^The White Terror^ 



A Domancc. By FELIX 6DAS. 



Translated from the Provencal by Mrs. Catharine A. Janvier. Uniform with " The 

 Reds of the Midi " and » The Terror." 



16mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



IN "The White Terror" M. Gras paints 

 with singular vividness the strange 

 conditions offered in the Midi after the 

 more familiar events of the French Revolu- 

 tion in Paris. He shows the alternating 

 triumphs and reverses of Whites and Reds, 

 and the lengthening of the shadow cast 

 by Napoleon, while throughout all these 

 stormy and adventurous scenes there 

 passes the appealing figure of Adeline, 

 daughter of a murdered Royalist. The 

 story of Adeline's protection by humble 

 friends from factional hate and from the 

 murderous Calisto forms a romance ex- 

 traordinary in its sympathetic quality and dramatic power. Her story 

 and the tale of her tViend Pascalet's adventures in the Napoleonic wars 

 make a romance which throbs with life and holds the reader tense with 

 suspended interest. The enthusiastic reception given to M. Gras's "The 

 Reds of the Midi" and "The Terror" indicate a great welcome awaiting 

 his new romance. 



OTHER BOOKS BY FELIX GRAS. 



The Reds of the Midi. ^^r^Vlt'/rJlX 



Catharine A. Janvier. With an Introduction by Thomas A. Janvier. With 

 Frontispiece. 12mo. Cloth, $L50. 



Mr. Gladstone to Mr. Heinemann. 



Dear Sir : 1 have read with great and sustained interest "The Reds of the South," which 

 you were good enough to present to me. Though a work of fiction, it aims at presenting the 

 historical features, and such works, if faithfully executed, throw more light than many so-called 

 histories on the true roots and causes of the Revolution which are so widely and so gravely mis- 

 understood. As a novel it seems to me to be written with great skill. 



Yours very faithfully, (signed) W. E. Gladstone. August 13, 1800. 



The Terror. 



A Romance of the French Revolution. 

 Janvier. 16mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



Translated by Mrs. 



" Romantic conditions could iiardly be better presented than in a book of this kind, and, 

 above all, in a book by Felix Gras. The romance is replete with interest." — New York Times. 



