FELIX GKAS. 



''A THRILLING ROMANCE." 



The White 

 Terror. 



A Romance. By Felix Gras. Trans- 

 lated from the Provencal by Mrs. 

 Catharine A. Janvier. Uniform with 

 "The Reds of the Midi" and "The 

 Terror." i6mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



In "The White Terror" M. Gras paints with singular vividness the strange con- 

 ditions 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 extraordinary in its 

 sympathetic quality and dramatic power. Her story and the tale of her friend 

 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 "Reds of the Midi" and "The Terror" indicates the welcome 

 awaiting his new romance. 



ANTHONY HOPE'S NEIV NOVEL. 



The King's 

 Mirror. 



By Anthony Hope. 1 2mo. Illustrated. 

 Cloth, Si. 50. 



"Surpasses all his earlier ventures." — London Spectator. 



"Animated, graceful, delicate in humor, and perfect in 

 taste." — A'(^c> York Tribune. 



" A strong book, charged with close analysis and exquisite irony ; a book full of 

 pathos and moral fiber— in short, a book to be read." — Daily Chroniite, London. 



ANTHONY HOPE. 



m 



These books are for sale by all booksellers ; or they will be sent ly mail on receipt of price by the publishers, 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 72 1-ikth Avenue, New York. 



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