Chuang Tzu, by H. A. Giles.
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A complete translation of the writings of the leading Taoist
philosopher, who flourished in the fourth and third centuries B.C.
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