WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. 7 



CHRONICLES OF CARLIXGFORD: SALEM CHAPEL. 

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



" This story, so fresh, so powerfully -n-rittcn, and so trap;ic, stands out from among its fellows like a 

 piece of newly-coined roUI 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 

 teiTible is the i-evelation."— Westminster Review. , 



CHRON'ICLES OF CARLINGFORD : THE RECTOR, AND 



THE DOCTOR'S FAMILY. Post 8vo, 12s. 



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 Friends : 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 '98.- Ben-na- 

 Groich. 



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 Territoiy. 

 — 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. XI. 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 Bama. — The Invol- 

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

 Lugas. — A Few Words on Social Philosophy. 



THE WOXDER-SEEKER; 



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

 ' Tales of the Great and Brave,' &c. A New Edition. Fcap. 8vo, 3s. 6d. 



