NEW SIX-SHILLING NOVELS.

THE ADVENTURES OF M. D'HARICOT. By J. Storer Clouston, Author of 'The Lunatic at Large,' &c. Second Impression.

EPISODES OF RURAL LIFE. By W.E.W. Collins, Author of 'A Scholar of his College,' 'The Don and the Undergraduate,' &c.

A WOMAN AND A CREED. By H. Garton Sargent.

THE COLONEL SAHIB. A Novel. By Garrett Mill. Second Impression.

MONSIEUR MARTIN: A Romance of the Great Swedish War. By Wymond Carey.

"Deserves to be called a great novel.... A book of sterling merits, wholesome human interest, and adequate learning."—Guardian.

THE PRINCE OF THE CAPTIVITY. By Sydney C. Grier, Author of 'The Kings of the East,' 'Peace with Honour,' &c.

"This clever novel. It is well worth reading."—Outlook.

THE MOST FAMOUS LOBA. By Nellie K. Blissett, Author of 'Wisdom of the Simple,' 'Brass,' &c. With a Frontispiece.

"Told with a grace and simplicity truly exquisite.... The intricacies of the story cannot be traced here, still less is it possible to suggest its incommunicable charm."—Daily Chronicle.

JOE WILSON AND HIS MATES. By Henry Lawson, Author of 'The Country I Come From,' 'While the Billy Boils,' &c.

"A volume of realistic stories of Bush-life.... Will be eagerly read by men and women who have experienced the loneliness and the roughness of the needy emigrant's part."—Spectator.

BUSH-WHACKING. By Hugh Clifford, C.M.G. Second Impression.

"The stories reach a masterly level of vivid colouring, wide sympathy, and genuine insight."—Athenæum.

DOOM CASTLE. By Neil Munro. Second Impression.

"Since 'Catriona' and 'Kidnapped' there has been no Scottish novel of more unmistakable genius."—British Weekly.

LORD JIM. A Tale. By Joseph Conrad. Second Impression.

"A most original, remarkable, and engrossing novel."—Spectator.


WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, Edinburgh and London.


Typographical errors corrected in text:

On page 321, the word battue is not a typographical error. A battue is a hunt in which beaters force the game to flee in the direction of the hunter.