[*] Castle, Mrs. Agnes (Sweetman), and Castle, Edgerton. Heart of Lady Anne. [†]$1.50. Stokes.

In the time of powder, masks and patches, Squire Day married the spoiled beauty, Lady Anne, and the story of her heart is the story of how she chafed at life on her young husband’s estate, how she went up to London as guest of Lady Kilcroney, who was Kitty Bellairs, and how she encountered the scheming, cruel world of fashion which taught her that her husband, who knew how to reveal himself as an heroic figure at the critical moment in each of her sad experiences, and who even aroused her jealousy toward the last, was the real master of the situation and of her heart.

[*] “A tale in Dresden china, so dainty and clever as fully to satisfy the taste for Dresden, but arousing no very strong feeling.”

+Acad. 68: 1154. N. 4, ‘05. 510w.

[*] “No authors know better how to use romance than Mr. and Mrs. Castle, and none can give the air of this artificial century with so excellent a grace.”

+ +Ath. 1905, 2: 680. N. 18. 340w.

[*] “Dainty bit of eighteenth century romancing.”

+Dial. 39: 448. D. 16, ‘05. 110w.

[*] “‘Tis a beguiling tale.”

+Ind. 59: 1483. D. 21, ‘05. 250w.