WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. / 



CHRONICLES OF OARLINQFORD: SALEM CHAPEL. 



Second Edition. Complete in 1 vol., price 5s. 



" This story, so fresh, so powerfully written, and so tragic, stands out from among its fellows like a 

 piece of newly-coined gold in a handful of dim commonplace shillings. Talcs of pastoral experience and 

 scenes from clerical life we have had in plenty, but the sacred things of the conventicle, the relative posi- 

 tion of pastor and flock in a Nonconforming ' connection,' were but guessed at by the world outside, and 

 terrible is the revelation."— ^YeatmUlster Heview. 



CHRONICLES OF CARL1NGF0RD : THE RECTOR, AND 



THE DOCTOR'S FAMILY. Post Svo, price 4s. THE PERPETUAL 

 CURATE. Complete in one vol. Svo, price b's. 



TALES FROM BLACKWOOD. 



Complete in 12 vols., bound in cloth, ISs. The Volumes are sold separately, 

 Is. 6d. ; and may be had of most Booksellers, in Six Volumes, handsomely 

 half-bound in red morocco. 



Contents. 

 Vol. I. The Glenmutchkin Railway.— Vanderdecken's Message Home.— The 

 Floating Beacon.— Colonna the Painter.— Napoleon. — A Legend of Gibral- 

 tar. — The Iron Shroud. 



Vol. II. Lazaro's Legacy.— A Story without a Tail.— Faustus and Queen Eliza- 

 beth.— How I became a Yeoman.— Devereux Hall. — The Metempsychosis. 

 — College Theatricals. 



Vol. III. A Reading Party in the Long Vacation.— Father Tom and the Pope. 

 — La Petite Madelaine. — Bob Burke's Duel with Ensign Brady. —The 

 Headsman : A Tale of Doom.— The Wearyful Woman. 



Vol. IV. How I stood for the Dreepdaily Burghs. — First and Last.— The Duke's 

 Dilemma : A Chronicle of Niesenstein. — The Old Gentleman's Teetotum. — 

 " Woe to us when we lose the Watery Wall."— My College Frxnds : Charles 

 Russell, the Gentleman Commoner.— The Magic Lay of the One-Horse Chay. 



Vol. V. Adventures in Texas.— How we got Possession of the Tuileries.— Cap- 

 tain Paton's Lament.— The Village Doctor.— A Singular Letter from South- 

 ern Africa. 



Vol. VI. My Friend the Dutchman. — My College Friends— No. II. : Horace 

 Leicester.— The Emerald Studs.— My College Friends— No. III. : Mr W. 

 Wellington Hurst.— Christine : A Dutch Story.— The Man in the Bell. 



Vol. VII. My English Acquaintance.— The Murderer's Last Night. — Narration 

 of Certain Uncommon Things that did formerly happen to Me, Herbert 

 Willis, B.D.— The Wags.— The Wet Wooing : A Narrative of '9S — Ben-na- 

 Groieh. 



Vol. VIII. The Surveyor's Tale. By Professor Aytoun.— The Forrest Race 

 Romance. — Di Vasari : A Tale of Florence. — Sigismund Fatello. — The 

 Boxes. 



Vol. IX. Rosaura : A Tale of Madrid.— Adventure in the North-West Territory. 

 —Harry Bolton's Curacy— The Florida Pirate. — The Pandour and his 

 Princess.— The Beauty Draught. 



Vol. X. Antonio di Carara.— The Fatal Repast.— The Vision of Cagliostro.— 

 The First and Last Kiss. — The Smuggler's Leap. — The Haunted and the 

 Haunters.— The Duellists. 



Vol. XL TheNatolian Story-Teller.— The First and Last Crime. — John Rintoul. 

 —Major Moss.— The Premier and his Wife. 



Vol. XII. Tickler among the Thieves ! — The Bridegroom of Barna. — The Invol- 

 untary Experimentalist.— Lebrun's Lawsuit.— The Sno wing-up of Strath 

 Lugas.— A Few Words on Social Philosophy. 



THE WONDER-SEEKER; 



Or, The History of Charles Douglas. By M. FRASER TYTLER, Author of 

 • Tales of the Great and Brave,' &c. A New Edition. Fcap. Svo, 3s. 6d. 



