The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson 



Edited by Sidney Colvin. With illustrations by Guerin and Peixotto. 2 vols., 8vo, $5.00 net- 

 " The final installment i?/ Stevenson's Letters in Scribner's caji but leave us wishing 

 he had lived to zurite more 0/ them. A feti' rnore like his best, and he might have been better 

 remembered for his letters than his books." — N'EW York Evening Post. 



" It bids fair to become one of those works whidi are kept very close to the arm-chair, and kept there not 

 merely during its first public vogue, but continuously. We have before stated— yet, as the day draws nearer 

 for Its publication, it may be stated again — that in S;kibxer's is appearing only a selection of Stevenson's 

 correspondence Many of the best letters are being reserved for the volume." — J he Academy. 



" Donald G. .Mitchell is one of the most delightful 0/ ramblers iti the higlnvays and by- 

 ways of letters. "—New Vo r k T k ih u n e . 



American Lands and Letters 



.Veiu Vnhane. LEATHER-STOCKING TO FOE'S RAVEN. By Donald G. Mitchell. 

 With 150 illustrations. 8vo, §2. 50. 



" A book which will not only be welcomed by his thousands of old readers, but is likely to win more 

 thousands of new readers for him." — New York Mail atid Express. 



*** Tilts voirune and the ccint>anion ivork covering the period Jrotn the M.'\^'flower to Rip Van 

 Winkle. 2 volumes, 8vo, iti box, $5.00. 



The Stones of Paris in History and Letters 



By Benja.min Ellis Martin and Charlotte M. Martin. \\ ith 60 illustrations by FuUey- 

 love, Delafontains, and from photographs. 2 volumes, i2mo, -S4.00. 

 The wealth of reminiscence, historic and literary, in which the stones of Paris are so rich, appears in ample 

 abundance in Mr. and Mrs. Martin's sympithetic and suggestive volumes. Historic times, from Merovingian 

 to the present, live again in these vivid pages. 



Primitive Love and Love Stories 



By Henry T. Finck, author of " Romantic Love and Personal Beauty." 8vo $3.00. 



Mr Finck's new work, the fruit of thirteen years of research among original authorities, is destined to create 

 a new epoch in the siciology of love and marriage, and to attract the widest attention among students of the 

 evolution of marriage. The tuUness and frankness of the discussion, whidi is fortified by an extraordinarily 

 large and varied collection of love stories of primitive races, make the book of the highest scientific value. 



Letters of Sidney Lanier 



Selections from his Correspondence, iS66-rS<Si. With two portraits. i2mo, §2.00. 



'' It is our good fortune to enter into a delightful intimacy with Sidney Lanier in the selections from his 

 correspondence. . . . The entire vohime will be read with delight, but, chiefly, the reader will linger over the 

 letters to his wife." — Hartford Courant. 



How England Saved Europe 



The Story of the Great War, 1793-1815. By W. H. Fitchett. In 4 volumes. Each, crown 

 8vo, $2.00. Vol. I. From the Low Countries to Egypt. Now ready. 



The story of the Twenty Years' War with Napoleon — " a resoimding epic rather than a drab colored page 

 of pallid and slow-moving historj'; an iliad of battles, sieges, and invasions." The story of this mighty contest 

 is told by .Vlr, Fitchett with a graphic power and dramatic intensity- worthy of the theme. 



AngIo=Saxons and Others 



By Aline Gorren. i2mo, $1.50. 



In this book Miss Gorren considers the question of Anglo-Saxon superiority. The feature of the book is 

 the note of warning which the author utters, the weaknesses of the race being analyzed with fullness and 

 fearlessness. 



The Trail of the Sandhill Stag 



By Ernest Seton-Thompson. With eight full-page illustrations (one in color), and numerous 

 marginal drawings by the author. Square 8vo, Si-50. 

 "A more delightful bit of impressionist work, subtle word painting, and that best of all teaching which 

 conveys its lesson unconsciously is not often found. It is a reproof of the blood-thirst in the hunter, a plea for 

 the harmless and_ gentle denizen of the forest and mountain, a sermon which Buddha might have preached, and 

 a marvel of artistic creation all in one." — Chicago Evening Post. 



Wild Animals I Have Known 



By Ernest Seton-Thompson. With 200 illustrations by the author. 230' Thousand. Square 

 i2mo, §2.00. 



"We have never met with a writer who has surpassed Mr. Seton-Thompson in putting himself ' inside the 



skin ' of the animals he describes." — Tlie Athenieii>n. 



CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS "^ '" '"'" ^"""' 



NEW YORK 



