14 George Redways Publications. 



SECOND EDITION. Crmvn 8vo, Cloth, price 6*. 



Dreams and Dream-Stories. 



BY ANNA BONUS KINGSFORD, 



M.D. OF PARIS ; PRESIDENT OF THE HERMETIC SOCIETY ; PART 



AUTHOR OF "THE PERFECT WAY ; OR, THE FINDING OF CHRIST.' 



EDITED BY EDWARD MAITLAND. 



" Charming stories, full of delicate pathos. . . . We put it down in won- 

 derment at how much it outstrips our great, yet reasonable expectation, so 

 excellent and noteworthy is it ; a book to read and to think over." Vanity 

 Fair. 



" Curious and fascinating to a degree ... by certainly one of the most 

 vivid dreamers, as she was one of the brightest minds, of her generation. . . . 

 A curiously interesting volume." Court Journal. 



"Wonderfully fascinating . . . with invention enough for a dozen romances 

 and subjects for any number of sermons." Inquirer. 



" More strange, weird, and striking than any imagined by novelist, play- 

 wright, or sensational writer ... for the marvellous, the beautiful, and the 

 vraisemblable, having Hawthorne's marvellous insight into the soul of things." 

 Lucifer. 



' ' The preface is as singular as the stories themselves. " Literary World. 



" All who knew Mrs Kingsford will remember that she was not only an 

 Idealist, but an exceptionally gifted woman. ... It is given to very few 

 writers, even when broad awake, to tell such weird and striking stories in 

 such lucid and admirable style." Lady's Pictorial. 



Crown 8vo, Cloth, 6s. 

 THE NEW AMERICAN NOVEL. 



The Stalwarts; 



Or, Who were to Blame ? 



BY FRANCES MARIE NORTON, 



THE ONLY SISTER OF CHARLES J. GuiTEAU. 



"The English reader will appreciate the excellent sketches of a settler's 

 life in the far West, which form an important part of the book, and throw 

 curious side lights on some phases of existence on the other side of the 

 Atlantic." Morning Post. 



"The murder of President Lincoln and the plots and counterplots of 

 American politics are interwoven with many bright and evidently faithful 

 descriptions of life in the Eastern villages, the Western prairies, and the great 

 cities of America. We cannot help wishing that the author had spared us the 

 political incidents and contented herself with the family histories she relates 

 so well. ... A high tone pervades the book, but while the women, with 

 but one exception, are self-sacrificing, devoted, pure and pious, the men are 

 very poor creatures and in every way unworthy of their feminine belongings." 

 Literary Churchman. 



