ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO.'S 



**A SWORD WITHOUT A STAIN.** 



Recollections and Letters of General Robert E. 

 Lee, by Captain R. E. Lee. Demy 8vo. 

 Illustrated with Portraits. I2S. 6d. net. 



" The reading of such a work as this has something in it of en- 

 couragement and inspiration. ' The country which has given birth 

 to men Uke him,' was the verdict of an EngUsh newspaper, ' may 

 look the chivalry/ of Europe in the face without shame. For the 

 Fatherlands of Sidney and Bayard never produced a nobler soldier. 

 Christian, and gentleman than General Robert E. Lee.* " — Daily 

 News. 



Far and Near, by John Burroughs, Author of 

 Green Fields, Walt Whitman, etc. Crown 8vo. 

 5s. net. 



" No man has done so much in the United States, during the last 

 three decades, towards interesting his fellow-countrjrmen in the 

 pure and simple pleasures of Nature, in the hfe of birds, the great 

 woods and hills, the well-flowered clearing, and the sparkling brook. 

 Mr. Burrough's hand has lost nothing of its cunning, and the reader 

 will find in this volume many a charming picture and much inter- 

 esting lore. The first half of the volume deals with ' Green Alaska ' ; 

 in the second portion the author returns to liis beloved home by the 

 Hudson River, and gives us some deUghtful pictures of bird-life. 

 Few writers on Nature have a more captivating pen than John 

 Burroughs." — Country Life. 



Bits of Gossip, by Rebecca Harding Davis. 

 Foolscap 8vo. 5s. net. 



" Miss Davis's recollections go back to before the Civil War. She 

 lived in a Virginian village to which her family had migrated from 

 one of the cotton States ; and she went afterwards to New England. 

 She has some striking stories to tell about all these places. . . . 

 This is most decidedly a book to be read." — Spectator. 



Literary Portraits, by Charles Whibley, Author 

 of A Book of Scoundrels, etc. Frontispiece. 

 Demy 8vo. ys. 6d. net. 



Contents : Studies in Rabelais, Commines, Burton and several 

 of the great Tudor translators. 



" Mr. Whibley must be classed among the few discriminating 

 critics of a day in which real sensitive criticism is as an oasis in the 

 desert. . . . The level of performance is here singularly even and 

 singularly high, and the book is a book for the library shelf, not a 

 mere volume of essays to be read, returned, and forgotten." — 

 Athenamm. 



