LIST OF BOOKS PUBLISHED BY 



Blackwood' s Standard Novels. 



Uniform in size and legibly printed. Each Novel complete in one Volume. 

 Florin Series, Illustrated Boards. 

 Tom Cringle's Log. By Michael Scott. 



Cruise of the Midge. By the Author of * Tom Cringle's Log.* 

 Cyril Thornton. By Captain Hamilton. 

 Annals of the Parish. By John Gait. 

 • The Provost, and other Tales. By John Gait. 

 Sir Andrew Wylie. By John Gait. 

 The Entail. By John Gait. 

 Reginald Dalton. By J. G. Lockhart. 

 Pen Owen. By Dean Hook. 

 AdaTn Blair. By J. G. Lockhart. 

 Lady Lee's Widowhood. By Col. Hamley, 

 Salem Chapel. By Mrs OHphant. 

 The Perpetual Curate. By Mrs Oliphant. 

 Miss Marjoritanks. By Mrs OUphant. 



Or in Cloth Boards, zs. 6d. 

 Shilling Series, Illustrated Cover. 

 The Sector and the Doctor's Family. By Mrs Oliphant. 

 The Life of Mansie Waugh. By D. M. Moir. 

 Peninsular Scenes and Sketches. By F. Hardmait. 

 Sir Frizzle Pumpkin, Nights at Mess, &c. 

 The Subaltern, 



Life in the Far West. By G. F. Ruxton. 

 Valerius : A Roman Story. By J. G. Lockhart. 



Or in Cloth Boards, is. 6d. 



OTHER WORKS IN PREPARATION. 



Blackwood's Maps of the Counties of Scotland. 



In Cloth Case for the Pocket, is. each. 



The same strongly bound in leather, in one vol. post 8vo, los. 6d. 



The Maid of Sker. 



ByE. D. Blackmore.Authorof 'LornaDoone,'&c. Originally published 

 in 'Blackwood's Magazine,' A New Edition. Crown 8vo, 7s. 6d. 



"His descriptions are wonderfully vivid and natural, although he loves to 

 paint nature in her most extravagant freaks. His pages are brightened every- 

 where with quiet humour ; the quaint dry tiuns of thought remind you occasion- 

 ally of Fielding."— T'z'wsj. 



"A work which reads in some parts like the famous autobiographies of Defoe, 

 and in others contains descriptions of natural beauty worthy of Kingsley, and 

 nautical adventures not inferior to the best things in Marryat." — AthencBum. 



" But let fact or fiction begin or end where they will, the book is exceeding 

 able, and strikingly original." — Saturday Review. 



"Mr Blackmore's book is in our opinion a genuine success, one of the few 

 good novels that have been written for many years, and one which will live."- 

 Si>ectator. 



