Mr. Edward Arnold's List of New Books 



THE RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR 



3from tbe outbreak of bosttlities to tbe evacuation of 

 By THOMAS COWEN, 



LATE SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT OF THE 'DAILY CHRONICLE.' 



With numerous Illustrations from Photographs and Sketches by Artists on 



the Spot, and Plans of the Principal Operations. 



Demy 8vo. 155. net. 



This book is the first instalment of the great mass of literature 

 which may presently be expected from the seat of war. After 

 tracing the course of events leading inevitably to the outbreak 

 of hostilities, Mr. Cowen describes with great completeness the 

 nature of the country, both in Korea and Manchuria, over which the 

 struggle has been waged, and then devotes himself to a brilliant and 

 graphic account of the actual conflict both by land and sea. 



EDWARD AND PAMELA FITZ- 

 GERALD. 



J53eiitg some account of tbeir Xtves 

 Comptteo from tbe betters of Cboae wbo Ifcnew Cbem. 



By GERALD CAMPBELL. 

 Demy 8vo. With numerous Portraits. ias. 6d. net. 



Since Thomas Moore's ' Life of Lord Edward FitzGerald ' was 

 published in 1831, one or two further memoirs have appeared, mainly 

 founded upon that work. ' Edward and Pamela FitzGerald ' differs 

 from these in several particulars. Its author, one of the rebel leader's 

 great-grandchildren, who has had access to a number of family 

 letters and papers, has endeavoured, after giving a picture of the 

 home-life of the FitzGerald family, to concentrate his attention on 

 those years during which Lord Edward was gradually becoming 

 entangled in the coils of the Irish Rebellion. After dealing with the 

 reasons which led him to adopt the cause of the revolutionary party, 

 and the circumstances of his arrest and death, the book proceeds to 

 consider more particularly than has yet been done the history of 

 Lord Edward's wife, Pamela, the reputed daughter of the Due 

 d' Orleans and Madame de Genlis. 



