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Old Point Lace, and How to Copy and Imitate It.

By Daisy Waterhouse Hawkins. With 17 Illustrations by the Author.


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Antonina. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by Sir J. Gilbert and Alfred Concanen. Basil. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by Sir John Gilbert and J. Mahoney. Hide and Seek. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by Sir John Gilbert and J. Mahoney. The Dead Secret. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by Sir John Gilbert and H. Furniss. Queen of Hearts. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by Sir J. Gilbert and A. Concanen. My Miscellanies. By Wilkie Collins. With Steel Portrait, and Illustrations by A. Concanen. The Woman in White. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by Sir J. Gilbert and F. A. Fraser. The Moonstone. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by G. Du Maurier and F. A. Fraser. Man and Wife. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by William Small. Poor Miss Finch. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by G. Du Maurier and Edward Hughes. Miss or Mrs.? By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by S. L. Fildes and Henry Woods. The New Magdalen. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by G. Du Maurier and C. S. Rands. The Frozen Deep. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by G. Du Maurier and J. Mahoney. The Law and the Lady. By Wilkie Collins. Illustrated by S. L. Fildes and Sydney Hall. The Two Destinies. By Wilkie Collins. ⁂ Also a POPULAR EDITION of WILKIE COLLINS’S NOVELS, post 8vo, illustrated boards, 2s. each. Felicia. By M. Betham-Edwards. With a Frontispiece by W. Bowles. “A noble novel. Its teaching is elevated, its story is sympathetic, and the kind of feeling its perusal leaves behind is that more ordinarily derived from music or poetry than from prose fiction. Few works in modern fiction stand as high in our estimation as this.”—Sunday Times. Olympia. By R. E. Francillon. Under the Greenwood Tree. By Thomas Hardy. Fated To Be Free. By Jean Ingelow. The Queen of Connaught. By Harriett Jay. The Dark Colleen. By Harriett Jay.A novel which possesses the rare and valuable quality of novelty.... The scenery will be strange to most readers, and in many passages the aspects of Nature are very cleverly described. Moreover, the book is a study of a very curious and interesting state of society. A novel which no novel-reader should miss, and which people who generally shun novels may enjoy.”—Saturday Review. Patricia Kemball. By E. Lynn Linton. With Frontispiece by G. Du Maurier. “Displays genuine humour, as well as keen social observation. Enough graphic portraiture and witty observation to furnish materials for half-a-dozen novels of the ordinary kind.”—Saturday Review. The Atonement of Leam Dundas. By E. Lynn Linton. With a Frontispiece by Henry Woods. “In her narrowness and her depth, in her boundless loyalty, her self-forgetting Passion, that exclusiveness of love which is akin to cruelty, and the fierce humility which is vicarious pride, Leam Dundas is a striking figure. In one quality the authoress has in some measure surpassed herself.”—Pall Mall Gaz. The Waterdale Neighbours. By Justin McCarthy. My Enemy’s Daughter. By Justin McCarthy. Linley Rochford. By Justin McCarthy. A Fair Saxon. By Justin McCarthy. Dear Lady Disdain. By Justin McCarthy. The Evil Eye, and other Stories. By Katharine S. Macquoid. Illustrated by Thomas R. Macquoid and Percy Macquoid. “Cameos delicately, if not very minutely or vividly, wrought, and quite finished enough to give a pleasurable sense of artistic ease and faculty. A word of commendation is merited by the illustrations.”—Academy. Number Seventeen. By Henry Kingsley. Oakshott Castle. By Henry Kingsley. With a Frontispiece by Shirley Hodson. “A brisk and clear north wind of sentiment—sentiment that braces instead of enervating—blows through all his works, and makes all their readers at once healthier and more glad.”—Spectator. Open! Sesame! By Florence Marryat. Illustrated by F. A. Fraser. “A story which arouses and sustains the reader’s interest to a higher degree than, perhaps, any of its author’s former works.”—Graphic. Whiteladies. By Mrs. Oliphant. With Illustrations by A. Hopkins and H. Woods. “A pleasant and readable book, written with practical ease and grace.”—Times. The Best of Husbands. By James Payn. Illustrated by J. Moyr Smith. Fallen Fortunes. By James Payn. Halves. By James Payn. With a Frontispiece by J. Mahoney. Walter’s Word. By James Payn. Illustrated by J. Moyr Smith. What he Cost her. By James Payn.His novels are always commendable in the sense of art. They also possess another distinct claim to our liking: the girls in them are remarkably charming and true to nature, as most people, we believe, have the good fortune to observe nature represented by girls.”—Spectator. Her Mother’s Darling. By Mrs. J. H. Riddell. The Way we Live Now. By Anthony Trollope. With Illustrations. The American Senator. By Anthony Trollope.Mr. Trollope has a true artist’s idea of tone, of colour, of harmony: his pictures are one, and seldom out of drawing; he never strains after effect, is fidelity itself in expressing English life, is never guilty of caricature.”—Fortnightly Review. Diamond Cut Diamond. By T. A. Trollope.Full of life, of interest, of close observation, and sympathy.... When Mr. Trollope paints a scene it is sure to be a scene worth painting.”—Saturday Review. Bound to the Wheel. By John Saunders. Guy Waterman. By John Saunders. One Against the World. By John Saunders. The Lion in the Path. By John Saunders.A carefully written and beautiful story—a story of goodness and truth, which is yet as interesting as though it dealt with the opposite qualities.... The author of this really clever story has been at great pains to work out all its details with elaborate conscientiousness, and the result is a very vivid picture of the ways of life and habits of thought of a hundred and fifty years ago.... Certainly a very interesting book.”—Times. Ready-Money Mortiboy. By W. Besant and James Rice. My Little Girl. By W. Besant and James Rice. The Case of Mr. Lucraft. By W. Besant and James Rice. This Son of Vulcan. By W. Besant and James Rice. With Harp and Crown. By W. Besant and James Rice. The Golden Butterfly. By W. Besant and James Rice. With a Frontispiece by F. S. Walker. “‘The Golden Butterfly’ will certainly add to the happiness of mankind, for defy anybody to read it with a gloomy countenance.”— Times.


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