THE INVISIBLE GENTLEMAN.

By the Author of "Chartley," "The Fatalist," etc. etc.

"It is a novel which may be termed the whimsically supernatural."—Athenæum.

"The present narrative is one of the most entertaining fictions we have met with for a long time; the idea is very original, and brought into play with a lively air of truth, which gives a dramatic reality even to the supernatural."—Literary Gazette.

"The adventures follow each other with delightful rapidity and variety; occasionally there is a deep and thrilling touch of pathos, which we feel not a bit the less acutely, because the trouble and wo of the parties have originated in the familiar and somewhat laughable act of pulling an ear."—Court Magazine.


In Two Volumes, 12mo.

MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS.

"The best novel of the season—a faithful, exact, and withal spirited picture of the aristocracy of this country—an admirable description of what is called high life, and full of a more enlarged knowledge of human nature."—Spectator.

"A very lively and amusing panorama of actual life."—Lit. Gazette.