Mk 



ro A CATALOGUE OF 



JUNIPER HALL : Rendezvous of certain illus- 

 trious Personages during the French Revolution, including Alex- 

 ander D'Arblay and Fanny Burney. Compiled by Constance 

 Hill. With numerous Illustrations by Ellen G. Hill, and repro- 

 ductions from various Contemporary Portraits. Crown 8 vo. 5j.net. 



Daily Telegraph. — " . . . one of the most charming volumes published within recent years. 

 . . . Miss Hill has drawn a really idyllic and graphic picture of the daily life and gossip 

 of the stately but unfortunate dames and noblemen who found in Juniper Hall a 

 thoroughly English home." 



The Times. — " This book makes another on the long and seductive list of books that take 

 up history just where history proper leaves off . . . We have given but a faint idea of 

 the freshness, the innocent gaiety of its pages ; we can give none at all of the beauty and 

 interest of the pictures that adorn it." 



Westminster Gazette. — " Skilfully unified and charmingly told." 



JANE AUSTEN : Her Homes and Her Friends. 



By Constance Hill. With numerous Illustrations by Ellen G. 

 Hill, together with Reproductions from Old Portraits, etc. Crown 

 8vo. 5/. net. 



World. — "Miss Constance Hill has given us a thoroughly delightful book. . . ." 



Spectator. — " This book is a valuable contribution to Austen lore." 



Daily Telegraph. — "Miss Constance Hill, the authoress of this charming book, has laid all 



devout admirers of Jane Austen and her inimitable novels under a debt of gratitude." 

 Manchester Guardian. — "The volume is the most valuable accession made since the 



publication of her Letters, to our knowledge, of Jane Austen." 

 The Times. — "Related with an engaging naivete." 



THE HOUSE IN ST. MARTIN'S STREET. 



Being Chronicles of the Burney Family. By Constance Hill, 

 Author of " Jane Austen, Her Home, and Her Friends," " Juniper 

 Hall," etc. With numerous Illustrations by Ellen G. Hill, and 

 reproductions of Contemporary Portraits, etc. Demy 8vo. 21s.net. 



World. — "This valuable and very fascinating work. . . . Charmingly illustrated. . . . 



Those interested in this stirring period of history and the famous folk who were Fanny 



Burney's friends should not fail to add ' The House in St. Martin's Street ' to their 



collection of books." 

 Mr. C. K. Shortek in Sphere. — " Miss Hill has written a charming, an indispensable book." 

 Graphic. — "This is the most interesting, as well as the most charming collection of Fanny 



Burney's letters that we remember to have seen. Miss Constance Hill has written and 



compiled this volume in a truly admirable manner, and all readers owe her a deep 



debt of gratitude." 

 Bookman. — "To lay down this book is like being forced to quit a delightful and congenial 



company." 

 Morning Post. — ". . . the authoress of this book has made a compilation which is full of 



charm and entertainment, and she may fairly be said to have succeeded in her object of 



recreating some of the domestic atmosphere of a very delightful family." 

 Globe.— " This is a thoroughly engaging book, bright and thoughtful, and delightful in its 



simple humanness." 



STORY OF THE PRINCESS DES URSINS IN 



SPAIN (Camarera-Mayor). By Constance Hill. With 12 

 Illustrations and a Photogravure Frontispiece. New Edition. 

 Crown 8vo. 5/. net. 



Truth. — " It is a brilliant study of the brilliant Frenchwoman who in the early years of the 

 eighteenth century played such a remarkable part in saving the Bourbon dynasty in 

 Spain. Miss Hill's narrative is interesting from the first page to the last, and the value 

 of the book is enhanced by the reproductions of contemporary portraits with which it is 

 illustrated." 



British Weekly.—" We rejoioe to see this new and cheaper edition of Miss Hill's fascinating 

 and admirable book." 



