POPULAR NEW NOVELS. JANE EYRE: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By CURRER

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POPULAR NEW NOVELS. JANE EYRE: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By CURRER BELL. Third Edition, with Preface by the Author.

"A very pathetic tale—very singular; and so like truth, that it is difficult to avoid believing that much of the characters and incidents are taken from life. Though woman is called the weaker sex, here, in one example, is represented the strongest passion and the strongest principle, admirably supported. It is an episode in this work-day world, most interesting, and touched with a daring and delicate hand. The execution of the painting is as perfect as the conception. It is a book for the enjoyment of a feeling heart and vigorous understanding."—Blackwood's Magazine.

ROSE, BLANCHE, AND VIOLET.

By G. H. LEWES, Esq.

Author of "Ranthorpe."

"Mr. Lewes takes a high position among our novelists: he possesses no ordinary insight into the human heart."—Fraser's Magazine.

BEAUCHAMP; OR, THE ERROR.

By G. P. R. JAMES, Esq.

"One of Mr. James's most successful tales. It has plenty of adventure, some pretty bits of landscape, much good-hearted sentiment: in short, all the elements of variety and interest."—Examiner.

SIR THEODORE BROUGHTON

Or, LAUREL WATER.

By G. P. R. JAMES, Esq.

"'Sir Theodore Broughton' is founded upon the case of Donellan, who was hanged some seventy years ago for poisoning his brother-in-law. Mr. James has a knowledge of the age, and he indicates it both in manners and incidents; the persons, also, are well discriminated."—Spectator.

ADVENTURES OF AN AIDE-DE-CAMP;

Or, A CAMPAIGN IN CALABRIA.

By JAMES GRANT, Esq.

Author of the "Romance of War; or the Highlanders in Spain."

"Overflowing with adventure—adventure in the camp and in the chamber, and by the road-side; soldiers' adventures, travellers' adventures, lovers' adventures, murders and abductions, battles and sudden deaths, in the romantic land of Calabria."—Atlas.

THE GAP OF BARNESMORE:

A Tale of the Irish Highlands, and the Revolution of 1688.

"These volumes are not unworthy of being placed in the same book-case with those of Sir Walter Scott."—Morning Post.

THE CONVICT;

A TALE.

By G. P. R. JAMES, Esq.

"The volumes are well filled with incident; the sentiments are those of a reflective and well-constituted mind; there is a perpetual flow of invention in the conduct of the story; and it agreeably combines a spirit of romance with a just delineation of social life and manners."—Britannia.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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