TOPEE AND TURBAN, OR HERE AND 

 THERE IN INDIA. By H. A. Newell, 

 Lt.-CoL, LA, With Illustrations from Photo- 

 graphs by the Author. Demy 8vo. i6s. net. 



COMPANIONS FEATHERED, FURRED 

 AND SCALED. By C. H. Donald. With 

 numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo. los. 6d. net. 



BENGAL FAIRY TALES. By F. B. Bradley 

 BiRT. With six Illustrations in colour by Aban- 

 indranath Tagore. Crown 4to. 15s. net. 



These fairy tales of Bengal have been collected by the author in the 

 villages and bazaars of that fascinating country. They have been told 

 to him by the natives themselves, and the author has successfully 

 reproduced in many ways the simplicity and directness of the style 

 of the original. The stories are suitable, and will be appreciated by 

 children, but their full beauty and significance will appeal even more 

 to grown-ups. They show us an insight into the Bengali character, 

 while they delight us with their aesthetic charm, which is greatly en- 

 hanced by the beautiful drawings in colour by Abanindranath Tagore. 



BYGONE DAYS IN INDIA. By Douglas 

 Dewar, Author of "Bombay Ducks," "Indian 

 Birds," etc. Demy 8vo. 15s. net. 



POEMS IN CAPTIVITY. By John Still, 

 Author of "A Prisoner in Turkey." Crown 8vo. 

 7s. 6d. net. 



John Still was captured by the Turks in Gallipoli in 191 5, and 

 remained in captivity for over three years, during which he found it 

 essential to have some absorbing mental occupation, necessary to 

 preserve his sanity. He discovered in himself then for the first time, 

 the power of writing verse. For many years before the war he lived 

 in Ceylon, and the latter part of the book is taken up with poems on 

 its peoples and lost cities, the first part containing the poems inspired 

 by captivity. 



JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD, VIGO ST., W. i 



