lo A CATALOGUE OF 



THE JOURNAL OF JOHN MAYNE DURING 

 A TOUR ON THE CONTINENT UPON ITS RE- 

 OPENING AFTER THE FALL OF NAPOLEON, 1814. 

 Edited by his Grandson, John Mayne Colles. With 16 

 Illustrations. Demy 8vo (9x5! inches). 12s. 6d. net. 



WOMEN OF THE SECOND EMPIRE. 



Chronicles of the Court of Napoleon III. By Frederic Loli^e. 

 With an introduction by Richard Whiteing, and 53 full-page 

 Illustrations, 3 in Photogravure. Demy 8vo. (9x5! inches.) 

 2 IS. net. 



Statidayd.—'^l\. Frederic Loliee has written a remarkable book, vivid and pitiless in 

 its description of the intrigue and dare-devil spirit which flourished unchecked at 

 the French Court. ... Mr. Richard Whilemg's introduction is written with 

 restraint and dignity. 



MEMOIRS OF MADEMOISELLE DES 



ECHEROLLES. Translated from the French by Marie 

 Clothilde Balfour. With an introduction by G. K. Fortescue, 

 Portraits, etc. 5s. net. 



Liverpool Mercury.—''. . . this absorbing book. . . . Tlie work has a very 

 decided historical value. The translation is excellent, and quite notable in the 

 preservation of idiom. 



GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO: A BIOGRAPHICAL 



STUDY. By Edward Hutton. With a Photogravure Frontis- 

 piece and numerous other Illustrations. Demy 8vo. (9XSJ 

 inches) 1 6s. net. 



THE LIFE OF PETER ILICH TCHAIKOVSKY 



(i 840-1 893).. By his Brother, Modeste Tchaikovsky. Edited 

 and abridged from the Russian and German Editions by Rosa 

 Newmarch. With Numerous Illustrations and Facsimiles and an 

 Introduction by the Editor. Demy 8vo. (9x5! inches.) 

 7s. 6d. net. Second edition. 



The Times.— ''A most illuminating commentary on Tchaikovsky's music." 

 lyorld.— "■One of the most fascinating self-revelations by an artist which has been 

 given to the world. The translation is excellent, and worth reading for its own 

 sake." 

 Contemporarv Review.— -''Yhehook'ssi^^esX is, of course, primarily to the music-lover ; 

 but there is so much of human and literary interest in it, such intimate revelation 

 of a singularly interesting personality, that many who have never come under the 

 spell of the Pathetic Symphony will be strongly attracted by what is virtually the 

 spiritual autobiography of its composer. High praise is due to the translator and 

 editor for the literary skill with which she has prepared the English version of 

 this fascinating work. . . There have been few collections of letters published 

 within recent .years that give so vivid a portrait of the writer as that presented to 

 us in these pages." 



