Extra crown 8vo, cloth elegant, gilt tops, 6s. each. Highways and Byways in Middlesex. By Walter Jerrold. With Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. Highways and Byways in Surrey. By Eric Parker. With Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. DAILY TELEGRAPH.—"Author and artist have combined to give us one of the very best books on the most variedly beautiful of the home counties." SPECTATOR.—"A very charming book, both to dip into and to read ... Every page is sown with something rare and curious." Highways and Byways in Hampshire. By D.H. Moutray Read. With Illustrations by Arthur B. Connor. WORLD.—"Mr. Moutray Read has written a well-nigh perfect guide-book, and he has been thrice blessed in his illustrator, Mr. Arthur B. Connor." STANDARD.—"In our judgment, as excellent and as lively a book as has yet appeared in the Highways and Byways Series." Highways and Byways in Kent. By Walter Jerrold. With Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. PALL MALL GAZETTE.—"A book over which it is a pleasure to pore, and which every man of Kent or Kentish man, or 'foreigner' should promptly steal, purchase, or borrow.... The illustrations alone are worth twice the money charged for the book." TRUTH.—"It will rank as one of the very best volumes in an admirable series." Highways and Byways in Berkshire. By James Edmund Vincent. With Illustrations by Frederick L. Griggs. DAILY CHRONICLE.—"We consider this book one of the best in an admirable series, and one which should appeal to all who love this kind of literature." DAILY TELEGRAPH.—"The author shows himself in this book to be possessed of a pretty touch in descriptive writing, a good eye for country, and a keen interest in literary and historical associations." MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd., LONDON. Highways and Byways in Dorset. By Sir Frederick Treves. With Illustrations by Joseph Pennell. STANDARD.—"Sir Frederick Treves is to be congratulated on a breezy, delightful book, full of sidelights on men and manners, and quick in the interpretation of all the half-inarticulate lore of the countryside." FIELD.—"This volume, in literary style, and happy illustration by the artist, is one of the very best of the series." Highways and Byways in Oxford and the Cotswolds. By H.A. Evans. With Illustrations by Frederick L. Griggs. DAILY TELEGRAPH.—"The author is everywhere entertaining and fresh, never allowing his own interest to flag, and thereby retaining the close attention of the reader." COUNTY GENTLEMAN.—"No better study of any well-marked division of the country has appeared." Highways and Byways in Derbyshire. By J.B. Firth. With Illustrations by Nelly Erichsen. STANDARD.—"One of the brightest contributions to the 'Highways and Byways' series. We have found Mr. Firth a careful guide, with a nice way of choosing from a great mass of material just such scenes and memories as appeal to the traveller of taste." DAILY TELEGRAPH.—"The result is altogether delightful, for 'Derbyshire' is as attractive to the reader in his arm-chair as to the tourist wandering amid the scenes Mr. Firth describes so well." Highways and Byways in Sussex. By E.V. Lucas. With Illustrations by Frederick L. Griggs. WESTMINSTER GAZETTE.—"A delightful addition to an excellent series.... Such beauty and character has the county, it requires of the writer who would do justice to Sussex a graceful and sprightly pen, as well as fulness of knowledge. Mr. Lucas is well endowed in these things. His knowledge of Sussex is shown in so many fields, with so abundant and yet so natural a flow, that one is kept entertained and charmed through every passage of his devious progress.... The drawings with which Mr. Frederick Griggs illustrates this charming book are equal in distinction to any work this admirable artist has given us." Highways and Byways in South Wales. By A.G. Bradley. With Illustrations by Frederick L. Griggs. TIMES.—"A book which may be described honestly as one of the best of its kind which has ever been published." SPECTATOR.—"Mr. Bradley has certainly exalted the writing of a combined archÆological and descriptive guide-book into a species of literary art. The result is fascinating." MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd., LONDON. Highways and Byways in London. By Mrs. E.T. Cook. With Illustrations by Hugh Thompson and Frederick L. Griggs. GRAPHIC.—"Mrs. Cook is an admirable guide; she knows her London in and out; she is equally at home in writing of Mayfair and of City courts, and she has a wealth of knowledge relating to literary and historical associations. This, taken together with the fact that she is a writer who could not be dull if she tried, makes her book very delightful reading." Highways and Byways in Hertfordshire. By Herbert W. Tompkins, F.R. Hist. S. With Illustrations by Frederick L. Griggs. WESTMINSTER GAZETTE.—"A very charming book.... Will delight equally the artistic and the poetic, the historical and the antiquarian, the picturesque and the sentimental kinds of tourist." ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.—"Cram full of interest and entertainment. The county is singularly rich in material for gossip and comment, and Mr. Tompkins has made a very charming book from it. Nothing more can well remain to be said, yet all that is said in these pages is to the point." Highways and Byways in the Lake District. By A.G. Bradley. With Illustrations by Joseph Pennell. ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.—"A notable edition—an engaging volume, packed with the best of all possible guidance for tourist's. For the most part the artist's work is as exquisite as anything of the kind he has done." DAILY TELEGRAPH.—"Mr, Bradley has done his work amazingly well. His heart has been in his subject, Mr. Joseph Pennell has found abundant scope for his graceful art." Highways and Byways in East Anglia. By William A. Dutt. With Illustrations by Joseph Pennell. WORLD.—"Of all the fascinating volumes In the 'Highways and Byways' series, none is more pleasant to read.... Mr. Dutt, himself an East Anglian, writes most sympathetically and in picturesque style of the district." PALL MALL GAZETTE.—"It is all splendid reading for those who know the country; it should persuade many to take a trip through it, and it will provide some fascinating hours even for those who will never see East Anglia, except in the excellent sketches with which these 'Highways and Byways' volumes are illustrated." MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd., LONDON. Highways and Byways in North Wales. By A.G. Bradley. With Illustrations by Hugh Thomson and Joseph Pennell. PALL MALL GAZETTE.—"To read this fine book makes us eager to visit every hill and every valley that Mr. Bradley describes with such tantalising enthusiasm. It is a work of inspiration, vivid, sparkling, and eloquent—a deep well of pleasure to every lover of Wales." Highways and Byways in Devon and Cornwall. By Arthur H. Norway. With Illustrations by Joseph Pennell and Hugh Thomson. DAILY CHRONICLE.—"So delightful that we would gladly fill columns with extracts were space as elastic as imagination.... The text is excellent; the illustrations of it are even better." WESTMINSTER GAZETTE.—"Will be read with intense interest by every west-countryman from Axminster to the Land's End, and from Land's End to Lynton, for within this triangle lie the counties of Devon and Cornwall." Highways and Byways in Yorkshire. By Arthur H. Norway. With Illustrations by Joseph Pennell and Hugh Thomson. PALL MALL GAZETTE.—"The wonderful story of Yorkshire's past provides Mr. Norway with a wealth of interesting material, which he has used judiciously and well; each grey ruin of castle and abbey he has re-erected and re-peopled in the most delightful way. A better guide and story-teller it would be hard to find." Highways and Byways in Donegal and Antrim. By Stephen Gwynn. With Illustrations by Hugh Thomson. DAILY CHRONICLE.—"Charming.... Mr. Gwynn makes some of the old legends live again for us, he brings the peasants before us as they are, his descriptions have the 'tear and the smile' that so well suit the country, and with scarcely an exception he has brought his facts and his figures up to date." DAILY TELEGRAPH.—"A perfect book of its kind, on which author, artist, and publisher have lavished of their best." Highways and Byways in Normandy. By Percy Dearmer, M.A. With Illustrations by Joseph Pennell. ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.—"A charming book.... Mr. Dearmer is as arrestive in his way as Mr. Pennell. He has the true topographic eye. He handles legend and history in entertaining fashion." ACADEMY.—"Between them Mr. Dearmer and Mr. Pennell have produced a book which need fear no rival in its own field for many a day." MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd., LONDON.R. CLAY AND SONS, LTD., BREAD ST. HILL, E.C., AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK.******* This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will be renamed. |