| CHAP. | |
| I. | WOMAN AS MOTHER. |
| II. | WOMAN AS WIFE. |
| III. | WOMAN AS MAIDEN. |
| IV. | WOMAN IN THE WORLD OF LETTERS. |
| V. | WOMAN IN THE WORLD OF ART. |
| VI. | WOMAN AS THE HEROINE, ENTHUSIAST, AND SOCIAL REFORMER. |
“The qualifications and influence of women in different spheres of life are detailed and illustrated by notices of the lives of many who have been distinguished in various positions.”—Bazaar.
“The youth of both sexes are under deep obligations by the publication of Mr. Hogg’s very interesting and attractive volumes. It is a great object to attract the young to the habitual practice of reading. That can only be accomplished by putting into their hands books which will interest and amuse them, and at the same time furnish them with useful knowledge, and with sound lessons of a moral, judicious, and sensible character, calculated to be useful to them as they advance in years.”—Dundee Courier and Argus.
WITH EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS ON TONED PAPER.
Small crown 8vo., 384 pp., cloth, price 3s. 6d.; gilt edges, 4s.
The Ocean Wave: Narratives of some of the Greatest Voyages, Seamen, Discoveries, Shipwrecks, and Mutinies of the World. By Henry Stewart, Author of “Our Redcoats and Bluejackets,” etc.
“Mr. Stewart’s new work comprises a selection of stories of the sea told in his best style and being historically accurate, ranks high among popular volumes intended to combine entertainment with instruction. To young and old alike the book ought to be profitable, for from it a very lucid account may be obtained of many of those momentous occurrences which have served to swell the history of England, and to afford an example to succeeding generations.”—Bazaar.