l)aluablc an& ^ttractbc Jfcw lHovks 



RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY 



Messrs. Harper & Brothers, New York. 



i^upton^s ^tiijrnturrs in fHr):ico ant( the ^ocfes 



iHountatns, 



12mo, Muslin, 62A cents ; Paper, 50 cents. 



No book could be more certain of a public welcome : it gives a much more life-like and vivid 

 picture of the country than any other book we have seen. — Albion. 



The author's dashing, picturesque style reminds us of Captain Head's "Rough Notes on 

 the Pampas :" it is rife with adventure and wild exploit. It is exactly the kind of book we 

 require at the present moment. — Mirror. 



A more racy delineator of incidents we hare rarely met with : he never flags, but carries 

 thp reader with him, unwearied and delighted. — Methodist Protestant. 



The best book of the kind we have seen for a long time. — Courier and Enquirer. 



l2mo. Muslin, 62i cents ; Paper, 50 cents. 



Mr. Warren's skill is of a peculiar kind ; it is earnest and emphatic. This tale excites 

 strong interest. — Athenceum. 



" Now and Then" is a graceful and firm movement forward on the part of Mr. Warren. Fev» 

 sermons inculcate the highest religious duties of faith and untiring love to man more effectu- 

 ally than this tale ! — Douglas Jerrold's Newspaper. 



We scarcely remember a work in the whole range of modern fiction so thrilling in its char- 

 acter, and so beaulifuUy natural and life-like io its details, as this new tale by the gifted au- 

 thor of " Diary of a Physician.'" — Altnon. 



aamartfnc's f^istocp of tfic effrontJtsts. 



With Portraits. 3 vols. l2mo. Muslin, §2 10 ; Paper, $1 80. 



A mj^nificent and oratorical style — spangled with gems, some of" purest ray serene," some 

 dazzling and gaudy even to giddiness — abundant, yet not prolix — rythmical and measured, yet 

 wanting occasionally in variety. The reader is sure to find in every chapter treasures many. 

 — London Athenamm. 



No work in our day seems to have created such a ferment in Paris. The tale of the victims 

 of the Revolution is told with pathetic splendor by De Lamartiue ; he unites so many of the 

 highest qualifications for a great historian. — Edinburgh Review. 



No history, romance, or poem has for a long time appeared, that possesses more attractions, 

 or that will have a wider popularity. — Knickerbocker 



Stmms'.s 5lifc of Chcbnlfcr iJa2)artr. 



" THE GOOD KXIOHT." — " SANS PEUR ET SANS KEPROCHE." 



With Engravings. 12mo, Muslin. $1 CO. 



Chevalier Bayard is one of the most romantic and attractive figures in history, and Mr. 

 Simnis has made a hit in selecting him as his subject. For the public, it will have more at- 

 traction than a novel, and we predict for the book an extensive popularity. The style has an 

 agreeable qnaintness quite appropriate to the theme. — Tribune. 



The Chevalier Bayard stands in history as a type of the noblest properties of the chivalry 

 of the Middle Ages — pure in life, great m exploits, self-denying, courteous, and manly — a re- 

 alization of the highest ideal of the gentleman, in the chivalric sense of the word. The roman- 

 tic incidents of his life, as well as his generous and attractive personal characteristics, are de- 

 lineated with unaffected admiration and with a happy tact. It is a picture of the age of chiv- 

 alry which, as illustrating the peculiarities of a marked era of the history of civilizatiim, is 

 well worth the study of the literary man and the Christian. There are several well-conceived 

 embellishmeBts, which adorn the beautiful pages of the volume. — New York Evangelist. 



