Blackie's Books for Young People, Catalogue - 1899

By Blackie & Son

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1899, by Blackie & Son

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Title: Blackie's Books for Young People, 1899

Author: Blackie & Son

Release Date: October 1, 2021 [eBook #66445]

Language: English

Produced by: Juliet Sutherland, SF2001 and the Online Distributed
             Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKIE'S BOOKS FOR YOUNG
PEOPLE, 1899 ***





[Illustration]




BLACKIE & SON’S BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.




BY G. A. HENTY.

“Mr. Henty’s stores of literary vivacity are inexhaustible, and boys
will find their old favourite as full of instruction and of excitement
as ever.”--_The Times._

_In crown 8vo, cloth elegant, olivine edges._


=With Frederick the Great=: A Tale of the Seven Years’ War. By G. A.
HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by WAL PAGET, and Maps. 6_s._

 “The story is one of Mr. Henty’s best, and so cleverly is history
 interwoven with fiction that the boy who reads it will know as much
 about the _Seven Years’ War_ as many an adult student of Carlyle’s
 masterpiece.”--_Standard._

=With Moore at Corunna=: A Tale of the Peninsular War. By G. A. HENTY.
With 12 page Illustrations by WAL PAGET. 6_s._

 “A very spirited story, well worthy to be ranked with the best of
 Mr. Henty’s work. Terence O’Connor, up to the time of the opening of
 the tale, has done little but get into mischief, but as soon as he
 feels the responsibility of being one of Mr. Henty’s heroes, combines
 discretion with courage, not forgetting, however, to spice the mixture
 with a little fun.”--_Spectator._

=The Tiger of Mysore=: A Story of the War with Tippoo Saib. By G. A.
HENTY. With 12 Illustrations by W. H. MARGETSON, and a Map. 6_s._

 “Mr. Henty not only concocts a thrilling tale, he weaves fact and
 fiction together with so skilful a hand that the reader cannot help
 acquiring a just and clear view of that fierce and terrible struggle
 which gave to us our Indian Empire.”--_Athenæum._

=A Knight of the White Cross=: A Tale of the Siege of Rhodes. By G. A.
HENTY. With 12 full-page Illustrations by RALPH PEACOCK. 6_s._

 “Mr. Henty is a giant among boys’ writers, and his books are
 sufficiently popular to be sure of a welcome anywhere.... In stirring
 interest, this is quite up to the level of Mr. Henty’s former
 historical tales.”--_Saturday Review._

=When London Burned=: A Story of Restoration Times and the Great Fire.
By G. A. HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by J. FINNEMORE. 6_s._

 “No boy needs to have any story of Henty’s recommended to him, and
 parents who do not know and buy him for their boys should be ashamed
 of themselves. Those to whom he is yet unknown could not make a better
 beginning than with _When London Burned_.”--_British Weekly._

 “Schoolboys owe a deep debt of gratitude to Mr. Henty.”--_The Record._

=At Agincourt=: A Tale of the White Hoods of Paris. By G. A. HENTY.
With 12 page Illustrations by WAL PAGET. 6_s._

 “Mr. Henty’s admirers, and they are many, will accord a hearty welcome
 to the sturdy volume entitled At Agincourt.”--_Athenæum._

=The Lion of St. Mark=: A Tale of Venice in the Fourteenth Century. By
G. A. HENTY. With 10 page Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “Every boy should read _The Lion of St. Mark_. Mr. Henty has never
 produced any story more delightful, more wholesome, or more vivacious.
 From first to last it will be read with keen enjoyment.”--_Saturday
 Review._

=By England’s Aid=: The Freeing of the Netherlands (1585-1604). By G.
A. HENTY. With 10 page Illustrations by ALFRED PEARSE, and 4 Maps. 6_s._

 “The story is told with great animation, and the historical material
 is most effectively combined with a most excellent plot.”--_Saturday
 Review._

=With Wolf in Canada=: or, The Winning of a Continent. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated with 12 page Pictures by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “A model of what a boys’ story-book should be. Mr. Henty has a great
 power of infusing into the dead facts of history new life, and as no
 pains are spared by him to ensure accuracy in historic details, his
 books supply useful aids to study as well as amusement.”--_School
 Guardian._

=Bonnie Prince Charlie=: A Tale of Fontenoy and Culloden. By G. A.
HENTY. Illustrated with 12 page Pictures by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “As good a narrative of the kind as we have ever read. For freshness
 of treatment and variety of incident, Mr. Henty has here surpassed
 himself.”--_Spectator._

=For the Temple=: A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem. By G. A. HENTY. With
10 page Illustrations by S. J. SOLOMON, and a Coloured Map. 6_s._

 “Mr. Henty’s graphic prose pictures of the hopeless Jewish
 resistance to Roman sway adds another leaf to his record of the
 famous wars of the world. The book is one of Mr. Henty’s cleverest
 efforts.”--_Graphic._

=True to the Old Flag=: A Tale of the American War of Independence. By
G. A. HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “Does justice to the pluck and determination of the British soldiers.
 The son of an American loyalist, who remains true to our flag, falls
 among the hostile redskins in that very Huron country which has been
 endeared to us by the exploits of Hawkeye and Chingachgook.”--_The
 Times._

[Illustration: TERENCE FINDS THAT THE _SEA-HORSE_ HAS BEEN BADLY MAULED
BETWEEN-DECKS.]

 “Among writers of stories of adventure Mr. Henty stands in the very
 first rank.”--_Academy._

=The Young Carthaginian=: A Story of the Times of Hannibal. By G. A.
HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by C. J. STANILAND, R.I. 6_s._

 “From first to last nothing stays the interest of the narrative. It
 bears us along as on a stream whose current varies in direction, but
 never loses its force.”--_Saturday Review._

=Redskin and Cow-boy=: A Tale of the Western Plains. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by ALFRED PEARSE. 6_s._

 “It has a good plot; it abounds in action; the scenes are equally
 spirited and realistic. The pictures of life on a cattle ranche are
 most graphically painted, as are the manners of the reckless but
 jovial cow-boys.”--_Times._

=The Lion of the North=: A Tale of Gustavus Adolphus. By G. A. HENTY.
With 12 page Pictures by J. SCHÖNBERG. 6_s._

 “A praiseworthy attempt to interest British youth in the great deeds
 of the Scotch Brigade in the wars of Gustavus Adolphus.”--_Athenæum._

=With Clive in India=: or, The Beginnings of an Empire. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “Those who know something about India will be the most ready to thank
 Mr. Henty for giving them this instructive volume to place in the
 hands of their children.”--_Academy._

=In Greek Waters=: A Story of the Grecian War of Independence
(1821-1827). By G. A. HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by W. S.
STACEY, and a Map. 6_s._

 “An excellent story, and if the proportion of history is smaller than
 usual, the whole result leaves nothing to be desired.”--_Journal of
 Education._

=The Dash for Khartoum=: A Tale of the Nile Expedition. By G. A. HENTY.
With 10 page Illustrations by J. SCHÖNBERG and J. NASH, and 4 Plans.
6_s._

 “It is literally true that the narrative never flags for a moment; the
 incidents which fall to be recorded after the dash for Khartoum has
 been made and failed are quite as interesting as those which precede
 it.”--_Academy._

=With Lee in Virginia=: A Story of the American Civil War. By G. A.
HENTY. With 10 page Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE, and 6 Maps. 6_s._

 “The story is a capital one and full of variety. Young Wingfield, who
 is conscientious, spirited, and ‘hard as nails’, would have been a man
 after the very heart of Stonewall Jackson.”--_Times._

=By Right of Conquest=: or, With Cortez in Mexico. By G. A. HENTY. With
10 page Illustrations by W. S. STACEY. 6_s._

 “_By Right of Conquest_ is the nearest approach to a
 perfectly successful historical tale that Mr. Henty has yet
 published.”--_Academy._

 “Mr. Henty is the king of story-tellers for boys.”--_Sword and Trowel._

=Through the Fray=: A Story of the Luddite Riots. By G. A. HENTY. With
12 page Illustrations by H. M. PAGET. 6_s._

 “One of the best of the many good books he has produced, and deserves
 to be classed with his _Facing Death_.”--_Standard._

=Captain Bayley’s Heir=: A Tale of the Gold Fields. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by H. M. PAGET. 6_s._

 “A Westminster boy who makes his way in the world by hard work, good
 temper, and unfailing courage.”--_St. James’s Gazette._

=St. Bartholomew’s Eve.= By G. A. HENTY. Illustrated by H. J. DRAPER.
6_s._

 “Is in Mr. Henty’s best style, and the interest never
 flags.”--_Journal of Education._

 [Illustration: _Reduced Illustration from “With Frederick the Great”._]

=In Freedom’s Cause=: A Story of Wallace and Bruce. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “His tale of the days of Wallace and Bruce is full of stirring action,
 and will commend itself to boys.”--_Athenæum._

=With Cochrane the Dauntless=: A Tale of the Exploits of Lord Cochrane
in South American Waters. By G. A. HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by
W. H. MARGETSON. 6_s._

 “This tale we specially recommend; for the career of Lord Cochrane and
 his many valiant fights in the cause of liberty deserve to be better
 known than they are.”--_St. James’s Gazette._

 “Mr. Henty is one of the best of story-tellers for young
 people.”--_Spectator._

=Beric the Briton=: A Story of the Roman Invasion. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by W. PARKINSON. 6_s._

 “Mr. Henty has done his utmost to make an impressive picture of the
 haughty Roman character, with its indomitable courage, sternness, and
 discipline. _Beric_ is good all through.”--_Spectator._

 [Illustration: _Reduced Illustration from “Beric the Briton”._]

=By Pike and Dyke=: A Tale of the Rise of the Dutch Republic. By G. A.
HENTY. With 10 page Illustrations by MAYNARD BROWN, and 4 Maps. 6_s._

 “Told with a vividness and skill worthy of Mr. Henty at his
 best.”--_Academy._

=Wulf the Saxon=: A Story of the Norman Conquest. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by RALPH PEACOCK. 6_s._

 “_Wulf the Saxon_ is second to none of Mr. Henty’s historical tales,
 and we may safely say that a boy may learn from it more genuine
 history than he will from many a tedious tome.”--_The Spectator._

=Through the Sikh War=: A Tale of the Conquest of the Punjaub. By G. A.
HENTY. With 12 page Illustrations by HAL HURST, and a Map. 6_s._

 “We have never read a more vivid and faithful narrative of military
 adventure in India.”--_The Academy._

=Under Drake’s Flag=: A Tale of the Spanish Main. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “There is not a dull chapter, nor, indeed, a dull page in the book;
 the author has so carefully worked up his subject that the exciting
 deeds of his heroes are never incongruous or absurd.”--_Observer._

 “G. A. Henty more than holds his own as the prince of story-tellers
 for boys.”--_St. James’s Gazette._

=A March on London=: Being a Story of Wat Tyler’s Insurrection. By G.
A. HENTY. With 8 page Illustrations by W. H. MARGETSON. 5_s._

 “Mr. Henty, true as ever, tells a capital story, and keeps up to
 the high standard of interest which we have learnt to expect from
 him.”--_Spectator._

 “The story of Wat Tyler’s ever-famous insurrection is set forth with a
 degree of cunning and an eye for effect that may always be looked for
 in the work that comes from this practised hand. Mr. Henty deals with
 troublesome times and with characters that have left their mark on the
 pages of history. He is fresh, virile, and never dull, and this volume
 must needs add to his reputation.”--_Daily Telegraph._

=On the Irrawaddy=: A Story of the first Burmese War. With 8
Illustrations by W. H. OVEREND. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant, olivine
edges, 5_s._

 “Altogether this is a capital story, and the descriptions of the
 Burmese cities are very good.”--_The Times._

 “Stanley Brook’s pluck is even greater than his luck, and he is
 precisely the boy to hearten with emulation the boys who read his
 stirring story.”--_Saturday Review._

=Through Russian Snows=: A Story of Napoleon’s Retreat from Moscow. By
G. A. HENTY. With 8 Illustrations by W. H. OVEREND, and a Map. 5_s._

 “Julian, the hero of the story, early excites our admiration, and is
 altogether a fine character such as boys will delight in, whilst the
 story of the campaign is very graphically told.... Will, we think,
 prove one of the most popular boys’ books this season.”--_St. James’s
 Gazette._

=In the Heart of the Rockies=: A Story of Adventure in Colorado. By G.
A. HENTY. Illustrated by G. C. HINDLEY. 5_s._

 “Few Christmas books will be more to the taste of the ingenuous boy
 than _In the Heart of the Rockies_.”--_Athenæum._

 “Mr. Henty is seen here at his best as an artist in lightning
 fiction.”--_Academy._

=One of the 28th=: A Tale of Waterloo. By G. A. HENTY. With 8 page
Illustrations by W. H. OVEREND, and 2 Maps. 5_s._

 “Written with Homeric vigour and heroic inspiration. It is graphic,
 picturesque, and dramatically effective ... shows us Mr. Henty at his
 best and brightest. The adventures will hold a boy of a winter’s night
 enthralled as he rushes through them with breathless interest ‘from
 cover to cover’.”--_Observer._

=Facing Death=: or, The Hero of the Vaughan Pit. A Tale of the Coal
Mines. By G. A. HENTY. With 8 page Pictures by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “If any father, godfather, clergyman, or schoolmaster is on the
 look-out for a good book to give as a present to a boy who is worth
 his salt, this is the book we would recommend.”--_Standard._

 “Ask for Henty, and see that you get him.”--_Punch._

=The Cat of Bubastes=: A Story of Ancient Egypt. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by J. R. WEGUELIN. 5_s._

 “The story, from the critical moment of the killing of the sacred
 cat to the perilous exodus into Asia with which it closes, is very
 skilfully constructed and full of exciting adventures. It is admirably
 illustrated.”--_Saturday Review._

=Maori and Settler=: A Story of the New Zealand War. By G. A. HENTY.
With 8 page Illustrations by ALFRED PEARSE. 5_s._

 “It is a book which all young people, but especially boys, will read
 with avidity.”--_Athenæum._

 “A first-rate book for boys, brimful of adventure, of humorous
 and interesting conversation, and of vivid pictures of colonial
 life.”--_Schoolmaster._

=St. George for England=: A Tale of Cressy and Poitiers. By G. A.
HENTY. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “A story of very great interest for boys. In his own forcible style
 the author has endeavoured to show that determination and enthusiasm
 can accomplish marvellous results; and that courage is generally
 accompanied by magnanimity and gentleness.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._

=The Bravest of the Brave=: With Peterborough in Spain. By G. A. HENTY.
With 8 full-page Pictures by H. M. PAGET. 5_s._

 “Mr. Henty never loses sight of the moral purpose of his work--to
 enforce the doctrine of courage and truth, mercy and lovingkindness,
 as indispensable to the making of an English gentleman. British lads
 will read _The Bravest of the Brave_ with pleasure and profit; of that
 we are quite sure.”--_Daily Telegraph._

=For Name and Fame=: or, Through Afghan Passes. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “Not only a rousing story, replete with all the varied forms of
 excitement of a campaign, but, what is still more useful, an account
 of a territory and its inhabitants which must for a long time possess
 a supreme interest for Englishmen, as being the key to our Indian
 Empire.”--_Glasgow Herald._

=A Jacobite Exile=: Being the Adventures of a Young Englishman in
the Service of Charles XII. of Sweden. By G. A. HENTY. With 8 page
Illustrations by PAUL HARDY, and a Map. 5_s._

 “Incident succeeds incident, and adventure is piled upon adventure,
 and at the end the reader, be he boy or man, will have experienced
 breathless enjoyment in a romantic story that must have taught him
 much at its close.”--_Army and Navy Gazette._

=Held Fast for England=: A Tale of the Siege of Gibraltar. By G. A.
HENTY. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “Among them we would place first in interest and wholesome educational
 value the story of the siege of Gibraltar.... There is no cessation of
 exciting incident throughout the story.”--_Athenæum._

 “Mr. Henty’s books are always alive with moving incident.”--_Review of
 Reviews._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

=Condemned as a Nihilist=: A Story of Escape from Siberia. By G. A.
HENTY. Illustrated by WALTER PAGET. 5_s._

 “The best of this year’s Henty. His narrative is more interesting than
 many of the tales with which the public is familiar, of escape from
 Siberia. Despite their superior claim to authenticity these tales are
 without doubt no less fictitious than Mr. Henty’s, and he beats them
 hollow in the matter of sensations.”--_National Observer._

=Orange and Green=: A Tale of the Boyne and Limerick. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “The narrative is free from the vice of prejudice, and ripples with
 life as vivacious as if what is being described were really passing
 before the eye.... Should be in the hands of every young student of
 Irish history.”--_Belfast News._

=In the Reign of Terror=: The Adventures of a Westminster Boy. By G. A.
HENTY. Illustrated by J. SCHÖNBERG. 5_s._

 “Harry Sandwith, the Westminster boy, may fairly be said to beat Mr.
 Henty’s record. His adventures will delight boys by the audacity and
 peril they depict. The story is one of Mr. Henty’s best.”--_Saturday
 Review._

=By Sheer Pluck=: A Tale of the Ashanti War. By G. A. HENTY. With 8
full-page Pictures by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “Morally, the book is everything that could be desired, setting
 before the boys a bright and bracing ideal of the English
 gentleman.”--_Christian Leader._

=The Dragon and the Raven=: or, The Days of King Alfred. By G. A.
HENTY. With 8 page Illustrations by C. J. STANILAND, R.I. 5_s._

 “A story that may justly be styled remarkable. Boys, in reading it,
 will be surprised to find how Alfred persevered, through years of
 bloodshed and times of peace, to rescue his people from the thraldom
 of the Danes. We hope the book will soon be widely known in all our
 schools.”--_Schoolmaster._

=A Final Reckoning=: A Tale of Bush Life in Australia. By G. A. HENTY.
Illustrated by W. B. WOLLEN. 5_s._

 “All boys will read this story with eager and unflagging interest.
 The episodes are in Mr. Henty’s very best vein--graphic, exciting,
 realistic; and, as in all Mr. Henty’s books, the tendency is
 to the formation of an honourable, manly, and even heroic
 character.”--_Birmingham Post._

=The Young Colonists=: A Tale of the Zulu and Boer Wars. By G. A.
HENTY. With 6 Illustrations by SIMON H. VEDDER. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Fiction and history are so happily blended that the record of
 facts quicken the imagination. No boy can read this book without
 learning a great deal of South African history at its most critical
 period.”--_Standard._

=A Chapter of Adventures=: or, Through the Bombardment of Alexandria.
By G. A. HENTY. With 6 page Illustrations by W. H. OVEREND. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Jack Robson and his two companions have their fill of excitement, and
 their chapter of adventures is so brisk and entertaining we could have
 wished it longer than it is.”--_Saturday Review._




 BY PROFESSOR A. J. CHURCH.

 “That prince of winning story-tellers, and master of musical
 English.”--_Expository Times._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant, olivine edges._


=Lords of the World=: A Tale of the Fall of Carthage and Corinth. By A.
J. CHURCH. With 12 page Illustrations by RALPH PEACOCK. 6_s._

 “Mr. Church’s mastery of his subject and his literary skill are
 sufficiently complete to carry his adult readers with him. Some of
 the scenes are highly picturesque, and there is many an exciting
 adventure that sustains the reader’s curiosity in the fortunes of the
 hero, Cleanor. As a boys’ book, _Lords of the World_ deserves a hearty
 welcome.”--_Spectator._

 [Illustration: _Reduced Illustration from “Lords of the World”._]

=Two Thousand Years Ago=: or, The Adventures of a Roman Boy. By
Professor A. J. CHURCH. With 12 page Illustrations by ADRIEN MARIE.
6_s._

 “Adventures well worth the telling. The book is extremely entertaining
 as well as useful, and there is a wonderful freshness in the Roman
 scenes and characters.”--_The Times._




 BY HERBERT HAYENS.


=Paris at Bay=: A Story of the Siege and the Commune. By HERBERT
HAYENS. With 8 page Illustrations by STANLEY L. WOOD. 5_s._

 “The story culminates in the terrible struggle between the
 Versaillists and the men who follow the red flag. Mr. Hayens holds the
 balance with commendable impartiality. He loves to describe a good
 soldier on whichever side he may fight. Altogether _Paris at Bay_ is
 of more than average merit.”--_Spectator._




 BY GEORGE MANVILLE FENN.

 “Mr. Fenn stands in the foremost rank of writers in this
 department.”--_Daily News._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


=Dick o’ the Fens=: A Romance of the Great East Swamp. By G. MANVILLE
FENN. Illustrated by FRANK DADD. 6_s._

 “We conscientiously believe that boys will find it capital reading.
 It is full of incident and mystery, and the mystery is kept up to the
 last moment. It is rich in effective local colouring; and it has a
 historical interest.”--_Times._

=Devon Boys=: A Tale of the North Shore. By G. MANVILLE FENN. With 12
page Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “An admirable story, as remarkable for the individuality of its
 young heroes as for the excellent descriptions of coast scenery and
 life in North Devon. It is one of the best books we have seen this
 season.”--_Athenæum._

=The Golden Magnet=: A Tale of the Land of the Incas. By G. MANVILLE
FENN. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “There could be no more welcome present for a boy. There is not a dull
 page in the book, and many will be read with breathless interest. ‘The
 Golden Magnet’ is, of course, the same one that attracted Raleigh and
 the heroes of _Westward Ho!_”--_Journal of Education._

=In the King’s Name=: or, The Cruise of the _Kestrel_. By G. MANVILLE
FENN. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 6_s._

 “The best of all Mr. Fenn’s productions in this field. It has the
 great quality of always ‘moving on’, adventure following adventure in
 constant succession.”--_Daily News._

=Nat the Naturalist=: A Boy’s Adventures in the Eastern Seas. By G.
MANVILLE FENN. With 8 page Pictures. 5_s._

 “This sort of book encourages independence of character, develops
 resource, and teaches a boy to keep his eyes open.”--_Saturday Review._

=Bunyip Land=: The Story of a Wild Journey in New Guinea. By G.
MANVILLE FENN. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 4_s._

 “Mr. Fenn deserves the thanks of everybody for Bunyip Land, and we
 may venture to promise that a quiet week may be reckoned on whilst
 the youngsters have such fascinating literature provided for their
 evenings’ amusement.”--_Spectator._

=Quicksilver=: or, A Boy with no Skid to his Wheel. By GEORGE MANVILLE
FENN. With 6 page Illustrations by FRANK DADD. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “_Quicksilver_ is little short of an inspiration. In it that prince of
 story-writers for boys--George Manville Fenn--has surpassed himself.
 It is an ideal book for a boy’s library.”--_Practical Teacher._

=Brownsmith’s Boy=: A Romance in a Garden. By G. MANVILLE FENN. With 6
page Illustrations. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Mr. Fenn’s books are among the best, if not altogether the best,
 of the stories for boys. Mr. Fenn is at his best in _Brownsmith’s
 Boy_.”--_Pictorial World._


 ⁂ For other Books by G. MANVILLE FENN, see page 22.




 BY GEORGE MAC DONALD.

 “Dr. George Mac Donald is one of the cleverest of writers for
 children.”--_The Record._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


=A Rough Shaking.= By GEORGE MAC DONALD. With 12 page Illustrations by
W. PARKINSON. 6_s._

 “One of the very best books for boys that has been written. It is
 full of material peculiarly well adapted for the young, containing in
 a marked degree the elements of all that is necessary to make up a
 perfect boys’ book.”--_Teachers’ Aid._

=At the Back of the North Wind.= By GEORGE MAC DONALD. With 75
Illustrations by ARTHUR HUGHES. 5_s._

 “The story is thoroughly original, full of fancy and pathos.... We
 stand with one foot in fairyland and one on common earth.”--_The
 Times._

=Ranald Bannerman’s Boyhood.= By GEO. MAC DONALD. With 36 Illustrations
by ARTHUR HUGHES. 5_s._

 “The sympathy with boy-nature in _Ranald Bannerman’s Boyhood_ is
 perfect. It is a beautiful picture of childhood, teaching by its
 impressions and suggestions all noble things.”--_British Quarterly
 Review._

=The Princess and the Goblin.= By GEORGE MAC DONALD. With 32
Illustrations. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Little of what is written for children has the lightness of touch and
 play of fancy which are characteristic of George Mac Donald’s fairy
 tales. Mr. Arthur Hughes’s illustrations are all that illustrations
 should be.”--_Manchester Guardian._

=The Princess and Curdie.= By GEORGE MAC DONALD. With 8 page
Illustrations. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “There is the finest and rarest genius in this brilliant story.
 Upgrown people would do wisely occasionally to lay aside their
 newspapers and magazines to spend an hour with _Curdie_ and the
 _Princess_.”--_Sheffield Independent._




 BY ASCOTT R. HOPE.

 “Such is the charm of Mr. Hope’s narrative that it is impossible to
 begin one of his tales without finishing it.”--_St. James’s Gazette._


=The Seven Wise Scholars.= By ASCOTT R. HOPE. With nearly 100
Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 5_s._

 “As full of fun as a volume of _Punch_; with illustrations,
 more laughter-provoking than most we have seen since Leech
 died.”--_Sheffield Independent._

=Stories of Old Renown=: Tales of Knights and Heroes. By A. R. HOPE.
With 100 Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “A really fascinating book worthy of its telling title. There is, we
 venture to say, not a dull page in the book, not a story which will
 not bear a second reading.”--_Guardian._

=Young Travellers’ Tales.= By ASCOTT R. HOPE. With 6 Illustrations by
H. J. DRAPER. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Possess a high value for instruction as well as for entertainment.
 His quiet, level humour bubbles up on every page.”--_Daily Chronicle._




 BY HARRY COLLINGWOOD.

 “As a story-teller Mr. Collingwood is not surpassed.”--_Spectator._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


=The Log of a Privateersman.= By HARRY COLLINGWOOD. With 12 page
Illustrations by W. RAINEY, R.I. 6_s._

 “The narrative is breezy, vivid, and full of incidents, faithful in
 nautical colouring, and altogether delightful.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._

=The Pirate Island.= By HARRY COLLINGWOOD. With 8 page Pictures by C.
J. STANILAND and J. R. WELLS. 5_s._

 “A capital story of the sea; indeed in our opinion the author is
 superior in some respects as a marine novelist to the better-known Mr.
 Clark Russell.”--_The Times._

=The Log of the “Flying Fish”=: A Story of Aerial and Submarine
Adventure. By HARRY COLLINGWOOD. With 6 page Illustrations by GORDON
BROWNE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “The _Flying Fish_ actually surpasses all Jules Verne’s creations;
 with incredible speed she flies through the air, skims over the
 surface of the water, and darts along the ocean bed. We strongly
 recommend our schoolboy friends to possess themselves of her
 log.”--_Athenæum._

 ⁂ For other Books by Harry Collingwood, see pages 22 and 23.




 BY KIRK MUNROE.

 “Captain Mayne Reid and Gustave Aimard find a worthy successor in Mr.
 Kirk Munroe.”--_St. James’s Gazette._


=With Crockett and Bowie=: A Tale of Texas. By KIRK MUNROE. With 8 page
Illustrations by VICTOR PERARD. 5_s._

 “Mr. Munroe has constructed his plot with undoubted skill, and his
 descriptions of the combats between the Texans and the Mexicans are
 brilliantly _graphic_. This is in every sense one of the best books
 for boys that has been produced this season.”--_Spectator._

=Through Swamp and Glade=: A Tale of the Seminole War. By KIRK MUNROE.
With 8 Illustrations by VICTOR PERARD. 5_s._

 “The hero of _Through Swamp and Glade_ will find many ardent
 champions, and the name of Coachoochie become as familiar in the
 schoolboy’s ear as that of the headmaster.”--_St. James’s Gazette._

=At War with Pontiac=: or, The Totem of the Bear. By KIRK MUNROE. With
8 Illustrations by J. FINNEMORE. 5_s._

 “Is in the best manner of Cooper. There is a character who is the
 parallel of Hawkeye, as the Chingachgooks and Uncas have likewise
 their counterparts.”--_The Times._

=The White Conquerors of Mexico=: A Tale of Toltec and Aztec. By KIRK
MUNROE. With 8 Illustrations by W. S. STACEY. 5_s._

 “Mr. Munroe gives most vivid pictures of the religious and civil
 polity of the Aztecs, and of everyday life, as he imagines it,
 in the streets and market-places of the magnificent capital of
 Montezuma.”--_The Times._




 FINELY ILLUSTRATED BOOKS FOR CHILDREN.


=Red Apple and Silver Bells=: a Book of Verse for Children of all Ages.
By HAMISH HENDRY. With over 150 charming Illustrations by Miss ALICE B.
WOODWARD. Square 8vo, cloth elegant, gilt edges, 6_s._

 “Mr. Hendry sees the world as children see it, and he writes
 charmingly and musically about it; many, indeed most, of his verses
 are delightful in all respects--childish, but not silly; funny,
 but not foolish; and sweet without being goody. Miss Woodward’s
 designs are just what the verses require, and they are carefully and
 delicately drawn and exquisitely finished after nature; consequently
 they are beautiful.”--_Athenæum._

=Just Forty Winks=: or, The Droll Adventures of Davie Trot. By HAMISH
HENDRY. With 70 humorous Illustrations by GERTRUDE M. BRADLEY. Square
8vo, cloth elegant, gilt edges, 5_s._

 “Daintily illustrated; _Just Forty Winks_ is an eye-opener for the
 little ones, who will enjoy the amazing adventures of _Davie Trot_
 down the long lane that has so many turns in dreamland.”--_Punch._

 “_Just Forty Winks_ is full of high spirits and most excellent
 invention.”--_Spectator._

=To Tell the King the Sky is Falling.= By SHEILA E. BRAINE. With over
80 quaint and clever Illustrations by ALICE B. WOODWARD. Square 8vo,
cloth, decorated boards, gilt edges, 5_s._

 “It is witty and ingenious, and it has certain qualities which
 children are quick to perceive and appreciate--a genuine love of fun,
 affectionateness, and sympathy, from their points of view.”--_Bookman._




 BOOKS FOR GIRLS.

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


=Banshee Castle.= By ROSA MULHOLLAND (Lady Gilbert). With 12 page
Illustrations by JOHN H. BACON. 6_s._

 “One of the most fascinating of Miss Rosa Mulholland’s many
 fascinating stories.”--_Athenæum._

=Giannetta.= By ROSA MULHOLLAND (Lady Gilbert). With 8 page
Illustrations by LOCKHART BOGLE. 5_s._

 “One of the most attractive gift-books of the season.”--_The Academy._

=A Girl’s Loyalty.= By FRANCES ARMSTRONG. With 8 page Illustrations by
JOHN H. BACON. 5_s._

 “There is no doubt as to the good quality of _A Girl’s Loyalty_. The
 book is one which would enrich any girl’s book-shelf.”--_St. James’s
 Gazette._

=A Fair Claimant=: Being a Story for Girls. By FRANCES ARMSTRONG.
Illustrated by GERTRUDE D. HAMMOND. 5_s._

 “As a gift-book for big girls it is among the best new books of
 the kind. The story is interesting and natural, from first to
 last.”--_Westminster Gazette._

 [Illustration]

=Adventures in Toyland.= By EDITH KING HALL. With 8 page Pictures
printed in Colour, and 70 Black-and-White Illustrations throughout the
text, by ALICE B. WOODWARD. Crown 4to, decorated cloth boards, gilt
edges, 5_s._

 “One of the funniest as well as one of the daintiest books of the
 season. The Adventures are graphically described in a very humorous
 way.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._

 “The story is a capital ‘make-believe’, and exhibits real knowledge on
 the part of both author and illustrator of what children want, as well
 as an unusual power of supplying it.”--_Literature._




 BY ROBERT LEIGHTON.

 “Mr. Robert Leighton has taken a place in the very front rank of the
 writers of stories for boys.”--_Daily Graphic._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant, olivine edges._


=The Golden Galleon=: A Narrative of the Adventures of Master Gilbert
Oglander, under the gallant Sir Richard Grenville in the great
sea-fight off Flores. By ROBERT LEIGHTON. With 8 page Illustrations by
WILLIAM RAINEY, R.I. 5_s._

 “The story itself is a capital one, but the chief merit lies in the
 telling. It presents an excellent picture of life in England, both on
 land and sea, in the days of Elizabeth.”--_Standard._

=Olaf the Glorious.= By ROBERT LEIGHTON. With 8 page Illustrations by
RALPH PEACOCK, and a Map. 5_s._

 “Is as good as anything of the kind we have met with. Mr. Leighton
 more than holds his own with Rider Haggard and Baring-Gould.”--_The
 Times._

=The Wreck of “The Golden Fleece”=: The story of a North Sea
Fisher-boy. By ROBERT LEIGHTON. With 8 page Illustrations by F.
BRANGWYN. 5_s._

 “This story should add considerably to Mr. Leighton’s high reputation.
 Excellent in every respect, it contains every variety of incident. The
 plot is very cleverly devised, and the types of the North Sea sailors
 are capital.”--_The Times._

=The Pilots of Pomona=: A Story of the Orkney Islands. By ROBERT
LEIGHTON. Illustrated by JOHN LEIGHTON. 5_s._

 “A story which is quite as good in its way as _Treasure Island_, and
 is full of adventure of a stirring yet most natural kind. Although
 it is primarily a boys’ book, it is a real godsend to the elderly
 reader.”--_Glasgow Evening Times._

=The Thirsty Sword=: A Story of the Norse Invasion of Scotland
(1262-63). By ROBERT LEIGHTON. With 8 page Illustrations by A. PEARSE.
5_s._

 “This is one of the most fascinating stories for boys that it has
 ever been our pleasure to read. From first to last the interest never
 flags.”--_Schoolmaster._

       *       *       *       *       *

=The Clever Miss Follett.= By J. K. H. DENNY. With 12 page
Illustrations by GERTRUDE D. HAMMOND. 6_s._

 “Just the book to give to girls, who will delight both in the
 letterpress and the illustrations. Miss Hammond has never done better
 work.”--_Review of Reviews._

       *       *       *       *       *

=The Heiress of Courtleroy.= By ANNE BEALE. With 8 page Illustrations
by T. C. H. CASTLE. 5_s._

 “We can speak highly of the grace with which Miss Beale relates how
 the young ‘Heiress of Courtleroy’ had such good influence over her
 uncle as to win him from his intensely selfish ways.”--_Guardian._




 _TWELFTH EDITION OF THE UNIVERSE._


=The Universe=: or, The Infinitely Great and the Infinitely Little. A
Sketch of Contrasts in Creation, and Marvels revealed and explained by
Natural Science. By F. A. POUCHET, M.D. With 272 Engravings on wood,
of which 55 are full-page size, and 4 Coloured Illustrations. _Twelfth
Edition_, medium 8vo, cloth elegant, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; also
morocco antique, 16_s._

 “Dr. Pouchet’s wonderful work on _The Universe_, than which there is
 no book better calculated to encourage the study of nature.”--_Pall
 Mall Gazette._

 “We know no better book of the kind for a schoolroom
 library.”--_Bookman._




 BY G. NORWAY.

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


=A Prisoner of War=: A Story of the Time of Napoleon Bonaparte. By G.
NORWAY. With 6 page Illustrations by ROBT. BARNES, A.R.W.S. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “More hairbreadth escapes from death by starvation, by ice, by
 fighting, &c., were never before surmounted.... It is a fine
 yarn.”--_The Guardian._

=A True Cornish Maid.= By G. NORWAY. With 6 page Illustrations by J.
FINNEMORE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “There is some excellent reading.... Mrs. Norway brings before the
 eyes of her readers the good Cornish folk, their speech, their
 manners, and their ways. _A True Cornish Maid_ deserves to be
 popular.”--_Athenæum._

 ⁂ For other Books by G. NORWAY see p. 23.

       *       *       *       *       *

=Under False Colours=: A Story from Two Girls’ Lives. By SARAH DOUDNEY.
Illustrated by G. G. KILBURNE. 4_s._

 “Sarah Doudney has no superior as a writer of high-toned stories--pure
 in style and original in conception; but we have seen nothing from her
 pen equal in dramatic energy to this book.”--_Christian Leader._

=With the Sea Kings=: A Story of the Days of Lord Nelson. By F. H.
WINDER. Illustrated by W. S. STACEY. 4_s._

 “Just the book to put into a boy’s hands. Every chapter contains
 boardings, cuttings out, fighting pirates, escapes of thrilling
 audacity, and captures by corsairs, sufficient to turn the quietest
 boy’s head. The story culminates in a vigorous account of the battle
 of Trafalgar. Happy boys!”--_The Academy._

=Dr. Jolliffe’s Boys=: A Tale of Weston School. By LEWIS HOUGH. With 6
page Pictures. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Young people who appreciate _Tom Brown’s School-days_ will find
 this story a worthy companion to that fascinating book.”--_Newcastle
 Journal._

=Dora=: or, A Girl without a Home. By Mrs. R. H. READ. With 6 page
Illustrations by PAUL HARDY. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “It is no slight thing, in an age of rubbish, to get a story so pure
 and healthy as this.”--_The Academy._




 BY DR. GORDON STABLES, R.N.

 “In all Dr. Gordon Stables’ books for boys we are sure to find
 a wholesome tone, plenty of instruction, and abundance of
 adventure.”--_Saturday Review._

 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


=The Naval Cadet.= By GORDON STABLES, C.M., M.D., R.N. With 6 page
Illustrations by WILLIAM RAINEY, R.I. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “A really interesting travellers’ tale, with plenty of fun and
 incident in it.”--_Spectator._

 “Love and war and ‘gun-room fun’ combine to make the history of _The
 Naval Cadet_ a very readable book.”--_Literature._

=For Life and Liberty.= By GORDON STABLES, C.M., M.D., R.N. With 8
Illustrations by SYDNEY PAGET, and a Map. 5_s._

 “The story is lively and spirited, with abundance of blockade-running,
 hard fighting, narrow escapes, and introductions to some of the most
 distinguished generals on both sides.”--_The Times._

=To Greenland and the Pole.= By GORDON STABLES, C.M., M.D., R.N. With 8
page Illustrations by G. C. HINDLEY, and a Map. 5_s._

 “His Arctic explorers have the verisimilitude of life. It is one of
 the books of the season, and one of the best Mr. Stables has ever
 written.”--_Truth._

=Westward with Columbus.= By GORDON STABLES, C.M., M.D., R.N. With 8
page Illustrations by A. PEARSE. 5_s._

 “We must place _Westward with Columbus_ among those books that all
 boys ought to read.”--_The Spectator._

=’Twixt School and College=: A Tale of Self-reliance. By GORDON
STABLES, C.M., M.D., R.N. Illustrated by W. PARKINSON. 5_s._

 “One of the best of a prolific writer’s books for boys, and inculcates
 the virtue of self-reliance.”--_Athenæum._




 BY HUGH ST. LEGER.


=An Ocean Outlaw=: A Story of Adventure in the good ship _Margaret_.
With Illustrations by WILLIAM RAINEY, R.I. 4_s._

 “We know no modern boys’ book in which there is more sound, hearty,
 good-humoured fun, or of which the tone is more wholesome and bracing
 than Mr. St. Leger’s.”--_National Observer._

=Hallowe’en Ahoy!= or, Lost on the Crozet Islands. By HUGH ST. LEGER.
With 6 Illustrations by H. J. DRAPER. 4_s._

 “One of the best stories of seafaring life and adventure which
 have appeared this season. No boy who begins it but will wish to
 join the _Britannia_ long before he finishes these delightful
 pages.”--_Academy._

=Sou’wester and Sword.= By HUGH ST. LEGER. With 6 page Illustrations by
HAL HURST. 4_s._

 “As racy a tale of life at sea and war adventure as we have met with
 for some time.... Altogether the sort of book that boys will revel
 in.”--_Athenæum._




 BY CHARLES W. WHISTLER.

 “Historical tales are always welcome when they are told by such a
 prince of story-tellers as Mr. CHARLES W. WHISTLER.”--_The Record._


 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

=King Olaf’s Kinsman=: A Story of the Last Saxon Struggle against the
Danes. By CHARLES W. WHISTLER. With 6 page Illustrations by W. H.
MARGETSON. 4_s._

 “Mr. Whistler’s story is in fine an excellent one--worthy to rank with
 some of R. L. Stevenson’s tales for boys.”--_St. James’s Gazette._

=Wulfric the Weapon-Thane=: The Story of the Danish Conquest of
East Anglia. By CHARLES W. WHISTLER. With 6 Illustrations by W. H.
MARGETSON. 4_s._

 “A picturesque and energetic story. A worthy companion to his capital
 story, _A Thane of Wessex_. One that will delight all active-minded
 boys.”--_Saturday Review._

=A Thane of Wessex=: Being the Story of the Great Viking Raid of 845.
By CHARLES W. WHISTLER. With 6 Illustrations by W. H. MARGETSON. 3_s._
6_d._

 “The story is told with spirit and force, and affords an excellent
 picture of the life of the period.”--_Standard._

       *       *       *       *       *

=Grettir the Outlaw=: A Story of Iceland. By S. BARING-GOULD. With 6
page Illustrations by M. ZENO DIEMER. 4_s._

=A Champion of the Faith=: A Tale of Prince Hal and the Lollards. By J.
M. CALLWELL. With 6 page Illustrations by HERBERT J. DRAPER. 4_s._

       *       *       *       *       *

=Meg’s Friend.= By ALICE CORKRAN. With 6 page Illustrations by ROBERT
FOWLER. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “One of Miss Corkran’s charming books for girls, narrated in that
 simple and picturesque style which marks the authoress as one of the
 first amongst writers for young people.”--_The Spectator._

=Margery Merton’s Girlhood.= By ALICE CORKRAN. With 6 page Pictures by
GORDON BROWNE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Another book for girls we can warmly commend. There is a delightful
 piquancy in the experiences and trials of a young English girl who
 studies painting in Paris.”--_Saturday Review._

=Down the Snow Stairs=: or, From Good-night to Good-morning. By ALICE
CORKRAN. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “A gem of the first water, bearing upon every page the mark of genius.
 It is indeed a Little Pilgrim’s Progress.”--_Christian Leader._

       *       *       *       *       *

=Gold, Gold, in Cariboo.= By CLIVE PHILLIPPS-WOLLEY. With 6 page
Illustrations by G. C. HINDLEY. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “We have seldom read a more exciting tale. There is a capital plot,
 and the interest is sustained to the last page.”--_The Times._




 BY ANNIE E. ARMSTRONG.


 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

=Violet Vereker’s Vanity.= By ANNIE E. ARMSTRONG. With 6 page
Illustrations by G. DEMAIN HAMMOND, R.I. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “A book for girls that we can heartily recommend, for it is bright,
 sensible, and with a right tone of thought and feeling.”--_Sheffield
 Independent._

=Three Bright Girls=: A Story of Chance and Mischance. By ANNIE E.
ARMSTRONG. Illustrated by W. PARKINSON. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Among many good stories for girls this is undoubtedly one of the very
 best.”--_Teachers’ Aid._

=A Very Odd Girl=: or, Life at the Gabled Farm. By ANNIE E. ARMSTRONG.
Illustrated. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “The book is one we can heartily recommend, for it is not only
 bright and interesting, but also pure and healthy in tone and
 teaching.”--_The Lady._

       *       *       *       *       *

=The Captured Cruiser.= By C. J. HYNE. Illustrated by FRANK BRANGWYN.
3_s._ 6_d._

 “The two lads and the two skippers are admirably drawn. Mr. Hyne has
 now secured a position in the first rank of writers of fiction for
 boys.”--_Spectator._

       *       *       *       *       *

=Afloat at Last=: A Sailor Boy’s Log of his Life at Sea. By JOHN C.
HUTCHESON. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “As healthy and breezy a book as one could wish to put into the hands
 of a boy.”--_Academy._

       *       *       *       *       *

=Brother and Sister=: or, The Trials of the Moore Family. By ELIZABETH
J. LYSAGHT. 3_s._ 6_d._

       *       *       *       *       *

=Storied Holidays=: A Cycle of Red-letter Days. By E. S. BROOKS. With
12 page Illustrations by HOWARD PYLE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “It is a downright good book for a senior boy, and is eminently
 readable from first to last.”--_Schoolmaster._

=Chivalric Days=: Stories of Courtesy and Courage in the Olden Times.
By E. S. BROOKS. With 20 Illustrations. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “We have seldom come across a prettier collection of tales. These
 charming stories of boys and girls of olden days are no mere
 fictitious or imaginary sketches, but are real and actual records of
 their sayings and doings.”--_Literary World._

=Historic Boys=: Their Endeavours, their Achievements, and their Times.
By E. S. BROOKS. With 12 page Illustrations. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “A wholesome book, manly in tone; altogether one that should
 incite boys to further acquaintance with those rulers of men whose
 careers are narrated. We advise teachers to put it on their list of
 prizes.”--_Knowledge._




 BY EDGAR PICKERING.


 _In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

=A Stout English Bowman.= By EDGAR PICKERING. With 6 page Illustrations
by WALTER S. STACEY. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “A vivid romance of the times of Henry III. In drawing the various
 pictures of this age of chivalry Mr. Pickering has caught the true
 spirit of the period, and never once does he forget that he is writing
 the sayings and doings of a past age.”--_Public Opinion._

=Two Gallant Rebels.= By EDGAR PICKERING. With 6 Illustrations by W. H.
OVEREND. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “There is something very attractive about Mr. Pickering’s style....
 Boys will relish the relation of those dreadful and moving events,
 which, indeed, will never lose their fascination for readers of all
 ages.”--_The Spectator._

=In Press-Gang Days.= By EDGAR PICKERING. With 6 Illustrations by W. S.
STACEY. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “It is of Marryat we think as we read this delightful story;
 for it is not only a story of adventure with incidents well
 conceived and arranged, but the characters are interesting and
 well-distinguished.”--_Academy._

=An Old-Time Yarn.= By EDGAR PICKERING. Illustrated by ALFRED PEARSE.
3_s._ 6_d._

 “And a very good yarn it is, with not a dull page from first to
 last. There is a flavour of _Westward Ho!_ in this attractive
 book.”--_Educational Review._

=Silas Verney=: A Tale of the Time of Charles II. By EDGAR PICKERING.
With 6 page Illustrations by ALFRED PEARSE. 3_s._ 6_d._

 “Altogether this is an excellent story for boys.”--_Saturday Review._

       *       *       *       *       *

=His First Kangaroo=: An Australian Story for Boys. By ARTHUR FERRES.
Illustrated by PERCY F. S. SPENCE. 3_s._ 6_d._




 BLACKIE’S NEW THREE-SHILLING SERIES.


 _In crown 8vo. Beautifully illustrated and handsomely bound._

=Highways and High Seas=: By F. FRANKFORT MOORE. With 6 page
Illustrations by ALFRED PEARSE. 3_s._

 “This is one of the best stories Mr. Moore has written, perhaps
 the very best. The exciting adventures are sure to attract
 boys.”--_Spectator._

=Under Hatches=: or, Ned Woodthorpe’s Adventures. By F. FRANKFORT
MOORE. Illustrated by A. FORESTIER. 3_s._

 “The story as a story is one that will just suit boys all the world
 over. The characters are well drawn and consistent.”--_Schoolmaster._

=The Missing Merchantman.= By HARRY COLLINGWOOD. With 6 page
Illustrations by W. H. OVEREND. 3_s._

 “One of the author’s best sea stories. The hero is as heroic as any
 boy could desire, and the ending is extremely happy.”--_British
 Weekly._

=Menhardoc=: A Story of Cornish Nets and Mines. By G. MANVILLE FENN.
Illustrated by C. J. STANILAND, R.I. 3_s._

 “The Cornish fishermen are drawn from life, and stand out from the
 pages in their jerseys and sea-boots all sprinkled with silvery
 pilchard scales.”--_Spectator._

=Yussuf the Guide=: or, The Mountain Bandits. By G. MANVILLE FENN. With
6 page Illustrations by J. SCHÖNBERG. 3_s._

 “Told with such real freshness and vigour that the reader feels he
 is actually one of the party, sharing in the fun and facing the
 dangers.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._

=Patience Wins=: or, War in the Works. By GEORGE MANVILLE FENN. With 6
page Illustrations. 3_s._

 “Mr. Fenn has never hit upon a happier plan than in writing this
 story of Yorkshire factory life. The whole book is all aglow with
 life.”--_Pall Mall Gazette._

=Mother Carey’s Chicken.= By G. MANVILLE FENN. With 6 page
Illustrations by A. FORESTIER. 3_s._

 “The incidents are of thrilling interest, while the characters
 are drawn with a care and completeness rarely found in a boys’
 book.”--_Literary World._

=Robinson Crusoe.= With 100 Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 3_s._

 “One of the best issues, if not absolutely the best, of Defoe’s work
 which has ever appeared.”--_The Standard._

=Perseverance Island=: or, The Robinson Crusoe of the 19th Century. By
DOUGLAS FRAZAR. With 6 page Illustrations. 3_s._

=Gulliver’s Travels.= With 100 Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE. 3_s._

 “Mr. Gordon Browne is, to my thinking, incomparably the most artistic,
 spirited, and brilliant of our illustrators of books for boys, and one
 of the most humorous also, as his illustrations of ‘Gulliver’ amply
 testify.”--_Truth._

=The Wigwam and the War-path=: Stories of the Red Indians. By ASCOTT R.
HOPE. With 6 page Illustrations. 3_s._

 “Is notably good. It gives a very vivid picture of life
 among the Indians, which will delight the heart of many a
 schoolboy.”--_Spectator._

=The Loss of John Humble=: What Led to It, and What Came of It. By G.
NORWAY. With 6 page Illustrations by JOHN SCHÖNBERG, 3_s._

 “Full of life and adventure. The interest of the story is sustained
 without a break from first to last.”--_Standard._

=Hussein the Hostage.= By G. NORWAY. With 6 page Illustrations by JOHN
SCHÖNBERG. 3_s._

 “_Hussein the Hostage_ is full of originality and vigour. The
 characters are lifelike, there is plenty of stirring incident, and the
 interest is sustained throughout.”--_Journal of Education._

=Cousin Geoffrey and I.= By CAROLINE AUSTIN. With 6 page Illustrations
by W. PARKINSON. 3_s._

 “Miss Austin’s story is bright, clever, and well
 developed.”--_Saturday Review._

[Illustration: _Reduced Illustration from “Cousin Geoffrey”._]

=Girl Neighbours=: or, The Old Fashion and the New. By SARAH TYTLER.
Illustrated by C. T. GARLAND. 3_s._

 “One of the most effective and quietly humorous of Miss Sarah
 Tytler’s stories. It is very healthy, very agreeable, and very well
 written.”--_The Spectator._

=The Rover’s Secret=: a Tale of the Pirate Cays and Lagoons of Cuba. By
HARRY COLLINGWOOD. With 6 page Illustrations by W. C. SYMONS. 3_s._

 “_The Rover’s Secret_ is by far the best sea story we have read for
 years, and is certain to give unalloyed pleasure to boys.”--_Saturday
 Review._

=The Congo Rovers=: A Story of the Slave Squadron. By HARRY
COLLINGWOOD. With 6 page Illustrations. 3_s._

 “No better sea story has lately been written than the _Congo Rovers_.
 It is as original as any boy could desire.”--_Morning Post._




BLACKIE’S HALF-CROWN SERIES.

 _Illustrated by eminent Artists. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

=A Daughter of Erin.= By VIOLET G. FINNY.

 “Extremely well written; the characters are cleverly drawn and
 the individual interest sustained to the end. It is a book we can
 thoroughly recommend, not only to girls, but to all who like a
 well-written healthy toned story.”--_St. James’s Gazette._

=Nell’s School-days.= By H. F. GETHEN.

 “A simple and natural picture of young life, and inculcates
 in an unostentatious way lessons of thoughtfulness and
 kindness.”--_Spectator._

=The Luck of the Eardleys.= By SHEILA E. BRAINE.

 “One of the cleverest books we have read for a long time. The
 authoress combines wit, humour, and pathos in a delightful manner, and
 understands how to portray character, for all her men, women, boys and
 girls glow with life and colour”--_The Record._

=Picked up at Sea=: or, The Gold Miners of Minturne Creek. By JOHN C.
HUTCHESON.

=The Search for the Talisman=: A Story of Labrador. By HENRY FRITH.

 “We pity the boy who cannot read every page of this capital
 story.”--_School Guardian._

=Marooned on Australia.= By ERNEST FAVENC.

 “A remarkably interesting and well-written story of travel and
 adventure in the Great Southern Land.”--_School Guardian._

=The Secret of the Australian Desert.= By ERNEST FAVENC.

 “We recommend the book most heartily; it is certain to please boys and
 girls, and even some grown-ups.”--_Guardian._

=My Friend Kathleen.= By JENNIE CHAPPELL.

=A Girl’s Kingdom.= By M. CORBET-SEYMOUR.

 “The story is bright, well told, and thoroughly healthy and
 good.”--_Ch. Bells._

=Laugh and Learn=: The Easiest Book of Nursery Lessons and Nursery
Games. By JENNETT HUMPHREYS.

 “One of the best books of the kind imaginable, full of practical
 teaching in word and picture, and helping the little ones pleasantly
 along a right royal road to learning.”--_Graphic._

=Reefer and Rifleman=: A Tale of the Two Services. By Lieut.-Col.
PERCY-GROVES.

=A Musical Genius.= By the Author of the “Two Dorothys”.

 “It is brightly written, well illustrated, and daintily bound, and can
 be strongly recommended as a really good prize-book.”--_Teachers’ Aid._

=For the Sake of a Friend=: A Story of School Life. By MARGARET PARKER.

 “An excellent school-girls’ story.”--_Athenæum._

=Things Will take a Turn.= By BEATRICE HARRADEN. With 44 Illustrations
by JOHN H. BACON.

 “Perhaps the most brilliant is _Things Will Take a Turn_.... It
 is a delightful blending of comedy and tragedy, with an excellent
 plot.”--_The Times._

[Illustration: _From “Things will Take a Turn”._ (_Reduced._)]

       *       *       *       *       *

=Under the Black Eagle.= By ANDREW HILLIARD.

 “The rapid movement of the story, and the strange scenes through
 which it passes, give it a full interest of surprise and
 adventure.”--_Scotsman._

=A Golden Age.= By ISMAY THORN. Illustrated by GORDON BROWNE.

 “Ought to have a place of honour on the nursery shelf.”--_The
 Athenæum._

=Hal Hungerford.= By J. R. HUTCHINSON, B.A.

 “Altogether, _Hal Hungerford_ is a distinct literary
 success.”--_Spectator._

=The Secret of the Old House.= By E. EVERETT-GREEN.

 “Tim, the little Jacobite, is a charming creation.”--_Academy._

=White Lilac=: or, The Queen of the May. By AMY WALTON.

 “Every rural parish ought to add _White Lilac_ to its
 library.”--_Academy._

=The Whispering Winds=, and the Tales that they Told. By MARY H.
DEBENHAM. With 25 Illustrations by PAUL HARDY.

=Miriam’s Ambition.= By EVELYN EVERETT-GREEN.

 “Miss Green’s children are real British boys and girls.”--_Liverpool
 Mercury._

=The Brig “Audacious”.= By ALAN COLE.

 “Fresh and wholesome as a breath of sea air.”--_Court Journal._

=Jasper’s Conquest.= By ELIZABETH J. LYSAGHT.

 “One of the best boys’ books of the season.”--_Schoolmaster._

=Little Lady Clare.= By EVELYN EVERETT-GREEN.

 “Reminds us in its quaintness of Mrs. Ewing’s delightful
 tales.”--_Liter. World._

=The Eversley Secrets.= By EVELYN EVERETT-GREEN.

 “Roy Eversley is a very touching picture of high
 principle.”--_Guardian._

=The Hermit Hunter of the Wilds.= By G. STABLES, R.N.

 “Will gladden the heart of many a bright boy.”--_Methodist Recorder._

=Sturdy and Strong.= By G. A. HENTY.

 “A hero who stands as a good instance of chivalry in domestic
 life.”--_The Empire._

=Gutta-Percha Willie.= By GEORGE MAC DONALD.

 “Get it for your boys and girls to read for themselves.”--_Practical
 Teacher._

=The War of the Axe=: or, Adventures in South Africa. By J.
PERCY-GROVES.

 “The story is well and brilliantly told.”--_Literary World._

=The Lads of Little Clayton.= By R. STEAD.

 “A capital book for boys.”--_Schoolmaster._

=Ten Boys.= By JANE ANDREWS. With 20 Illustrations.

 “The idea is a very happy one, and admirably carried out.”--_Practical
 Teacher._

=A Waif of the Sea=: or, The Lost Found. By KATE WOOD.

 “Written with tenderness and grace.”--_Morning Advertiser._

=Winnie’s Secret.= By KATE WOOD.

 “One of the best story-books we have read.”--_Schoolmaster._

=Miss Willowburn’s Offer.= By SARAH DOUDNEY.

 “Patience Willowburn is one of Miss Doudney’s best
 creations.”--_Spectator._

=A Garland for Girls.= By LOUISA M. ALCOTT.

 “These little tales are the beau ideal of girls’ stories.”--_Christian
 World._

=Hetty Gray=: or, Nobody’s Bairn. By ROSA MULHOLLAND.

 “Hetty is a delightful creature--piquant, tender, and true.”--_World._

=Brothers in Arms.= By F. BAYFORD HARRISON.

 “Sure to prove interesting to young people of both sexes.”--_Guardian._

=Stimson’s Reef=: A Tale of Adventure. By C. J. HYNE.

=Miss Fenwick’s Failures.= By ESMÉ STUART.

 “A girl true to real life, who will put no nonsense into young
 heads.”--_Graphic._

=Gytha’s Message.= By EMMA LESLIE.

 “This is the sort of book that all girls like.”--_Journal of
 Education._

=A Little Handful.= By HARRIET J. SCRIPPS.

 “He is a real type of a boy.”--_The Schoolmaster._

=Hammond’s Hard Lines.= By SKELTON KUPPORD.

 “It is just what a boy would choose if the selection of a story-book
 is left in his own hand.”--_School Guardian._

=Dulcie King=: A Story for Girls. By M. CORBET-SEYMOUR.

=Nicola=: The Career of a Girl Musician. By M. CORBET-SEYMOUR.

=Hugh Herbert’s Inheritance.= By CAROLINE AUSTIN.

=Jack o’ Lanthorn=: A Tale of Adventure. By HENRY FRITH.

=A Rough Road=: or, How the Boy Made a Man of Himself. By Mrs. G.
LINNÆUS BANKS.

=The Two Dorothys.= By Mrs. HERBERT MARTIN.

 “A book that will interest and please all girls.”--_The Lady._

[Illustration: _Reduced Illustration from, “A Girl in Spring-time”._]

=My Mistress the Queen.= By M. A. PAULL.

=The Stories of Wasa and Menzikoff.=

=Stories of the Sea in Former Days.=

=Tales of Captivity and Exile.=

=Famous Discoveries by Sea and Land.=

=Stirring Events of History.=

=Adventures in Field, Flood, and Forest.=

=A Cruise in Cloudland.= By HENRY FRITH.

=Marian and Dorothy.= By ANNIE E. ARMSTRONG.

=Gladys Anstruther.= By LOUISA THOMPSON.




BLACKIE’S TWO-SHILLING SERIES.


_Illustrated by eminent Artists. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

=Tommy the Adventurous.= By S. E. CARTWRIGHT.

=Some Other Children.= By H. F. GETHEN.

=That Merry Crew.= By FLORENCE COOMBE.

=Sir Wilfrid’s Grandson.= By GERALDINE MOCKLER.

=Sydney’s Chums=: A Story of East and West London. By H. F. GETHEN.

=Daddy Samuels’ Darling.= By the Author of “The Two Dorothys”.

=May, Guy, and Jim.= By ELLINOR DAVENPORT ADAMS.

=A Girl in Spring-time.= By Mrs. MANSERGH.

=In the Days of Drake.= Being the Adventures of Humphrey Salkeld. By J.
S. FLETCHER.

=Wilful Joyce.= By W. L. ROOPER.

=Proud Miss Sydney.= By GERALDINE MOCKLER.

=Queen of the Daffodils.= By LESLIE LAING.

=The Girleen.= By EDITH JOHNSTONE.

=The Organist’s Baby.= By KATHLEEN KNOX.

=School Days in France.= By AN OLD GIRL.

=The Ravensworth Scholarship.= By Mrs. HENRY CLARKE.

=Sir Walter’s Ward=: A Tale of the Crusades. By WILLIAM EVERARD.

=Raff’s Ranche=: A Story of Adventure among Cow-boys and Indians. By F.
M. HOLMES.

=The Joyous Story of Toto.= By LAURA E. RICHARDS.

=Our Dolly=: Her Words and Ways. By Mrs. R. H. READ.

=Fairy Fancy=: What she Heard and Saw. By Mrs. READ.

=New Light through Old Windows.= By GREGSON GOW.

=Little Tottie, and Two Other Stories.= By THOMAS ARCHER.

=Naughty Miss Bunny.= By CLARA MULHOLLAND.

=Adventures of Mrs. Wishing-to-be.= By ALICE CORKRAN.

=An Unexpected Hero.= By ELIZ. J. LYSAGHT.

=The Bushranger’s Secret.= By Mrs. HENRY CLARKE, M.A.

=The White Squall.= By JOHN C. HUTCHESON.

=The Wreck of the “Nancy Bell”.= By J. C. HUTCHESON.

=The Lonely Pyramid.= By J. H. YOXALL.

=Bab=: or, The Triumph of Unselfishness. By ISMAY THORN.

=Brave and True=, and other Stories. By GREGSON GOW.

=The Light Princess.= By GEORGE MAC DONALD.

=Nutbrown Roger and I.= By J. H. YOXALL.

=Sam Silvan’s Sacrifice.= By JESSE COLMAN.

=Insect Ways on Summer Days= in Garden, Forest, Field, and Stream. By
JENNETT HUMPHREYS. With 70 Illustrations.

=Susan.= By AMY WALTON.

=A Pair of Clogs.= By AMY WALTON.

=The Hawthorns.= By AMY WALTON.

=Dorothy’s Dilemma.= By CAROLINE AUSTIN.

=Marie’s Home.= By CAROLINE AUSTIN.

=A Warrior King.= By J. EVELYN.

=Aboard the “Atalanta”.= By HENRY FRITH.

=The Penang Pirate.= By JOHN C. HUTCHESON.

=Teddy=: The Story of a “Little Pickle”. By JOHN C. HUTCHESON.

=A Rash Promise.= By CECILIA SELBY LOWNDES.

=Linda and the Boys.= By CECILIA SELBY LOWNDES.

=Swiss Stories for Children.= From the German of MADAM JOHANNA SPYRI.
By LUCY WHEELOCK.

=The Squire’s Grandson.= By J. M. CALLWELL.

=Magna Charta Stories.= Edited by ARTHUR GILMAN, A.M.

=The Wings of Courage=; and The Cloud-Spinner. Translated from the
French of GEORGE SAND, by Mrs. CORKRAN.

=Chirp and Chatter=: Or, Lessons from Field and Tree. By ALICE BANKS.
With 54 Illustrations by GORDON BROWNE.

=Four Little Mischiefs.= By ROSA MULHOLLAND.




LIBRARY OF FAMOUS BOOKS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.

_Illustrated. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 1s. 6d. each._


  =The Rifle Rangers.= By Captain MAYNE REID.
  =Macaulay’s Essays on English History.=
  =Autobiographies of Boyhood.=
  =Holiday House.= By CATHERINE SINCLAIR.
  =Log-book of a Midshipman.=
  =Parry’s Third Voyage.=
  =Passages in the Life of a Galley-Slave.=
  =The Downfall of Napoleon.= By SIR WALTER SCOTT.
  =What Katy Did.= By SUSAN COOLIDGE.
  =What Katy Did at School.=
  =Wreck of the “Wager”.=
  =Miss Austen’s Northanger Abbey.=
  =Miss Edgeworth’s The Good Governess.=
  =Martineau’s Feats on the Fiord.=
  =Marryat’s Poor Jack.=
  =The Snowstorm.= By Mrs. GORE.
  =Life of Dampier.=
  =The Cruise of the Midge.= M. SCOTT.
  =Lives and Voyages of Drake and Cavendish.=
  =Edgeworth’s Moral Tales.=
  =Marryat’s The Settlers in Canada.=
  =Michael Scott’s Tom Cringle’s Log.=
  =Natural History of Selborne.=
  =Waterton’s Wanderings in S. America.=
  =Anson’s Voyage Round the World.=
  =Autobiography of Franklin.=
  =Lamb’s Tales from Shakspeare.=
  =Southey’s Life of Nelson.=
  =Miss Mitford’s Our Village.=
  =Two Years Before the Mast.=
  =Children of the New Forest.=
  =Scott’s The Talisman.=
  =The Basket of Flowers.=
  =Marryat’s Masterman Ready.=
  =Alcott’s Little Women.=
  =Cooper’s Deerslayer.=
  =The Lamplighter.= By Miss CUMMINS.
  =Cooper’s Pathfinder.=
  =The Vicar of Wakefield.=
  =Plutarch’s Lives of Greek Heroes.=
  =Poe’s Tales of Romance and Fantasy.=


BLACKIE’S EIGHTEENPENNY SERIES.

_Illustrated. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant._


  =Holidays at Sandy Bay.= By E. S. BUCHHEIM.
  =Best of Intentions.= By GERALDINE MOCKLER.
  =An Africander Trio.= By JANE H. SPETTIGUE.
  =A Chum Worth Having.= By FLORENCE COOMBE.
  =Penelope and the Others.= By AMY WALTON.
  =The “Saucy May”.= By HENRY FRITH.
  =The Little Girl from Next Door.= By GERALDINE MOCKLER.
  =Uncle Jem’s Stella.= By Mrs. MARTIN.
  =The Ball of Fortune.= By C. PEARSE.
  =The Family Failing.= By D. DALE.
  =Warner’s Chase.= By ANNIE S. SWAN.
  =Climbing the Hill.= By ANNIE S. SWAN.
  =Into the Haven.= By ANNIE S. SWAN.
  =Down and Up Again.= By GREGSON GOW.
  =Madge’s Mistake.= By ANNIE E. ARMSTRONG.
  =The Troubles and Triumphs of Little Tim.= By GREGSON GOW.
  =The Happy Lad.= By B. BJÖRNSON.
  =A Box of Stories.= By H. HAPPYMAN.
  =The Patriot Martyr=, and other Narratives of Female Heroism.
  =Olive and Robin.= By MRS. MARTIN.
  =Mona’s Trust.= By P. LESLIE.

_With Illustrations. In crown 8vo, cloth elegant._

[Illustration: _Reduced Illustration From “A Chum Worth Having”._]

  =Little Jimmy=: A Story of Adventure. By Rev. D. RICE-JONES, M.A.
  =Pleasures and Pranks.= By ISABELLA PEARSON.
  =In a Stranger’s Garden.= By CONSTANCE CUMING.
  =Yarns on the Beach.= By G. A. HENTY.
  =A Soldier’s Son.= By ANNETTE LYSTER.
  =Mischief and Merry-making.= By ISABELLA PEARSON.
  =Tom Finch’s Monkey.= By J. C. HUTCHESON.
  =Miss Grantley’s Girls.= By THOS. ARCHER.
  =The Pedlar and his Dog.= By MARY C. ROWSELL.
  =Littlebourne Lock.= By F. BAYFORD HARRISON.
  =Wild Meg and Wee Dickie.= By MARY E. ROPES.
  =Grannie.= By ELIZABETH J. LYSAGHT.
  =The Seed She Sowed.= By EMMA LESLIE.
  =Unlucky=: A Fragment of a Girl’s Life. By CAROLINE AUSTIN.
  =Everybody’s Business.= By ISMAY THORN.
  =Tales of Daring and Danger.= By G. A. HENTY.
  =The Seven Golden Keys.= By JAMES E. ARNOLD.
  =The Story of a Queen.= By MARY C. ROWSELL.
  =Edwy=: or, Was he a Coward? By ANNETTE LYSTER.
  =The Battlefield Treasure.= By F. BAYFORD HARRISON.
  =Joan’s Adventures at the North Pole.= By ALICE CORKRAN.
  =Filled with Gold.= By J. PERRETT.
  =Our General.= By ELIZABETH J. LYSAGHT.
  =Aunt Hesba’s Charge.= By ELIZABETH J. LYSAGHT.
  =By Order of Queen Maude.= By LOUISA CROW.
  =The Late Miss Hollingford.= By ROSA MULHOLLAND.
  =Our Frank.= By AMY WALTON.
  =A Terrible Coward.= By G. MANVILLE FENN.
  =Town Mice in the Country.= By M. E. FRANCIS.
  =Phil and his Father.= By ISMAY THORN.
  =Prim’s Story.= By L. E. TIDDEMAN.


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Under the above title the publishers have arranged to issue, for
School Libraries and the Home Circle, a selection of the best and most
interesting books in the English language. The Library includes lives
of heroes, ancient and modern, records of travel and adventure by sea
and land, fiction of the highest class, historical romances, books of
natural history, and tales of domestic life.

The greatest care has been devoted to the get-up of the Library.
The volumes are clearly printed on good paper, and the binding
made specially durable, to withstand the wear and tear to which
well-circulated books are necessarily subjected.


_In crown 8vo volumes. Strongly bound in cloth. Price 1s. 4d. each._

  =Dana’s Two Years before the Mast.=
  =Southey’s Life of Nelson.=
  =Waterton’s Wanderings in S. America.=
  =Anson’s Voyage Round the World.=
  =Lamb’s Tales from Shakspeare.=
  =Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.=
  =Marryat’s Children of the New Forest.=
  =Miss Mitford’s Our Village.=
  =Scott’s Talisman.=
  =The Basket of Flowers.=
  =Marryat’s Masterman Ready.=
  =Alcott’s Little Women.=
  =Cooper’s Deerslayer.=
  =Parry’s Third Voyage.=
  =Dickens’ Old Curiosity Shop.= 2 vols.
  =Plutarch’s Lives of Greek Heroes.=
  =The Lamplighter.=
  =Cooper’s Pathfinder.=
  =The Vicar of Wakefield.=
  =White’s Natural History of Selborne.=
  =Scott’s Ivanhoe.= 2 vols.
  =Michael Scott’s Tom Cringle’s Log.=
  =Irving’s Conquest of Granada.= 2 vols.
  =Lives of Drake and Cavendish.=
  =Michael Scott’s Cruise of the Midge.=
  =Edgeworth’s Moral Tales.=
  =Passages in the Life of a Galley-Slave.=
  =The Snowstorm.= By Mrs. Gore.
  =Life of Dampier.=
  =Marryat’s The Settlers in Canada.=
  =Martineau’s Feats on the Fiord.=
  =Marryat’s Poor Jack.=
  =The Good Governess.= By Maria Edgeworth.
  =Northanger Abbey.= By Jane Austen.
  =The Log Book of a Midshipman.=
  =Autobiographies of Boyhood.=
  =Holiday House.= By Catherine Sinclair.
  =Wreck of the “Wager”.=
  =What Katy Did.= By Miss Coolidge.
  =What Katy Did at School.= By Do.
  =Scott’s Life of Napoleon.=
  =Essays on English History.= By Lord Macaulay.
  =The Rifle Rangers.= By Captain Mayne Reid.

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LONDON:
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Transcriber's Notes


A number of typographical errors were corrected silently.

Cover image was created from elements of the book as is donated to the
public domain.

This book is an extract of the last 32 pages of “A Girl of To-day”
by Ellinor Davenport Adams.

*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKIE'S BOOKS FOR YOUNG
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