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18
BOOKS PUBLISHED BY

Post 8v0, cloth limp, 25. 6d, per vol,

Mayfair Library, The:

The New Republic. By W. H. Mattock,

The New Paul and Virginia. By W. H, Mattock.:

The True History of Joshua Davidson, By E, Lynn Linton.

Old Stories Re-told. By WALTER

THORNBURY.

Thoreau: His Life and Aims. By H, A, Pace,

By Stream and Sea. LIAM SENIOR.

By WIL Jeux d'Hsprit, Edited by HENRY S. LeIcn,

Puniana. By the Hon. Hue RowLey.

More Puniana. By the Hon. Huca Row ey.

Puck on Pegasus. By H. CHOLMONDELEY-PENNELL.— Muses of Mayfair, Edited by H,. CHoLtMoNDELEY- PENNELL.

Gastronomy as a Fine Art. By BRILLAT-SAVARIN. oe

Original Plays. By W. S. GIL BERT.

  • ,* Other Volumes are in preparation.

New Novels at every Library.

THE FALLEN LEAVES,

Vols., crown 8vo.

By Wilkiez Collins, Three Vols., crown 8v.


"The natural vigour and brightness of Mr. Wilkie Collins's work, which have helped to win him his well-deserved reputation, are as noticeable in his last book as in any. It would be hardly possible for anybody who begins the book not to read on to the end without a moment's weariness. . . . . It is, perhaps, the chief triumph of the book that the reader leaves off with his appettie whetted tnstead of dulled,"—ATHENÆUM,

UNDER ONE ROOF, By Jamzes Payn, Author of " By Proxy," &c, Three Vols., crown 8vo.

"The title of this novel is move than usually happy and significant, . . . The author deserves thanks for his charming sketch of the German governess, for his portraits of the two natural, graceful English girls, and for the scenes in which these three girls are wooed and eventually won. With a few delicate and happy touches, and a dash of humour to colour the picture, he presents us with many an exhilarating piece of love-making which we at once acknowledge to be hit off to the life, and of which we can easily fill up the mere outline either from the imagination or, peradventure, from memory. . . . The irrepressible spirit of drollery prevails. . . . The story is pretty sure to be found attractive."—Pall Mall Gazette.

MAID, WIFE, OR WIDOW? By Mrs. ALEXANDER, Author of "The Wooing o't." Second Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10s. 6d. "It would be difficult, and certainly ungracious, to pick out the blemishes which may possibly exist in Mrs, Alexander's pretty, pathetic, well-modulated little romance. As a matter of fact, the story cannot be read without pleasure; and it is written with so much delicacy as well as correctness, that criticism is disarmed from the outset. . . Humanity at its truest and tenderest, youthful affection and faith at their purest and simplest, circumstance and detail in their most natural form: these are the materials out of which Mrs. Alexander has woven a charming tale of German life. The thorough ease of the narrative is one of the best proofs of the fidelity of the pictures which it brings before our eyes."—Athenæaum.