BY ROBERT W. CHAMBERS 



Cardigan [Constable's Halj-Crown Library. 



Small Crown 8vo, 2s. 6d. net. 



*' Unquestionably a stirring tale, palpitating, never faltering in 

 interest, and written in a style at once vigorous, cultured and 

 picturesque." Pall Mall Gazette. 



" One of the most spirited and interesting historical novels we 

 have read for a long time." Spectator. 



" With all its dash and excitement, there is no slovenly work- 

 manship in this story. ' Cardigan ' is a fine and inspiring story 

 fittingly told." Atheneeum. 



The Maid at Arms 6j- [2nd Edition. 



" A good title that covers an even better book. Mr. Chambers 

 gives a fine picture of that moment of hesitation when the future 

 of the United States trembled on a razor's edge. . . . We salute 

 Dorothy as one of the sweetest heroines that fiction has presented 

 for some little time." The Daily Chronicle. 



" As fine a romance as any one has a right to wish for . . . not 

 merely a book to order from the circulating library, but to buy 

 and read many times over." The Church Times. 



Maids of Paradise 6j- [yd Edition. 



" Is a fine martial story of the Franco-Prussian War, with a 

 dash of romance in it. Besides being a good novel, Mr. Chambers' 

 book is rich in descriptive passages that are as vivid and graphic 

 as anything that has been written of that disastrous war." Tork- 

 shire Post. 



In Search of the Unknown 6J- 



" Below the surface it is an excellent satire on pseudo-scientific 

 romance. On the surface it is a delightful string of the most 

 marvellous adventures. . . . The book is saturated with fun, and 

 heaped up and running over with adventure and information. 

 Scotsman. 



A Young Man in a Hurry 6j- 



[In the -press. 



