6 A Selection from Mr. Edward Arnold's List. 



MEN OF MIGHT. Studies of Great Characters. By A. C. 



Benson, M.A., and H. F. W. Tatham, M.A. , Assistant Masters at Eton 



College. Crown 8vo. , cloth, 3s. 6d. 



Contents : , 



Socrates. , Carlo Borromeo. , Dr. Arnold. 



Mahomet. F^nelon. Livingstone. 



St. Bernard. I John Wesley. ] General Gordon. 



Savonarola. George Washington, Father Damien. 



Michael Angelo. Henry Martyn. 



'• Models of what such compositions should be; full of incident and anecdote, with the 

 right note of enthusiasm, where it justly comes in, with Httle if anything of direct sermonizing, 

 though the moral for an intelligent lad is never far to seek. It is a long time since we have 

 seen a better book for youngsters." —Gita7-dian. 



"There is enough here to stimulate the interest and broaden the sympathies of any 

 audience. Studiously simple, yet never puerile, the ' Studies' are nicely calculated to satisfy 

 that most critical of all critics, a set of boys varying in age from fifteen to eighteen." — Record. 



EDUCATION FROM A NATIONAL STANDPOINT. Trans- 



lated from the French of Alfred Fouillee, by W. J. Greenstkeet, M.A., 

 Head Master of the Marling School, Stroud. Forming a Volume in "The 

 International Education Series." Crown 8vo , cloth, 7s. 6d. 



" The reader will rise from the study of this brilliant and stimulating book with a sense of 

 gratitude to M. Fouillde for the forcible manner in which the difficulties we must all have felt 

 are stated, and for his admirable endeavours to construct a workable scheme of secondary 

 educditiovi."— Journal 0/ Education. 



LOVE-LETTERS OF A WORLDLY WOMAN. By Mrs. W. K. 



Clifford, Author of " Mrs. Keith's Crime," " Aunt Anne," etc. In one vol., 



crown 8vo., 6s. 



" It is that 7-ara avis— 2. volume characterized 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."— 

 IVorld. 



" I have been reading one of the cleverest books that ever a woman wrote — that is, 

 ' Love-Letters of a Worldly Woman.' " — Queen. 



" The characterization of the dratiiatis persona in each case is forcible and clear, and the 

 letters in which the three stories are embodied are natural and on the whole convincing." — 

 A tJietuBum. 



"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, 

 who^e Madge Brooke stands forth distinct and almost flesh and blood, — a human document." 

 — Review 0/ Reviews. 



" In short analytical stories of this kind Mrs. Clifford has come to take a unique position 

 in England.'' — Black and White. 



BAREROCK ; op, 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. 



" An excellent work, the interest of which, from commencement to finish, does not flag for 

 an instant." — Daily Telegraph. 



" The story is a particularly good one, interesting from start to finish, without being too 

 sensational." — Reviexv 0/ Reviews. 



" For fertility of invention, wealth of imagination, and luxuriousness of incident, commend 

 us to ' Barerock,' the new story of adventure by Henry lisLsh."— Sheffield Telegraph. 



" A book vastly to our taste— a book to charm all boys, and renew the boy in all who have 

 ever been boys." — Saturday Review. 



" A captivating story of adventures by sea and land. ' — Daily News. 



