July 1, 1906. 



The Review of Reviews. 



Winter is Qomin^ On, 



Lay in Your Stock of Reading. 



Nothing Better and Cheaper can be got than Our Novels and Poets. 

 SEND FOR THEM AT ONCE. 



A GOOD NOVEL IS A NECESSITY FOR HARD WORKERS. 



You Can't be Working Day and Night. 



You Need Some Relaxation. 



Nothing Gives Relaxation Like a Good Novel. 



I CHARLES O'MALLEY; Oliarles lever's stirring romance, tell- 

 ing of tlie adventures of an Irish ofiBcer in tlie Nape- 

 leonio Wars. 



% CONINGSBY ; one of tl.e most famona works of tlie states- 

 man novelist. Lord Beaconsfield, 



5. BEN NIR; perhaps the most realistic story of the lime 



of Christ. A stirring tale of fighting and love by 

 General Lew Wallace. 



* THE SCARLET lETIEK ; Nathaniel Hawthorne's master- 

 piece. Tells of the stern, early Puritan doings in 

 America. 



6. ALDERSYDE ; a charming story of the Scottish bor<ler, 

 written most graphically hy Annie S. Swan. 



< NEOMI: THE BRIGAND'S DAIGHTER; the title explains it 



self. The novel is one of the most popular of that 



popular writer, 8- Baring-Gould. 

 '■ INCIE TOM'S CABIN. An epoch making book, by Mrs. H 



Beecher-Stowe. A tale of the slave days in America. 

 i. INE FIFTH FORM OF ST. DOailMCS; one of the best stories 



of school days in England. Bright, having plenty of 



Incident. By T. Barnes Keed. 



9. ROLND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY DAY<; by Jules Verne. This 

 is one of the few stories which give some idea of the 

 world as a whole. 



10. THE TRUE HISTORY OF JOSHUA DAVIDSON ; by Mrs. E. 



Linton. 



Lynn 



n. THE SCOTTISH CHIEFS. A stirring Ule of the days of Wal- 

 lace, by Miss Jane Porter. 



12. JANE EYRE. The most widely-circulated and most power- 

 fal of cf Charlotte Bronte's novels. 



1 THE EARTHLY PAR»':|SE; by William Morris. Stories from 

 this great masterpiece of one of the greatest of present 

 day poets, told in prose with copious extracts in verse, 

 bv special permission of the author. 



2 THE INOOLOSBY LEGENDS, by Thomas Ingoldsby (Rev. E. H 

 Barliam), wlio easily holds first place as master of 

 English liumorous rhyme. 



: CHIl E HAROLD'S PILGRIM .GE. The book contains the second 

 portion of Lord Byron's greatest masterpiece. It !• 

 more popular than the first, as it deals with the poet'i 

 wandering in better known lands. 

 i POEMS OF LIBERTY. PROGRESS & LABOUR, by John Greenleaf- 

 Whittier. the Quaker poet of America. He has been 

 called the Poet Laureate of the Suffrage 

 WHIT lER'S POEMS, contains his autolnographical poems and 

 selections from the verses he wrote against slavery. 

 6. COWPER'S POEMS, includin}; a collectioTi of ;ill his poenis relating to 

 animals. 



L. ..> AND BALLADS A selection of the best known 

 legends and ballads in the English tongrue. 

 - ST. GEORGE AND THE DRAGON That portion of Spencer's 

 Faerie Queene which tells of the adventures of the Bed 

 Cross Kniiiht. 

 ■> THE CANTERBURY TALES, in which Geoffrey Chaucer tells of 

 a pilgrimage from London to Canterbury five cen- 

 turies ago. 

 '■' T 1E PLEASURES OF HOPE, and other poems, by Thomas 

 Campbell. The Scottish poet is chiefly known by his 

 battle poems. The Battle of the Baltic, Hohenlinden, 

 1 I HE POEMS OF JOHN I EATS. This "Poet of Beauty" lived 

 but 25 years, and yet he was one of the greatest poeta 

 of the 19th century. All his best masteriHeces are In- 

 cluded in the volume. 

 iJ IRISH MEIO Its and other poems, by the greatest of Iriib 

 poets. Tiiomas Moore. 



TWELVE NOVELS for Is. 4d. as. sd m stamps). 



TWELVE POETS for Is. 4d. as. 5d. m stamps.) 



ALL EXCELLENT READING. 



••"<* only Is, 4d. fl». sd. If slamps', and the twelve novels or the twelve poet* will be sent you by return 

 r»r 3a. Vd. the whole library of twenty four volumes will be sent, post free. 



THE MANAGER, "The Review of Reviews," Equitable Building, Melbourne. 



