Old Friends at Cambridge and Elsewhere

Part 23

Chapter 23173 wordsPublic domain

_TIMES._—“All intelligent visitors to Cambridge, however short their stay, will be grateful to Mr. J. W. Clark, the Registrary of the University, for his excellent _Concise Guide to the Town and University of Cambridge in Four Walks_. It is not often that the casual visitor to a place of great historical and architectural interest like Cambridge finds so competent a _cicerone_ as Mr. Clark to tell him what he can see and what is best worth seeing in the time at his disposal.”

_ATHENÆUM._—“Mr. J. Willis Clark has written _A Concise Guide to Cambridge_ of unusual excellence.”

_DAILY CHRONICLE._—“An ideal guide-book by a former Fellow of Trinity.”

_MANCHESTER GUARDIAN._—“Mr. Clark’s varied accomplishments raise this little book quite out of the category of ordinary popular guide-books.”

_ACADEMY._—“In a book of its size the information is, of course, much condensed, but so far as it goes it is excellent.”

LIBRARIES IN THE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE PERIODS. The Rede Lecture, delivered June 13, 1894. By J. W. CLARK, M.A., F.S.A. Crown 8vo. 2_s._ 6_d._ net.

Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes.