BOOKS BY PAUL CRESWICK
ROBIN HOOD AND HIS ADVENTURES
8vo, cloth, gilt top $2.50
Fully illustrated in colors, and black and white by T. H. Robinson.
To the boy mind there is no more interesting subject than Robin Hood.
Mr. Creswick has made a thorough study of his subject from all sources and we believe he has written the best boy's rendering of Robin Hood yetproduced.
HASTINGS, THE PIRATE
12mo, cloth, gilt top, illustrated by T. H. Robinson. $1.50
IN ALFRED'S DAYS
A Story of Saga the Dane. Illustrated, 12mo, cloth. $1.50
Full of life and fire. Reproduces the far past with vividness. The illustrations also are superior. A fine book.—Congregationalist.
This story, so worthy the telling, has been set forth with stirring words and vigorous speech in this volume so appropriately bound and illustrated. This makes another splendid gift book.—Living Church.
UNDER THE BLACK RAVEN
Illustrated by T. H. Robinson, 12mo, cloth $1.50
Writers of juvenile fiction are awakening to the consciousness that the charm exercised upon sensitive children by Scott and certain other elder writers lies in the very strangeness of their style, in its removal from the newspaper and the school book.
Mr. Paul Creswick gives it in a story entitled "Under the Black Raven," and recounting the deeds of Sweyn Harfage, when, armed by Alfred, he went forth to claim his own, and, after much good fighting, won it, and many another thing. The illustrations are Mr. T. H. Robinson's and are worthy of both style and story.—Boston Journal.
A spirited and striking picture of olden times in Denmark before Christianity dawned on that land. The interest of the story centres in the conflicting claims of two Danish factions. The Ravens and The Dragons—signifying the emblems under which they fought.
The story gives a vivid picture of the rude wars of remote times.—The Outlook.
E. P. DUTTON & CO., Publishers
31 West Twenty-third Street, New York