THE YOUNG DUTCH NOVELIST, MISS WALLIS. Cheap Edition, 6s. each, of
1. ROYAL FAVOUR. Second Edition.
“A remarkable literary phenomenon. It is modest, sober, cautious, refined, thoughtful, serious, sensible.”—Pall Mall.
2. IN TROUBLED TIMES. Fourth Edition.
“It earns for her a distinct and honourable position amongst contemporary men and women of letters.”—AthenÆum.
HISTORY OF A WALKING-STICK, in Ten Notches. By Richard Le Free.
“A brightly-written story contained in one nicely got-up volume, and embracing a variety of episodes which would not be a meagre supply for a regulation three-volumer.”—Society.
THE LEAVEN OF MALICE. By Hamilton Evelac.
“The local colouring is good, and the Scottish dialect is successfully used, and several of the minor personages appeal at once by their typical veracity.”—Academy.
“A thoroughly good old-fashioned story.”—Morning Post.
THE COASTGUARD’S SECRET. By R. S. Hichens.
“Lovers of sensational fiction will find the story entirely to their taste, full as it is of love and crime.”—Society.
THE OTWAY’S CHILD. By Hope Stanford.
“This is a story well suited to a garden chair and a warm afternoon.”—Daily Telegraph.
THE BOSOM OF THE DEEP. By J. E. Muddock.
“A novel eminently worth reading. . . . The plot is excellent, and the writer shows again and again that he knows how to tell a story with force and vigour.”—Scotsman.
A WAYSIDE VIOLET. By the Author of “Fair Faces and True Hearts,” “Born to Luck,” etc.
“We are charmed with the cleverly-drawn sketch of the Dale family.”—Literary World.
MEREVALE. By Mrs. John Bradshaw, Author of “Roger North.”
“Merevale is a pleasant, readable book. . . . Exceedingly bright and clever.”—Saturday Review.
THE BLISS OF REVENGE. By T. E. Jacob.
“The characters are well conceived.”—Academy.
“Plenty of human nature in it.”—Saturday Review.
“The style is good, and the mode of narration taking, the interest in the story intensifying with each succeeding chapter.”—Newcastle Daily Chronicle.
THE BASILISK. By H. P. Stephens and Warham St. Ledger.
“The story St. Ledger and Stephens unfold
Will tend to your edification;
The plot is ingenious, the tale is well told,
And full of most startling sensation!”—Punch.
“Really a very clever book, well written, well devised, and the story is well told.”—Scotsman.
JOBSON’S ENEMIES. By E. Jenkins.
“A very clever book full of exciting episodes, and abounding with cynical humour and caustic epigram.”—Truth.
THE YOUNG MARQUISE. By Manus.
“Lovers of sensation will revel in these pages.”—Bookseller.
BARTHOLOMEW LEGATE. By Florence Gregg. [Shortly.]
IS LOVE A CRIME? By Mrs. Jagger. [Shortly.]
ERNEST DACENT. By Mrs. Batty. [Shortly.]
MAN OF THE PEOPLE. By Jno. Robertson.
RURICK. By Annie Grant.
OF SUSPICION. By Jane Nutt. [Shortly.]
Edited by E. M. ABDY-WILLIAMS.
1s. 128 Pages. 1s. Large 8vo.
TIME represents no party or clique, and whilst ranking amongst the political and literary Monthlies, it provides matter for all classes of readers. Its Staff comprises many of the most prominent writers of the day, amongst whom a few may be mentioned:—
E. M. Abdy-Williams. F. Anstey, Author of “Vice-Versa.” William Archer, M.A. Rev. S. A. Barnett. A. A. Baumann, M.P. Walter Besant. Miss M. Betham-Edwards. Dr. Karl Blind. Lord Brabourne. Bret Harte. Oscar Browning, M.A. Prof. Lewis Campbell, M.A. Frances Power Cobbe. W. L. Courtney. May Crommelin. H. Sutherland Edwards. F. E. Francillon. Rev. Hilderic Friend, F.L.S. | Fred. Gale, “The Old Buffer.” Miss Gordon Cumming. Major Arthur Griffiths. Rev. H. R. Haweis, M.A. Julian Hawthorne. Richard Jefferies. Rev. Harry Jones, M.A. W. F. Kirby (Brit. Mus.). Andrew Lang, M.A. T. H. Leary, D.C.L. Vernon Lee. Mrs. Leith Adams. Sir J. Lubbock, Bart., M.P. Justin McCarthy, M.P. William Mackay. Katharine Macquoid. Charles Marvin. Jean Middlemass. Alfred Milner, M.A. | D. Christie Murray. T. P. O’Connor, M.P. Walter Pater, M.A. Sir E. J. Reed, K.C.B., M.P. Mrs. J. H. Riddell. “Rita.” J. E. Thorold Rogers, M.P. William Sharp. G. A. Simcox, M.A. William Sime. G. R. Sims. Stepniak. Rev. C. W. Stubbs, M.A. Prof. J. Sully, M.A. J. Addington Symonds, M.A. Bertha Thomas. H. D. Traill. Sir Julius Vogel, K.C.M.G. William Wallace. Prof. C. D. Yonge, M.A. |
NEW SERIES OF NOVELS.
3/6 each.
MRS. LEITH ADAMS.
1. GEOFFREY STERLING.
“‘Geoffrey Sterling,’ unites in a remarkable degree the many qualities that designate Mrs. Leith Adams as one of the best of our feminine novelists.”—Morning Post.
2. MADELON LEMOINE.
“A charming story, full of clever yet genial touches of society.”—Guardian.
CAPTAIN MAYNE REID.
1. THE DEATH SHOT.
2. THE FLAG OF DISTRESS.
DAISY DARLING. By E. Spencer-Churchill.
“It is brimming over with quaint and lively humour.”—Westminster Review.
THE PRIMA DONNA. By Sarah Williams (“Sadie”).
“Full of freshness and originality.”—Whitehall.
CYPRESS BEACH. By W. H. Babcock.
“Cypress Beach has three cogent qualifications for perusal. It is well written, short, and readable from beginning to end.”—Vanity Fair.
“It is a story of life on one of the American Southern Border States, and the writer seems to have equal skill over character as in description and scenery . . . a strong sense of both pathos and humour.”—Academy.
FRASER TYTLER.
1. JASMINE LEIGH.
“A work of art from which all our novelists, with one or two exceptions, might take a lesson. . . . Not a stroke is blurred.”—Westminster Review.
2. MARGARET.
New Dutch Novel. Second Edition.
ANNA: The Professor’s Daughter. By Marie Daal.
“This is a charming Dutch novel, faithfully translated by Col. Charles Muller. The aim of the author is to advocate the emancipation of women and the protection of dumb animals. . . . The reader cannot fail to be interested in it, and in the graphic description of Dutch life and manners among the middle classes with which the author intersperses her admirable tale.”—Literary World.
Crown 8vo, paper covers, 6d.
FRENCH ART AND ENGLISH MORALS. By John Trevor.
“The spirit of the whole pamphlet is excellent.”—Inquirer.
“A well-written and not unneeded homily.”—Literary World.
SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO.’S NEW LIST.
Just published, crown 8vo, cloth, 2s. 6d.
A SHORT HISTORY OF PARLIAMENT.
By B. C. SKOTTOWE, M.A.
STEPNIAK’S NEW BOOK.
THE RUSSIAN STORM CLOUD; or, Russia in her Relations to her Neighbouring States. Is now ready at all Libraries. 8vo, 12s. 6d.
“Stepniak’s obvious self-restraint and moderation, combined with his avowal of revolutionary sympathies, greatly enhance the value of his political forecast.”—Saturday Review.
“The most interesting book Stepniak has yet put forth.”—St. James’s Gazette.
RECONNOITRING CENTRAL ASIA. By Charles Marvin. Adventures of English and Russian Explorers, Secret Agents, and Special Correspondents in the Region between the Caspian and India, from 1863 to 1884. With Illustrations and Map. Second Edition. Demy 8vo, cloth gilt, 7s. 6d.
FROM PARIS TO PEKIN OVER SIBERIAN SNOWS: A Narrative of a Journey by Sledge over the Snows of Russia and Siberia, by Caravan through Mongolia, across the Gobi Desert and the Great Wall, and by Mule Palanquin through China to Pekin. By Victor Meignan. At all Libraries. Demy 8vo, with Map and 15 Plates, 16s.
“A lively record of travel.”—AthenÆum.
“The story is lucid and never tedious.”—Contemporary Review.
“An amusing volume.”—Daily News.
“His sketches of society are drawn with a light and skilful pen. . . . A series of lively pictures.”—Saturday Review.
“A bright, brisk . . . breathless book.”—Times.
“A delightful work of travel. . . . The work cannot fail to be popular.”—Science Gossip.
Demy 8vo, cloth extra, gilt top, 10s. 6d.
EMIGRANT LIFE IN KANSAS. By Percy G. Ebbutt.
“We refer those who wish to know more of the experiences of those settlers to the book itself, which concludes with many practical remarks. . . . A clear, homely, every-day view of emigrant life.”—Anglo-American Times.
“He gives a very good—and what to intending emigrants will prove very useful—description of his everyday existence in the West.”—Contemporary Review.
“There is a vast amount of information in this artless and racy narrative of a boy of sixteen.”—The Graphic.
New and Revised Editions of the Works of W. H. Prescott. Edited by John Foster Kirk. Each volume handsomely bound in cloth extra, gilt top. Demy 8vo, 7s. 6d.
1. HISTORY OF THE REIGN OF FERDINAND and ISABELLA.
2. HISTORY OF THE CONQUEST OF PERU.
3. HISTORY OF THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO.
NEW BOOK BY MR. SYDNEY E. WILLIAMS.
PARTY AND PATRIOTISM; or, The Degeneracy of Politics. Crown 8vo, cloth, neat, 3s. 6d.
“Mr. Williams may be assured of many readers among the thoughtful men of both parties.”—Yorkshire Post.
RADICAL PIONEERS OF EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. By J. Bowles Daly, LL.D. Crown 8vo, with copious Index, cloth extra, 6s.
“It would be hard to conceive a volume of more compressed information and deeper interest. . . . Mr. Daly has pictured with amazing conciseness and graphic power the social and moral conditions of the time. . . . It forms an admirable picture of an epoch more pregnant, perhaps, with political instruction than any other in the world’s history.”—Daily Telegraph, April 13th.
SIX CENTURIES OF WORK AND WAGES. By J. E. Thorold Rogers, M.P. Second Edition, in One Volume. 8vo, 15s.
“An interesting book on a subject of no small importance, on which hitherto it has been impossible to find a concise and reliable treatise.”—Spectator.
THE PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL ECONOMY. By Yves Guyot, Hon. Member Cobden Club. With numerous diagrams. 8vo, 9s.
“That well-known work . . . is an excellent store-house of facts and ideas.”—The Times.
“A valuable addition to the literature of economic lore.”—Spectator.
THE WANDERINGS OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS. By Professor Victor Hehn and James S. Stallybrass. Demy 8vo, cloth extra, 16s.
“No more interesting work can be imagined. . . . A profusion of learning is spent on every chapter; at every turn some odd piece of classical lore turns up. Every student of nature, as well as every scholar, will be grateful to Mr. Stallybrass for his book. He gives them in their own tongue a great body of erudition and collection of striking facts. The index is excellent, and particular attention should be drawn to the notes, which are most valuable, and run to one hundred pages.”—Academy.
NEW SHILLING BOOKS IN POPULAR SCIENCE.
Hinton’s Scientific Books.
GHOSTS EXPLAINED.
1. WHAT IS THE FOURTH DIMENSION? By C. H. Hinton, B.A. Crown 8vo. 1s.
“A short treatise of admirable clearness. . . . Mr. Hinton brings us panting but delighted to at least a momentary faith in the Fourth Dimension, and upon the eye of this faith there opens a vista of interesting problems. . . . His pamphlet exhibits a boldness of speculation, and a power of conceiving and expressing even the inconceivable which rouses one’s faculties like a tonic.”—Pall Mall.
THE MYSTERY OF PLEASURE AND PAIN.
2. THE PERSIAN KING; or, The Law of the Valley. By C. H. Hinton, B.A. Crown 8vo. 1s.
“A very suggestive and well-written speculation, by the inheritor of a honoured name.”—Mind.
3. CASTING OUT THE SELF. 1s.
4. A PLANE WORLD. 1s.
5. A PICTURE OF OUR UNIVERSE. 1s.
NATURAL HISTORY HANDBOOKS FOR COLLECTORS.
Each Volume is very fully illustrated with practical Woodcuts, and bound in flat cloth extra, ONE SHILLING each, post free 1s. 2d.
“We have seen nothing better than this series. It is cheap, concise, and practical.”—Saturday Review.
“All written by first-class specialists, and forms the most enterprising series ever published. . . . Each contains so much well-arranged matter as to make a far from contemptible handbook.”—Inquirer.
BRITISH BUTTERFLIES, MOTHS, and BEETLES. By W. F. Kirby, of the British Museum (Nat. Hist. Dep.).
“A really admirable and absurdly cheap manual. The incipient entomologist will do himself an injustice if he does not procure it. Not the least striking thing in it is the faithful way in which insect markings are reproduced in the mere black and white of wood engraving.”—Knowledge.
“The author is an entomologist of repute. . . . His book conveys a great deal of information.”—Times.
“Excellently proportioned.”—Saturday Review.
MOSSES. By James E. Bagnall, A.L.S.
“A very handy and useful book for the young collector, nicely illustrated.”—Journal of Microscopy.
“The illustrations are numerous and good. . . . A capital little book.”—AthenÆum.
“We do not think any botanist could have been better selected than Mr. Bagnall.”—Science Gossip.
POND LIFE. By E. A. Butler, F.Z.S.
FUNGI, LICHENS, etc. By Peter Gray.
“A most useful contribution to our literature on the subject. . . . We can heartily recommend this little handbook on the subject as one of the best we have seen for beginners in the study.”—North British Agriculturist.
SEAWEEDS, SHELLS, and FOSSILS. By Peter Gray and B. B. Woodward, of the British Museum (Nat. Hist. Dep.).
“Will be welcomed by all who are anxious to know about aquatic plants, and the ‘wonders of the shore.’”—Glasgow Herald.
CRUSTACEANS AND SPIDERS. By F. A. Skuse. [Shortly.]
EXTRA VOLUME.
HANDBOOK OF ENGLISH COINS. By Llewellynn Jewett, F.S.A. With a chapter on Greek Coins, by Barclay V. Head (Brit. Mus.).
“Those who take an interest in Numismatics will find this volume a valuable aid to study.”—Newcastle Weekly Chronicle.
8vo, limp cloth, 2s. 6d.
THE NATURALIST’S DIARY. A Daybook of Meteorology, Phenology, and Rural Biology. Arranged and Edited by Chas. Roberts, F.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., etc.
“It is among the most comprehensive and convenient books of its class, and contains a fund of useful and indeed indispensable information.—Morning Post.
“A delightful device by which to entrap the young and unwary bird-nester, and make of him a scientific naturalist.”—Saturday Review.