How Novelists Write for the Press.
ow authors work—what methods are peculiar to each individual in preparing MS. for the printer—is a question on which, we think, the following fac-similes, of the same size as the originals, of the work of four representative novelists of the present day, will throw an interesting light. William Black, Walter Besant, Bret Harte, and Grant Allan—here is a page from a manuscript of each. Mr. Black's, with which we commence, fine and careful as it is, is however only a rough draft, which is afterwards re-copied, with slight alternations, for the press.
Fac-simile of a page of MS. from Mr. WILLIAM BLACK'S Prince Fortunatus.