“More valuable to the general reader than any other.”—San Francisco Chronicle.
“He recalls the Rome of the great age of the conquests; of the Empire; of those years when the fires of life were dying; of the age of the barbarians; of the middle age; of the Renaissance; and of the modern time.”—H. W. Mabie.
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
64-66 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
Writings of F. Marion Crawford
12mo Cloth
| Whosoever Shall Offend | $1.50 |
| The Heart of Rome | 1.50 |
| Cecilia | 1.50 |
| Marietta | 1.50 |
| Corleone | 1.50 |
| Mr. Isaacs | 1.50 |
| Dr. Claudius | 1.50 |
| A Roman Singer | 1.50 |
| An American Politician | 1.50 |
| To Leeward | 1.50 |
| Zoroaster | 1.50 |
| A Tale of a Lonely Parish | 1.50 |
| Marzio’s Crucifix | 1.50 |
| Paul Patoff | 1.50 |
| Pietro Ghisleri | 1.50 |
| The Children of the King | 1.50 |
| Marion Darche | 1.50 |
| The Three Fates | 1.50 |
| Katharine Lauderdale | 1.50 |
| The Ralstons | 1.50 |
| Love in Idleness | 2.00 |
| Casa Braccio, 2 vols. | 2.00 |
| Taquisara | 1.50 |
| Adam Johnstone’s Son, and A Rose of Yesterday | 1.50 |
| Saracinesca | 1.50 |
| Sant’ Ilario | 1.50 |
| Don Orsino | 1.50 |
| With the Immortals | 1.50 |
| Greifenstein | 1.50 |
| A Cigarette-Maker’s Romance, and Khaled | 1.50 |
| The Witch of Prague | 1.50 |
| Via Crucis | 1.50 |
| In the Palace of the King | 1.50 |
WHOSOEVER SHALL OFFEND.—“Not since George Eliot’s ‘Romola’ brought her to her foreordained place among literary immortals, has there appeared in English fiction a character at once so strong and sensitive, so entirely and consistently human, so urgent and compelling in its appeal to sustained, sympathetic interest.”—Philadelphia North American.
THE HEART OF ROME (A Tale of the “Lost Water”).—“Mr. Crawford has written as absorbingly interesting a story as any of the perennially engrossing ‘Saracinesca’ trilogy.”—Brooklyn Times.
CECILIA (A Story of Modern Rome).—“The love story, which is the dominating interest throughout, is so strange and novel a one that many readers will, we think, compare it with ‘Mr. Isaacs,’ the author’s first and most popular book.... Mr. Crawford will, we think, be held to have scored a new and distinct success in this story.”—The Philadelphia North American.