SELECTIONS FROM MR.. EDWARD ARNOLD'S LIST. 



Love-Letters of a Worldly Woman. By Mrs. W. K. 



CLIFFOHD, Author of "Mrs. Keith's Crime," &c. In 1 vol. , crown 

 8vo, 6s. 



"It is that ram avis a volume characterised by knowledge of human 

 nature, and brightened by refined wit." Morning Post. 



" A book that will gladden the hearts of all those who love literature 

 for its own sake." World. 



" This volume comes to us in a particularly charming dress, which we 

 hope may entice readers to one of the most delicate, most original, and 

 most noticeable books of the season. . . . Many writers have pictured to 

 us a woman, but none more successfully than Mrs. Clifford, whose Madge 

 Brooke stands forth distinct and almost flesh and blood, a human 

 document." Review of Reviews. 



That Fiddler Fellow. A Tale of St. Andrews. By 



HORACE G. HUTCHINSON, Author of " My Wife's Politics," " Golf," 

 " Creatures of Circumstance," &c. Popular Edition, crown 8vo, 

 cloth, 2s. 6d. 



" A singularly ingenious and interesting tale." Spectator. 

 " What Mr. Hutchinson writes is always pleasant to read." The 

 World. 



" A strange history of hypnotism and crime, which will delight any 

 lover of the grim and terrible." The Guardian. 



Barerock ; or, the Island of Pearls. By HENRY NASH. 



With numerous full-page and other Illustrations by LANCELOT SPEED. 



Large crown 8vo. Over 400 pages, handsomely bound, gilt edges, 6s. 

 "A book vastly to our taste a book to charm all boys, and renew the 

 boy in all who have ever been boys. There are all kinds of delights a 

 shipwreck, a desert island, a Crusoe-like life enjoyed by two boys, a 

 ' surprise party ' of savages, and a wonderful coil of exciting incideuts 

 among West African blacks. Jack may be a trifle too clever in adapting 

 himself and his comrade to their new environments ; but Mr. Nash is a 

 persuasive romancer. He never overdoes the ingenious results of Jack's 

 book-learning like some of our latter-day Crusoe men, and \ve acknow- 

 ledge the spell he casts over us." Saturday Eeview. ^C. 



Friends of the Olden Time. By ALICE WARDXER, 

 Lecturer in History at Newnham College, Cambridge. Illustrated. 

 Square 8vo, 2s. 6d. 



"A capital little book for children, whose interest in history it is 

 desired to stimulate by lively and picturesque narratives of the lives of 

 heroes, and the nobler aspects of heroic times. Leouidas and Pericles, 

 Solon and Socrates, Camillus and Hannibal, the Gracchi and Alexander, 

 form the subject of Miss Gardner's animated recitals, which possess all 

 the charm of simplicity and clearness that should belong to stories told 

 to children." Saturday Review. 



LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 37, BEDFORD STREET, STRAND. 

 Publishers to the India Office. 



