WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. 



Professor Wilson's Poems. 



In two volumes post 8vo, 21s. 



— o — 

 BY THE SAME AUTHOR, 



In foolscap 8vo, price 2s. 6d. each, sewed; 3s. neatly bound in cloth ; or 



3s. 6d. handsomely bound in cloth, gilt edges, 



NEW EDITIONS OF 



Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life. 



o 



" What child will not hang over the Tales of the Covenanters in 

 Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life ? . . . We have already said 

 a word or two on this delightful volume — the work of one of the 

 most amiable of contemporary minds — a genius which shines with 

 equal felicity in the tender and humorous." — Quarterly Beview. 



The Trials of Margaret Lyndsay. 

 The Foresters. 



The Recreations of Christopher North. 



In Three Vols, post 8vo, price £1, lis. 6d. 



Contents : — Volume I. Christopher in his Sporting Jacket — A 



Tale of Expiation — Morning Monologue — The Field of Flowers 



— Cottages — An Hour's talk about Poetry — Inch Cruin — A Day 



at Windermere. 



Volume II. The Moors— Highland Snow-Storm— The Holy Child 



— Our Parish — May-Day — Sacred Poetry. 

 Volume III. Christopher in his Aviary — Dr Kitchiner — Soliloquy 

 on the Seasons — A Few Words on Thomson — The Snowball 

 Bicker of Pedmont — Christmas Dreams — Our Winter Quarters 

 — Stroll to Grassniere — L'Envoy. 



" His contributions to Blackwood's Magazine raised the uhole tone 

 and character of periodical literature. The keenest wit, the most 

 playful fancy, the most genial criticism, the deepest pathos, were 

 lavished year after year, with a profusion almost miraculous. Some 

 of the finest of these productions have been collected as 'The Recrea- 

 tions of Christopher North.' It would be difficult to point to three 

 volumes of our own times, that have an equal chance of becoming 

 immoTtdl."— Knights Half Hours with the Best Authors, vol. ii. p. 103. 

 " Delightful volumes— full of fun and fervour, power and pathos 

 — of deep feeling and light-hearted gaiety— of impassioned language, 

 rolUng along in the strength and majesty of genuine eloquence— 

 and of familiar gossip, tripping it lightly over the merrier pages."— 

 Scotsman. 



