BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



The Piccadilly Novels — continued. 



The Frozen Deep, By Wilkie Collins. 



Illustrated by G. Du Maurier and J. Mahoney. 



The Law and the Lady. By Wilkie Collins. 



Illustrated by S. L. Fildes and Sydney Hall. 



V Also a POPULAR EDITION of WILKIE COLLINS'S 

 NOVELS, post 8vo, Illustrated boards, 2s. each. 



Felicia. By M. Betham-Edwards. 



With a Frontispiece by W. Bowles. 



" A noble novel. Its teaching is elevated, its story is sympathetic, and the kind 

 of feeling- its perusal leaves behind is that more ordinarily derived from music or 

 poetry than from Prose fiction. Few works in modern fiction stand as high in our 

 estimation as this." — Sunday Times. 



Patricia KembalL By E. Lynn Linton. 



With Frontispiece by G. Du Maurier. ' 



" A very clever and well-constructed story, original and striking, interesting 

 all through. A novel abounding in thought and power and interest" — Times. 



** Displays genuine humour, as well as keen social observation. Enough graphic 

 Portraiture and witty observation to furnish materials for half-a-dozen novels of 

 the ordinary kind." — Saturday Review. 



The Atonement of Learn Dundas, By E. Lynn Linton. 



With a Frontispiece by Henry Woods. 



" In her narrowness and her depth, in her boundless loyalty , her selfforgetting 

 Passion, that exclusiveness of love which is akin to cruelty, and the fierce 

 humility which is vicarious pride, Leant Dundas is d striking figure. In one 

 quality the authoress has in some measure surpassed herself .—Pali. Mall 

 Gazette. 



The-EvilEye, and other Stories. By Katharine S.Macquoid. 



Illustrated by Thomas R. Macquoid and Percy Macquoid. 



" Cameos delicately, if not very minutely or vividly, wrought, and quite finished 

 enough to give a pleasurable sense of artistic ease and faculty. A word of com- 

 mendation is merited by the "illustrations."— Academy. 



Number Seventeen. By henry Kingsley. 



Oakshott Castle. . By Henry Kingsley. 



With a Frontispiece by Shirley Hodson. 



"A brisk and clear north wind of sentiment — sentiment that braces instead of 

 enervating— blows through all his works, and makes all their readers at once 

 healthier and more glad." — Spectator, 



Open ! Sesame ! By Florence Marryat. 



Illustrated by F. A. Fraser. 

 " A story -which arouses and sustains the reader's interest to a higher degree 

 than, perhaps, any of its author's former works. , . , A very excellent 

 story." — Graphic. 



Whiteladies. By Mrs _ oliphant. 



With Illustrations by A. Hopkins and H. Woods. 

 " Is really a pleasant and readable look, written with practical ease and 

 grace." — Times. 



