Part 20
THE MISCHIEF OF A GLOVE. By Mrs PHILIP CHAMPION DE CRESPIGNY, Author of ‘From behind the Arras.’
This story deals with the adventures of a man and a maid in the time of Mary I of England. The heroine, the daughter of a wild and reckless father, inherits his bold spirit, and by her woman’s wit and courage, assists her lover to elude the pursuit of his enemies. She sallies forth in man’s attire for his sake, and has many adventures, both humorous and otherwise, before the end is attained.
HELEN ADAIR. By LOUIS BECKE.
This story, which is largely based on fact, describes the career of a young Irish girl whose father was transported to Botany Bay for being concerned in the publication of a ‘seditious’ newspaper. Helen Adair, so that she may follow her father to the Antipodes, and share, or at least alleviate, his misfortunes under the dreaded ‘Convict System,’ passes counterfeit coin in Dublin, is tried and convicted under an assumed name, and is sent out in a transport. Her adventures in Australia form an exciting romance.
ROSEMONDE. By BEATRICE STOTT. (First Novel Library).
This is the story of a gifted, sensitive woman, her husband who was a genius, and the unquenchable love for each other which was their torture and their bane.
LAURA’S LEGACY. By E. H. STRAIN, Author of ‘A Man’s Foes.’
The ‘Innocent Impostor’ of the title is a very charming girl who has grown up in the full belief of herself and the world that she is Miss Barclay of Eaglesfaulds; her mother dotes on her, she is seemingly heiress to large property, even the Queen is interested in her, how can she guess that she is in reality the daughter of a beggar woman, and is keeping the rightful heir out of his inheritance? How this extraordinary situation came about and the trouble and tangle it brought into the life of a sensitive and noble-natured girl, is narrated by E. H. Strain after the fashion which has already endeared her to many readers.
THE BLACK SHILLING. By AMELIA E. BARR.
Critics who have read this novel in manuscript speak of it as the best story Mrs Barr has yet written. Its central character--Cotton Mather, preacher, scholar, philanthropist and persecutor--is one of the most picturesque figures in American history, while the period--that of the witchcraft scare at the opening of the eighteenth century, when numbers of men and women suffered cruel persecution for their supposed trafficking with the Evil One--is full of dramatic possibilities.
THE VINEYARD. By JOHN OLIVER HOBBES.
In this novel Mrs Craigie turns from the glittering world of finance, which she depicted so brilliantly in ‘Love and the Soul Hunters,’ and gives us a story of life in an English provincial town. As in all her books the love interest is strong, and under the ‘signoria d’Amore’ her characters are led into situations of the deepest interest, demanding for their treatment all the subtlety of insight which her previous works have shown her to possess.
THE MIS-RULE OF THREE. By FLORENCE WARDEN, Author of ‘The House on the Marsh,’ etc.
This is the story of three young men, living together in London lodgings, of the ideals of womanhood which they have formed, and of the singular fashion in which each falls a victim to the charms of a woman in all respects the opposite to his ideal. The story takes the reader from London to the most romantic region of the Channel Islands, and is connected with a mystery which surrounds the owner of one of these islands.
T. FISHER UNWIN, Publisher,
THE STICKIT MINISTER AND SOME COMMON MEN
BY S. R. CROCKETT
_Eleventh Edition. Crown 8vo., cloth_, =6s.=
[Illustration]
“Here is one of the books which are at present coming singly and at long intervals, like early swallows, to herald, it is to be hoped, a larger flight. When the larger flight appears, the winter of our discontent will have passed, and we shall be able to boast that the short story can make a home east as well as west of the Atlantic. There is plenty of human nature--of the Scottish variety, which is a very good variety--in ‘The Stickit Minister’ and its companion stories; plenty of humour, too, of that dry, pawky kind which is a monopoly of ‘Caledonia, stern and wild’; and, most plentiful of all, a quiet perception and reticent rendering of that underlying pathos of life which is to be discovered, not in Scotland alone, but everywhere that a man is found who can see with the heart and the imagination as well as the brain. Mr Crockett has given us a book that is not merely good, it is what his countrymen would call ‘by-ordinar’ good,’ which, being interpreted into a tongue understanded of the southern herd, means that it is excellent, with a somewhat exceptional kind of excellence.”--_Daily Chronicle._
THE LILAC SUN-BONNET
BY S. R. CROCKETT
_Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo., cloth_, =6s.=
[Illustration]
“Mr Crockett’s ‘Lilac Sun-Bonnet’ ‘needs no bush.’ Here is a pretty love tale, and the landscape and rural descriptions carry the exile back into the Kingdom of Galloway. Here, indeed, is the scent of bog-myrtle and peat. After inquiries among the fair, I learn that of all romances, they best love, not ‘sociology,’ not ‘theology,’ still less, open manslaughter, for a motive, but just love’s young dream, chapter after chapter. From Mr Crockett they get what they want, ‘hot with,’ as Thackeray admits that he liked it.”--Mr ANDREW LANG in _Longman’s Magazine_.
11, Paternoster Buildings, London, E.C.
T. FISHER UNWIN, Publisher,
Recent Volumes in the
STORY OF THE NATIONS
A SERIES OF POPULAR HISTORIES.
_Each Volume complete with Maps, many Illustrations, and an Index. Large crown 8vo, fancy cloth, gold lettered, or Library Edition, dark cloth, burnished red top_, =5s.= _each. Or may be had in half Persian, cloth sides, gilt tops: Price on Application._
49. =Austria.= By SIDNEY WHITMAN.
50. =Modern England before the Reform Bill.= By JUSTIN MCCARTHY.
51. =China.= With a New Chapter on Recent Events. By Prof. R. K. DOUGLAS.
52. =Modern England under Queen Victoria.= By JUSTIN MCCARTHY.
53. =Modern Spain, 1878-1898.= By MARTIN A. S. HUME, F.R.H.S., Author of “Sir Walter Ralegh,” &c.
54. =Modern Italy, 1748-1898.= By PIETRO ORSI, Professor of History in the R. Liceo Foscarini, Venice. With over 40 Illustrations and Maps.
55. =Norway.= By Professor HJALMAR H. BOYESEN, Author of “Idylls of Norway.”
56. =Wales.= By OWEN EDWARDS.
_IN PREPARATION._
=The United States of America, 1783-1900.= By A. C. M‘LAUGHLIN. In 2 Volumes.
=The Papal Monarchy=: From Gregory the Great to Boniface VIII. By Rev. W. BARRY.
=Mediæval Rome.= By WILLIAM MILLER.
=Buddhist India.= By T. W. RHYS DAVIDS.
=The Story of Greece= (to the Roman Occupation). By E. S. SHUCKBURGH.
=The Story of Greece= (from the Roman Occupation to A.D. 1453). By E. S. SHUCKBURGH.
11, Paternoster Buildings, London, E.C.
T. FISHER UNWIN, Publisher,
BUILDERS OF GREATER BRITAIN
EDITED BY H. F. WILSON
_A Set of 10 Volumes, each with Photogravure Frontispiece, and Map, large crown 8vo., cloth_, =5s.= _each_.
[Illustration]
The completion of the Sixtieth year of the Queen’s reign will be the occasion of much retrospect and review, in the course of which the great men who, under the auspices of Her Majesty and her predecessors, have helped to make the British Empire what it is to-day, will naturally be brought to mind. Hence the idea of the present series. These biographies, concise but full, popular but authoritative, have been designed with the view of giving in each case an adequate picture of the builder in relation to his work.
The series will be under the general editorship of Mr H. F. Wilson, formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and now private secretary to the Right Hon. J. Chamberlain at the Colonial Office. Each volume will be placed in competent hands, and will contain the best portrait obtainable of its subject, and a map showing his special contribution to the Imperial edifice. The first to appear will be a Life of Sir Walter Raleigh, by Major Hume, the learned author of “The Year after the Armada.” Others in contemplation will deal with the Cabots, the quarter-centenary of whose sailing from Bristol Is has recently been celebrated in that city, as well as in Canada and Newfoundland; Sir Thomas Maitland, the “King Tom” of the Mediterranean; Rajah Brooke, Sir Stamford Raffles, Lord Clive, Edward Gibbon Wakefield, Zachary Macaulay, &c., &c.
The Series has taken for its motto the Miltonic prayer:--
“Thou Who of Thy free grace didst build up this Brittanick Empire to a glorious and enviable heights. With all her Daughter Islands about her, stay us in this felicitie.”
=1.= =SIR WALTER RALEIGH.= By MARTIN A. S. HUME, Author of “The Courtships of Queen Elizabeth,” &c.
=2.= =SIR THOMAS MAITLAND=; the Mastery of the Mediterranean. By WALTER FREWEN LORD.
=3.= =JOHN CABOT AND HIS SONS=; the Discovery of North America. By C. RAYMOND BEAZLEY, M.A.
=4.= =EDWARD GIBBON WAKEFIELD=; the Colonisation of South Australia and New Zealand. By R. GARNETT, C.B., L.L.D.
=5.= =LORD CLIVE=; the Foundation of British Rule in India. By Sir A. J. ARBUTHNOT, K.C.S.I., C.I.E.
=RAJAH BROOKE=; the Englishman as Ruler of an Eastern State. By Sir SPENSER ST. JOHN, G.C.M.G.
=ADMIRAL PHILIP=; the Founding of New South Wales. By LOUIS BECKE and WALTER JEFFERY.
=SIR STAMFORD RAFFLES=; England in the Far East. By the Editor.
11, Paternoster Buildings, London, E.C.
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[Illustration]
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=U= Smooth Running, with a Quill-like Action. =U=