By a. H. savage LANDOR 



IN THE FORBIDDEN LAND. An Account of a 

 Journey into Tibet, Capture by the Tibetan Lamas and 

 Soldiers, Imprisonment, Torture, and Ultimate Release, 

 brought about by Dr. Wilson and the Political Peshkar 

 Karak Sing-Pal. With the Government Enquiry and 

 Report and other Official Documents, by J. Larkin, 

 Esq., Deputed by the Government of India. With 

 One Photogravure, Eight Colored Plates, Fifty Full- 

 page and about One Hundred and Fifty Text Illustra- 

 tions, and a Map from Surveys by the Author. 2 Vols. 

 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, Uncut Edges and Gilt Tops, 

 00. 



A very remarkable work from whatever point of view it ma}^ be 

 read, and one which will insure its author a distinct and prominent 

 place among European travellers of the nineteenth century. — jy. Y. 

 Mail and Express. 



It is a book easy to read and hard to put down, for the scene is 

 constantly changing, the iiction is full of surprises, and the de- 

 sciiptions of scenery eniiance the signilicance of the occurrences de- 

 scribed. — New York Tribune. 



Tibet, the forbidden land, is not familiar ground, and an ob- 

 server as competent as Mr. Landor has much to tell quite apart 

 from his thrilling personal experiences. He writes well, and his 

 photographs ami drawings give excellent views of some of the 

 grandest scenery in the world and some of the most picturesque 

 things and people. He tells a plain manly tale, without affectation 

 or bravado, and it is a book that will be rend with interest and ex- 

 citement, even in those parts of it which only describe a journey 

 through an unknown region. — London Times. 



^b f. 



HARPER & BROTHERS, Publishers 



NEW YORK AND LONDON 



TTie above work loill be sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any 

 part of the United States, Canada, or Mexico^ on receipt of tJie price. 



