INDEX

Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.
Edinburgh & London

WORKS BY W. H. FITCHETT, B.A., LL.D.

Nelson and His Captains: Sketches of Famous Seamen. With 11 Portraits and a Facsimile Letter. Crown 8vo, 6s.

PUNCH.—‘My Baronite, having read all Dr. Fitchett’s tales of battle on land, thinks his best piece is his sea piece.... Saxon and Celt reading the glowing narrative will feel proud to know it’s all true.’

ACADEMY.—‘A spirited picture of Nelson and his times.... The story which the author has to tell is almost incredible in its directness of detail, but certainly fascinating in its charm.’

The Tale of the Great Mutiny. Second Impression. With 8 Portraits and 4 Plans. Crown 8vo, 6s.

GUARDIAN.—‘It is almost impossible to lay the book down. The Story of those summer months of 1857 must ever appeal to English readers.’

BOOKMAN.—‘Written with all the swing and dash, with all the careful accuracy and brilliant descriptive power which have made Dr. Fitchett’s books so deservedly popular.’

How England Saved Europe: the Story of the Great War (1793-1815). Second Impression. In 4 vols., crown 8vo, with Portraits, Facsimiles, and Plans, 6s. each.

TIMES.—‘The story is broadly told, but very vigorously. It is not without significance that this excellent “Story of the Great War,” at once popular in the best sense, well-informed, full of instruction, and very attractively written, should be the work of a Colonial writer.’

GUARDIAN.—‘Mr. Fitchett has achieved a real success, and the boy who cannot read these volumes with pleasure (and profit) is hopeless. They are, if boyhood would but see it, more enthralling than half the novels published.’

Fights for the Flag. Second Edition. With 16 Portraits, 13 Plans, and a Facsimile Letter of the Duke of Marlborough. Crown 8vo, 6s.

SPECTATOR.—‘“Fights for the Flag” is as good as “Deeds that Won the Empire.” To say more than this in praise of the book before us is unnecessary, for “Deeds that Won the Empire” was one of the best collection of popular battle studies ever given to the public.... No writer ever had more completely the art of making one realise how opposing forces move both by land and sea.’

REVIEW OF REVIEWS.—‘This is the second volume of the series which has achieved one of the greatest literary successes of our time.... As a gift-book, or as a book to take up and read at odd moments, or to devour at a prolonged sitting, this book has few equals, and will probably equal or eclipse the popularity of its predecessors.’

Deeds that Won the Empire. Fourteenth Edition. With 16 Portraits and 11 Plans. Crown 8vo, 6s.

SPECTATOR.—‘Not since Macaulay ceased to write has English literature produced a writer capable of infusing such life and vigour into historical scenes. The wholesome and manly tone of Mr. Fitchett’s book is specially satisfactory.... The book cannot but take the reader by storm wherever it finds him.’

TIMES.—‘“Deeds that Won the Empire” is admirably conceived and written. Wolfe’s striking feat of arms at Quebec, Hawke’s splendid victory in Quiberon Bay, Busaco, Albuera, the Nile, the action of the Shannon and Chesapeake, with other memorable fights by sea and land, are vividly described. Mr. Fitchett has not sacrificed historical accuracy to dramatic effect, and his words ring true.’

Wellington’s Men: some Soldier-Autobiographies. (‘Kincaid’s Adventures in the Rifle Brigade’; ‘Rifleman Harris’; Anton’s ‘Military Life’; Mercer’s ‘Waterloo.’) Edited by W. H. Fitchett, M.A., LL.D. Crown 8vo, 6s.

SPECTATOR.—‘Fitchett has ere this sounded the clarion and filled the fife to good purpose, but he has never done better work than in rescuing from oblivion the narratives which appear in this volume. Here we have the incidents of war told by the actors themselves, and each actor saw a different side of the thing, and had his own way of telling about it. We feel very grateful to Mr. Fitchett for his skilful editing of four stories which ought not to be allowed to die.’

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

SMITH, ELDER, & CO.’S PUBLICATIONS.

THE LIFE OF HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE CONSORT. By Sir Theodore Martin, K.C.B. With Portrait and Views. 5 vols. Demy 8vo. 18s. each. ⁂ Also a ‘People’s Edition,’ in 1 vol., bound in cloth, 4s. 6d.; or in six parts, 6d. each. Cloth Cases for binding, 1s. each.

MORE LEAVES FROM THE JOURNAL OF A LIFE IN THE HIGHLANDS, from 1862 to 1882. Fifth Edition. With Portraits and Woodcut Illustrations. 8vo. 10s. 6d. ⁂ Also the Popular Edition, with Portrait and Woodcut Illustrations, fcp. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

THE LIFE OF LORD LAWRENCE. By R. Bosworth Smith, M.A., late Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford; Author of ‘Mohammed and Mohammedanism,’ ‘Carthage and the Carthaginians,’ &c. Seventh Edition. 2 vols. large crown 8vo. with 2 Portraits and 2 Maps, 21s.

LIFE OF SIR HENRY LAWRENCE. By Major-General Sir Herbert Benjamin Edwardes, K.C.B., K.C.S.I., and Herman Merivale, C.B. With Two Portraits. 8vo. 12s.

LIFE OF LIEUT.-GENERAL SIR JAMES OUTRAM. By Major-General Sir Frederic J. Goldsmid, C.B., K.C.S.I. Second Edition. 2 vols. demy 8vo. 32s.

RECOLLECTIONS OF A MILITARY LIFE. By General Sir John Adye, G.C.B., R.A., late Governor of Gibraltar. With Illustrations by the Author. Demy 8vo. 14s. net.

THE LIFE OF MAHOMET. From Original Sources. By Sir Wm. Muir, K.C.S.I. Third Edition, with a New Map and several Illustrations. 8vo. 16s.

By the same Author.

THE MAMELUKE OR SLAVE DYNASTY OF EGYPT, 1260-1517 A.D. With 12 Full-page Illustrations and a Map. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

THE CALIPHATE: ITS RISE, DECLINE, AND FALL. With Maps. Third Edition. Demy 8vo. 16s.

THE MERV OASIS: Travels and Adventures East of the Caspian during the Years 1879-80-81, including Five Months’ Residence among the Tekkes of Merv. By Edmond O’Donovan, Special Correspondent of the Daily News. In 2 vols. demy 8vo. with Portrait, Maps, and Facsimiles of State Documents, 36s.

MERV: a Story of Adventures and Captivity. Epitomised from ‘The Merv Oasis.’ By Edmond O’Donovan. With a Portrait. Crown 8vo. 6s.

ESSAYS ON THE EXTERNAL POLICY OF INDIA. By the late J. W. S. Wyllie, C.S.I., India Civil Service, sometime Acting Foreign Secretary to the Government of India. Edited, with a brief Life, by Sir W. W. Hunter, B.A., LL.D. With a Portrait of the Author. 8vo. 14s.

THE INDIA DIRECTORY. For the Guidance of Commanders of Steamers and Sailing Vessels. Compiled from latest British Official Publications. Part I. Illustrated by Charts of Winds, Currents, Tides, Passages, and Compass Variation. Revised Edition, with Supplementary Chapters. Super royal 8vo. 28s. Part II. Illustrated by Charts of Currents in opposite Monsoons. Super royal 8vo. 28s. By Commander Alfred Dundas Taylor, F.R.G.S., Indian Navy, late Superintendent of Marine Surveys to the Government of India.

THE ANNALS OF RURAL BENGAL. From Official Records and the Archives of Ancient Families. By Sir W. W. Hunter, LL.D. Vol. I. The Ethnical Frontier. Fifth Edition. Demy 8vo. 18s. Also the new, revised, and cheaper edition (the Seventh). Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d.

By the same Author.

ORISSA; or, The Vicissitudes of an Indian Province under Native and British Rule. Being the Second and Third Volumes of ‘Annals of Rural Bengal.’ With Illustrations. 2 vols. demy 8vo. 32s.

A LIFE OF THE EARL OF MAYO, Fourth Viceroy of India. 2 vols. Second Edition. Demy 8vo. 24s.

THE INDIAN EMPIRE: its Peoples, History, and Products. Third and Standard Edition. With Map. Demy 8vo. 28s.

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

New Edition of W. M. Thackeray’s Works.

In Thirteen Volumes, Large Crown 8vo, Cloth, Gilt Top, 6s. each.

THE BIOGRAPHICAL EDITION
OF
W. M. THACKERAY’S COMPLETE WORKS.

THIS NEW AND REVISED EDITION
COMPRISES
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL and HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED
LETTERS, SKETCHES, and DRAWINGS

Derived from the Author’s Original Manuscripts and Note-Books,

AND EACH VOLUME INCLUDES A MEMOIR, IN THE FORM OF AN INTRODUCTION,
BY MRS. RICHMOND RITCHIE.

The 13 Volumes are also supplied in Set Cloth Binding, Gilt Top, Price £3, 18s.

Contents of the Volumes:—

1. VANITY FAIR. With 20 Full-page Illustrations, 11 Woodcuts, a Facsimile Letter, and a New Portrait.

2. PENDENNIS. With 20 Full-page Illustrations and 10 Woodcuts.

3. YELLOWPLUSH PAPERS, &c. With 24 Full-page Reproductions of Steel Plates by George Cruikshank, 11 Woodcuts, and a Portrait of the Author by Maclise.

4. THE MEMOIRS OF BARRY LYNDON: The Fitzboodle Papers, &c. With 16 Full-page Illustrations by J. E. Millais, R.A., Luke Fildes, A.R.A., and the Author, and 14 Woodcuts.

5. SKETCH BOOKS.—The Paris Sketch Book; The Irish Sketch Book; Notes of a Journey from Cornhill to Grand Cairo, &c. &c. With 16 Full-page Illustrations, 39 Woodcuts, and a Portrait of the Author by Maclise.

6. CONTRIBUTIONS TO ‘PUNCH,’ &c. With 20 Full-page Illustrations, 26 Woodcuts, and an Engraving of the Author from a Portrait by Samuel Laurence.

7. THE HISTORY OF HENRY ESMOND; and THE LECTURES. With 20 Full-page Illustrations by George Du Maurier, F. Barnard, and Frank Dicksee, R.A., and 11 Woodcuts.

8. THE NEWCOMES. With 20 Full-page Illustrations by Richard Doyle, and 11 Woodcuts.

9. CHRISTMAS BOOKS, &c. With 97 Full-page Illustrations, 122 Woodcuts, and a Facsimile Letter.

10. THE VIRGINIANS. With 20 Full-page Illustrations, 6 Woodcuts, a Photogravure, and a new Portrait.

11. THE ADVENTURES OF PHILIP; and A SHABBY GENTEEL STORY. With 24 Full-page Illustrations by Frederick Walker, A.R.A., and the Author, 6 Woodcuts, a Facsimile of MS., and 2 Facsimile Letters.

12. LOVEL THE WIDOWER; ROUNDABOUT PAPERS; DENIS DUVAL, &c. With 20 Full-page and 11 Text Illustrations by Frederick Walker, A.R.A., Charles Keene, and the Author, and 2 Pages of MSS. in Facsimile.

13. BALLADS AND MISCELLANIES. With 35 Full-page Illustrations by the Author, George Cruikshank, and John Leech. 3 Portraits of Thackeray’s Ancestors, an Engraving of the Author from a Drawing by Samuel Laurence, a Photogravure from a Drawing by Chinnery of Thackeray at the age of 3, with his father and mother, and 35 Text Illustrations. The Volume also contains a life of Thackeray by Leslie Stephen, and a Bibliography.

THE BOOKMAN.—“In her new biographical edition Mrs. Richmond Ritchie gives us precisely what we want. The volumes are a pleasure to hold and to handle. They are just what we like our ordinary every-day Thackeray to be. And prefixed to each of them we have all that we wish to know, or have any right to know, about the author himself; all the circumstances, letters, and drawings which bear upon the work.”

A Prospectus of the Edition, with Specimen pages, will be sent post free on application.

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

WORKS BY FRANK T. BULLEN, F.R.G.S.

Deep Sea Plunderings. Third Impression. With 8 Full-page Illustrations by Arthur Twidle. Crown 8vo, 6s.

SPECTATOR.—“A new book of sea stories from Mr. Bullen is an event which all who enjoy an exciting narrative set forth in a picturesque and animated manner have good reason to be thankful for.... There is something in the book to please almost every taste, and very little to call for serious criticism.... The book deserves to be, and will be, read by all who look to literature to provide them with refreshment and recreation.”

TIMES.—“Mr. Bullen’s name is sufficient recommendation for a collection of most miscellaneous stories, all smacking strongly of the brine. In ‘Deep Sea Plunderings’ be does exciting and informing work, and in the depths of the ocean finds inexhaustible treasure.”

The Men of the Merchant Service. Being the Polity of the Mercantile Marine for ‘Longshore Readers.’ Second Impression. Large post 8vo, 7s. 6d.

SPECTATOR.—“The book is of great value, and of great interest to all the innumerable people who are curious about the most romantic and separate of lives. But it is of importance, secondly and chiefly, as Mr. Bullen’s appeal to the political sense of his country. Put as briefly as possible, it comes to this. The control of the sea is vital to England; and the English, though they continue to be a great ship-owning people, are less and less a seafaring people. English ships are increasingly manned by foreigners and officered by foreigners. We cannot commend his volume too earnestly to public consideration. England’s tenure of her position in the world depends on her merchant marine no less than on her Navy, and in neither one nor the other can she afford to rely on mercenaries.”

ACADEMY.—“We could not in a short space convey any idea of the variety of special information—all so human and related-that Mr. Bullen gives.... We only prick a book that is bulged with seacraft, and resembles the perfect sailor whose every hair is a ropeyarn and every drop of blood Stockholm tar.”

The Cruise of the “Cachalot” Round the World After Sperm Whales. By Frank T. Bullen, First Mate. The volume includes a Letter to the Author from Rudyard Kipling. Ninth Impression. With 8 Illustrations and a Chart. Large post 8vo, 8s. 6d.

TIMES.—“Mr. Bullen has a splendid subject, and be handles it with the pen of a master.... ‘The Cruise of the Cachalot’ is a book which cannot but fascinate all lovers of the sea, and all who can appreciate a masterly presentation of its wonder and its mystery, its terrors and its trials, its humours and its tragedies.”

The Rev. Dr. HORTON, in his Sermon on behalf of the British and Foreign Bible Society, referred to Mr. Bullen’s ‘Cruise of the Cachalot’ in the following terms:

“It is a very remarkable book in every way: it seems to me worthy to rank with some of the writings of Defoe. It has absolutely taken the shine out of some of the romantic literature of such writers as even Stevenson and Rudyard Kipling. By the strange law that truth is more wonderful than fiction, this book is more wonderful than the wildest dreams of the creator of imagination.”

The Log of a Sea-Waif. Being Recollections of the First Four Years of my Sea Life. Third Impression. With 8 Full-page Illustrations specially drawn by Arthur Twidle. Large post 8vo, 8s. 6d.

WORLD.—“We have read many stories of sea life, but do not remember to have been so fascinated and enthralled by any of them as by this masterly presentation of the humours, hardships, and minor tragedies of life in the forecastle.”

TIMES.—“Full of thrilling adventure, admirably told.... We must leave Mr. Bullen’s touching story of his early struggles and adventures to speak for itself. His descriptive powers are great, his literary imagination is vivid, and he finds abundant opportunities for the display of both.”

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“When the Haworth Edition was announced we expected something with which no other version has provided us, and we are not disappointed.”

In 7 Volumes. Large crown 8vo, cloth, gilt top, 6s. each.

THE HAWORTH EDITION
OF THE
LIFE AND WORKS
OF
CHARLOTTE BRONTË
(CURRER BELL)
AND HER SISTERS
EMILY AND ANNE BRONTË
(ELLIS AND ACTON BELL)

WITH PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS.

Including Views of places described in the Works, reproduced from Photographs specially taken for the purpose by Mr. W. R. Bland, of Duffield, Derby, in conjunction with Mr. C. Barrow Keene, of Derby, Medallists of the Royal Photographic Society.

Introductions to the Works are supplied by Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD,

AND

An Introduction and Notes to Mrs. Gaskell’s “Life of Charlotte Brontë” by Mr. CLEMENT K. SHORTER, the eminent Brontë authority.

CONTENTS OF THE VOLUMES:

1. JANE EYRE. By Charlotte Brontë. With a Photogravure Portrait of Charlotte Brontë, from a Drawing by G. Richmond, a Photogravure of Rochester and Jane Eyre, from a Water-colour Drawing by Frederick Walker, A.R.A.; a Facsimile of the Title-page of the first edition, and 8 Full-page Illustrations.

2. SHIRLEY. By Charlotte Brontë. With a Facsimile of the Title-page of the first edition, and 10 Full-page Illustrations.

3. VILLETTE. By Charlotte Brontë. With a Photogravure Portrait of M. Heger, Facsimiles of Title-page of the original edition and of a page of the original MS., and 8 Full-page Illustrations.

4. THE PROFESSOR, by Charlotte Brontë, and POEMS, by Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë, and the Rev. Patrick Brontë, &c. With Facsimiles of the Title-pages of the first editions, and 8 Full-page Illustrations.

5. WUTHERING HEIGHTS. By Emily Brontë. AGNES GREY. By Anne Brontë. With a Preface and Biographical Notice of both Authors by Charlotte Brontë. With a Portrait of Emily Brontë, Facsimiles of the Title-pages of the first editions, and 8 Full-page Illustrations.

6. THE TENANT OF WILDFELL HALL. By Anne Brontë. With a Portrait of Anne Brontë, a Facsimile of the Title-page of the first edition, and 6 Full-page Illustrations.

7. LIFE OF CHARLOTTE BRONTË. By Mrs. Gaskell. With an Introduction and Notes by Clement K. Shorter. With nearly 100 hitherto unpublished Letters from the Brontës, father and daughters, Photogravure Portraits of Mrs. Gaskell and of the Rev. A. B. Nicholls, a Portrait of the Rev. Patrick Brontë, 11 New Illustrations, Facsimiles of a Letter by Charlotte Brontë, and of a page from Charlotte Brontë’s MS. of “The Secret,” &c. &c.

⁂ THE LIFE AND WORKS OF THE SISTERS BRONTË are also to be had in 7 Vols., small post 8vo, limp green cloth, or, cloth boards, gilt top, price 2s. 6d. each; and in small fcap. 8vo, bound in cloth, with gilt top, with Frontispiece to each volume, price 1s. 6d. each; or the Set, in gold-lettered cloth case, 12s. 6d.

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

‘The magnum opus of our generation.’—Truth.

‘A work absolutely indispensable to every well-furnished library.’—The Times.

In 65 Volumes Royal 8vo Price 15s. each net, in cloth; or in half-morocco, marbled edges, 20s. net.

DICTIONARY of NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY
AND SUPPLEMENT.

Edited by Sir LESLIE STEPHEN, K.C.B., and SIDNEY LEE.

(Volumes 1 to 21 edited by Leslie Stephen. Volumes 22 to 26 edited by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee. Volumes 27 to 63, and the three Supplementary Volumes, edited by Sidney Lee.)

A FEW REPRESENTATIVE OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.

TIMES.—‘One of the most enduring and one of the most important literary monuments of the time in which we live. Indeed, it is no hyperbole to say that the Dictionary is much more than this. In many respects it is unique—in its immense bulk and scope, in the high standard of excellence it maintains throughout, in the literary eminence and scholarly reputation of so many of its contributors, in the amazing regularity of its appearance from first to last.’

SPECTATOR.—‘A work of National importance. It will by degrees and in course of years correct a great national fault—the tendency to forget men who are worthy of remembrance.... No statue will recall an eminent individual as this Dictionary of Biography will recall them all. It is more than a great monument to the eminent, for it is also what a monument can seldom be—a record of their deeds. As a whole the work, which involved an infinity of labour, much judgment, and some shrewd insight into character, has been marvellously well done, so that the great book will probably never be superseded, and will possibly for centuries give the first impress to the judgment of the inquirer into the history and doings of all English notables.’

LITERATURE.—‘The inception of the work, its steady and business-like execution, and its reception by the public mark something like an epoch in English literary history. Few publications even in an age when collaboration is the fashion, have brought together so many distinguished writers; none certainly have done more to organise research and turn it to a practical use.’

EDINBURGH REVIEW.—‘A Dictionary of Biography on this scale is a history of our race. The biographies of sovereigns, and statesmen, and warriors, written as they are in these volumes with great fulness, do in fact contain the annals of their lives. There is not in existence a more complete history of England than is to be found in these volumes.’

ATHENÆUM.—‘In fulness, in thoroughness, and in general accuracy it leaves little or nothing to be desired. It compares very favourably with its two foreign models in most essential points; and in one, at least, it is distinctly superior. Neither the German nor the Belgian Dictionary indicates the sources from which the matter in the text has been drawn with equal completeness and precision. A careful bibliographical note is appended to even the shortest of the articles; and in some of the longer ones this note becomes nothing less than an exhaustive critical digest, the utility of which can scarcely be rated too highly.’

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—‘A Great undertaking, worthily designed, and admirably executed.... We may at least say that the “Dictionary of National Biography” has achieved in many respects the ideal which was before the mind of Plutarch when he wrote his “Lives of Greeks and Romans” at once to amuse and interest himself and to edify and enlighten the world.’

MORNING POST.—‘The greatest undertaking of the century in its own field of endeavour.... It must justly be said that this vast undertaking will fill a yawning gap in the list of dictionaries, and satisfy a want which must have been felt, more or less strongly, by almost every English writer.’

ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW.—‘The thoroughness of the work is such that the Dictionary has become an indispensable book of reference, and its influence will be strongly felt on the scholarship of the next generation.’

SPEAKER.—‘The book will last as long as the English language, and will preserve for all time not only the memory of the greater personages of English history, which is in no danger, but of that multitude of smaller luminaries whose light would otherwise have been lost.’

A Full Prospectus of ‘The Dictionary of National Biography,’ with Specimen Pages, may be had upon application.

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

SMITH, ELDER, & CO.’S PUBLICATIONS.

AN ONLOOKER’S NOTE-BOOK. By the Author of ‘Collections and Recollections.’ Second Impression. Large post 8vo, 7s. 6d. net.

MORNING POST.—‘Mr. Russell’s book contains 43 chapters; the reader will probably not agree with him in all, but in all he is entertaining, and a prescription of three a day after meals would be an excellent aid to cheerfulness and digestion.’

THE ROLL-CALL OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY. By E. T. Bradley (Mrs. A. Murray Smith), Author of ‘Annals of Westminster Abbey,’ &c. With 24 Full-page Illustrations and 5 Plans. Third Impression. Large crown 8vo, 6s.

TRUTH.—‘Incomparably the best of its kind that has yet appeared.’

SIR CHARLES WARREN AND SPION KOP. A Vindication. By ‘Defender.’ With a Biographical Sketch, Portrait, and Map. Large crown 8vo, 6s.

A NEW TRAFALGAR: a Tale of the Torpedo Fleet. By A. C. Curtis. Crown 8vo, 6s.

DAILY CHRONICLE.—‘Mr. Curtis writes a stirring tale. His ideas are clearly expressed, and his book is well worth reading.’

THE TALE OF THE GREAT MUTINY. By W. H. Fitchett, B.A., LL.D., &c., Author of ‘Deeds that Won the Empire,’ ‘Fights for the Flag,’ ‘Wellington’s Men,’ &c. Second Impression. With 8 Portraits and 4 Maps. Crown 8vo. 6s.

GUARDIAN.—‘It is almost impossible to lay the book down. The story of those summer months of 1857 must ever appeal to English readers.’

DEEP SEA PLUNDERINGS. A Collection of Stories of the Sea. By Frank T. Bullen, F.R.G.S., Author of ‘The Cruise of the “Cachalot,”’ ‘The Log of a Sea Waif,’ ‘The Men of the Merchant Service,’ &c. Third Impression. With Eight Full-page Illustrations by Arthur Twidle. Crown 8vo. 6s.

SPECTATOR.—‘There is something in the book to please almost every taste.... It deserves to be, and will be, read by all who look to literature to provide them with refreshment and recreation.’

THE LIFE OF LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN. By R. Barry O’Brien, Author of ‘Fifty Years of Concessions to Ireland,’ ‘The Life of Charles Stewart Parnell,’ &c. Third Impression. With a Portrait. Large 8vo. 10s. 6d.

SATURDAY REVIEW.—‘Mr. O’Brien has done an admirable piece of work, and produced the best life of a lawyer that we remember to have seen.... There is not a dull page from beginning to end.’

THE LIFE OF WILLIAM EWART GLADSTONE. By Herbert W. Paul, Author of ‘Men and Letters.’ With a Portrait. Large post 8vo. 7s. 6d.

TIMES.—‘As a chronicle of facts Mr. Paul’s volume is singularly complete and trustworthy, and the author does not write in any way as a partisan.’

A SAILOR’S LOG. By Robley D. Evans, Rear-Admiral in the U.S. Navy. Second English Impression. With Illustrations. Large post 8vo. 8s. 6d.

TIMES.—‘A very racy and entertaining book. It is full of good stories and lively adventures, very vividly told.’

THE SMALL FARM AND ITS MANAGEMENT. By James Long, Author of ‘British Dairy Farming,’ ‘Farming in a Small Way,’ ‘The Story of the Farm,’ ‘Our Food Supply,’ &c. Crown 8vo. 6s.

LIVERPOOL DAILY COURIER.—‘A lucid, most informing volume.... A weighty contribution to the agricultural problem.’

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.

NOVELS BY H. S. MERRIMAN.

THE VELVET GLOVE. Sixth Impression. Crown 8vo. 6s.

SKETCH.—‘Equal to, if not better than, the best he has ever written. “The Velvet Glove” is the very essence of good romance.’

THE ISLE OF UNREST. Fifth Impression. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 6s.

THE TIMES.—‘Capital reading, absorbing reading.... An exciting story with “thrills” at every third page.’

THE GUARDIAN.—‘Altogether charming, serious yet gay, wholesome and manly, fresh and full of interesting incident.’

RODEN’S CORNER. Third Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

TRUTH.—‘A novel I defy you to lay down when once you have got well into it.’

PUNCH.—‘For dramatic situation, intensity, and simplicity of narrative, it is marvellous.... The plot is ingenious and new.’

IN KEDAR’S TENTS. Eighth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

THE PALL MALL GAZETTE.—‘After the few first pages one ceases to criticise, one can only enjoy.... In a word—the use of which, unqualified, is such a rare and delicious luxury—the book is good.’

THE SOWERS. Twenty-second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

THE GRAPHIC.—‘His absorbingly interesting story will be found very difficult indeed to lay down until its last page has been turned.’

WITH EDGED TOOLS. Crown 8vo. 6s.; and fcp. 8vo. boards, Pictorial Cover, 2s.; or, limp red cloth, 2s. 6d.

THE WESTMINSTER GAZETTE.—‘Admirably conceived as a whole, and, most skilful in its details. The story never flags or loiters.’

FROM ONE GENERATION TO ANOTHER. Crown 8vo. 6s.; and fcp. 8vo. boards, Pictorial Cover, 2s.; or, limp red cloth, 2s. 6d.

THE ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS.—‘The book is a good book. The characters of Michael Seymour and of James Agar are admirably contrasted.... There is a very fair allowance of wrong-doing in the novel; but, on the other hand—which is quite unusual in a story nowadays—things all come right at last.’

THE SLAVE OF THE LAMP. Crown 8vo. 6s.; and fcp. 8vo. boards, Pictorial Cover. 2s.; or, limp red cloth, 2s. 6d.

THE MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.—‘A masterly story ... so like real life, and so entirely unconventional.’

THE GREY LADY. Square 16mo. 4s.; or, with 12 Full-page Illustrations by Arthur Rackham, crown 8vo. 6s.

THE BRITISH WEEKLY.—‘An interesting, thoughtful, carefully-written story, with a charming touch of pensiveness.’

London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place, S. W.