Messrs. Methuen's List 29 Emily Lawless. HURRISH. By the Honble. Emily Law- less, Author of ' Maelcho,' etc. Fifth Edition. Crown Zvo. ds. A reissue of Miss Lawless' most popular novel, uniform with ' Maelcho.' Emily Lawless. MAELCHO : a Sixteenth Century Romance. By the Honble. Emily Lawless. Second Edition. CrownZvo. 65. ' A really great book.' — Spectator. 'There is no keener pleasure in life than the recognition of genius. Good work is commoner than it used to be, but the best is as rare as ever. All the more gladly, therefore, do we welcome in " Maelcho " a piece of work of the first order, which we do not hesitate to describe as one of the most remarkable literary achievements of this generation. Miss Lawless is possessed of the very essence of historical genius.' — Mani.heiicr Guardian. J. H. Findlater. THE GREEN GRAVES OF BALGOWRIE. By Jane H. FiNDLATER. Third Edition. CrownZvo. ds. 'A powerful and vivid story.' — Standard. ' A beautiful story, sad and strange as truth itself." — Vanity Fair. ' A work of remarkable interest and originality.'— iV'a^/o«a/ Observer. ' . very charming and pathetic tale.' — Pall Matt Gazette. ' A singularly original, clever, and beautiful story.' — Guardian. ' " The Green Graves of Balgowrie" reveals to us a new Scotch writer of undoubted faculty and reserve force.' — Spectator. 'An exquisite idyll, delicate, aflfecting, and beautiful.' — Black and Wliite. H. G. Wells. THE STOLEN BACILLUS, and other Stories. By H. G. Wells, Author of 'The Time Machine.' Crown Svo. 6s. ' The ordinary reader of fiction may be glad to know that these stories are eminently readable from one cover to the other, but they are more than that ; they are the impressions of a very striking imajjination, which, it would seem, has a great deal within its reach.' — Saturday Review. H. G. Wells. THE PLATTNER STORY and Others. By H. G. Wells. Second Edition. Crown Zvo. 6j. ' Weird and mysterious, they seem to hold the reader as by a magic spell.' — Scotsman. 'Such is the fascination of this writer's skill that you unhesitatingly prophesy that none of the many readers, however his flesh do creep, will relinquish the volume ere he has read from first word to last.' — Black and Wliite. ' No volume has appeared for a long time so likely to give equal pleasure to the simplest reader and to the most fastidious critic' — Academy. ' Mr. Wells is a magician skilled in wielding that most potent of all spells — the fear of the unknown.'— jya/Zy Telegraph. E. F. Benson. DODO : A DETAIL OF THE DAY. By E. F. Benson. Sixteenth Edition. Crown ?>vo, 6s. ' A delightfully witty sketch of society.' — Spectator. ' A perpetual feast of epigram and paradox.' — Speaker. E. F. Benson. THE RUBICON. By E. F. Benson, Author of 'Dodo.' Fifth Edition. Crown %vo. 6s. ' An exceptional achievement ; a notable advance on his previous vfork.'—JVational Oiserver. Mrs. Oliphant. SIR ROBERT'S FORTUNE. By Mrs. Oliphant. Crown Svo. 6s. ' EuU of her own peculiar charm of style and simple, subtle character- painting comes her new gift, the delightful story before us. The scene mostly lies in the moors, and at the touch of the authoress a Scotch moor becomes a living thing, strong, tender, beautiful, and chungefuW— Pall Matt Gazette.