His Lordship's Leopard: A Truthful Narration of Some Impossible Facts
By David Dwight Wells. With cover by Wm. Nicholson, 10th Impression. 12mo. $1.25.
A very humorous story, dealing with English society, growing out of certain experiences of the author while a member of our Embassy in London. The elephant's experiences, also, are based on facts.
The Nation : He is probably funny because he cannot help it.... Again and again excites spontaneous laughter, is such a boon that its author must consent to be regarded as a benefactor of his kind without responsibility.
New York Tribune : Mr. Wells allows his sense of humor to play about the personalities of half a dozen men and women whose lives, for a few brief, extraordinary days, are inextricably intertwined with the life of the aforesaid monarch of the jungle.... Smacks of fun which can be created by clever actors placed in excruciatingly droll situations.
Philadelphia Times : As breezy a bit of fiction as the reading public has lately been offered. Amusing from the first page to the last, unique in conception, and absolutely uproarious in plot.
New York Commercial Advertiser : A really delicious chain of absurdities which are based upon American independence and impudence; ... exceedingly amusing.
Outlook : Full of amusing situations.
Buffalo Express : So amusing is the book that the reader is almost too tired to laugh when the elephant puts in his appearance.
Author of Her Ladyship's Elephant
The ensuing work is a serious attempt to while away an idle hour. The best criticism that the author received of Her Ladyship's Elephant was from an old lady who wrote him that it had made her forget a toothache; the most discouraging, from a critic who approached the book as serious literature and treated it according to the standards of the higher criticism .
The author takes this occasion to state that he has never been guilty of writing literature, serious or otherwise, and that if any one considers this book a fit subject for the application of the higher criticism, he will treat it as a just ground for an action for libel.
David Dwight Wells
HER LADYSHIP'S ELEPHANT
HIS LORDSHIP'S LEOPARD
WARNING!
CONTENTS.
IN WHICH CECIL BANBOROUGH ACHIEVES FAME AND THE "DAILY LEADER" A "SCOOP."
IN WHICH CECIL BANBOROUGH ATTEMPTS TO DRIVE PUBLIC OPINION.
IN WHICH CECIL BANBOROUGH DRIVES A BLACK MARIA.
IN WHICH THE BLACK MARIA RECEIVES A NEW INMATE.
IN WHICH THE PARTY RECEIVES A NEW IMPETUS.
IN WHICH THE BISHOP OF BLANFORD RECEIVES A BLACK EYE.
IN WHICH A LINE IS DRAWN AND CROSSED.
IN WHICH A LOCKET IS ACCEPTED AND A RING REFUSED.
IN WHICH MRS. MACKINTOSH ADMIRES JONAH.
IN WHICH THE ENEMY ARRIVES.
IN WHICH PEACE IS PROPOSED AND WAR DECLARED.
IN WHICH THE BISHOP IS ABDUCTED.
IN WHICH THE BISHOP EATS JAM TART, AND MISS MATILDA HUMBLE-PIE.
IN WHICH MISS ARMINSTER PROPOSES TO MARRY AGAIN.
IN WHICH MISS ARMINSTER VERIFIES THE PROVERB.
THE END.
GODFREY'S THE HARP OF LIFE
GODFREY'S POOR HUMAN NATURE
THE GADFLY.
BARROW'S THE FORTUNE OF WAR
GODFREY'S THE HARP OF LIFE
LUCAS'S THE OPEN ROAD
HOPE'S RUPERT OF HENTZAU
HOPE'S PRISONER OF ZENDA
OTHER BOOKS BY ANTHONY HOPE
"Tense with sustained power."
FOLLY CORNER
GOD'S PRISONER