John Halifax, Gentleman. A Novel. By Mibs Mulock. Por- 

 trait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



The book Is from the pen of one who combines a careful study of life with a 

 rare genius in depicting its real experiences, and who renders charming even 

 a simple story of actual life, by the glow of a warm and loving heart with 

 which she transfuses it.— Frederick Myrum Cooper. 



Undine and Other Tales. By De La Mottb Fotjqtjb. Trans- 

 lated from the German by F. E. Bunnbtt. Portrait. ISmo, cloth, 

 gilt top, $1.00. 



Undine has become a household book for old and young in Germany, and 

 has been translated into almost every European language. There is in it a 

 simplicity of style unsurpassed, and plenty of sweet pathos which wets the 

 eye but never vfrings the heart.— Henry Prentice. 



Uarda, A Romance of Ancient Egypt. By George Ebeks. 

 Translated from the German by Clara Bell. 13mo, cloth, gilt 

 top, $1.00. 



Amid all the tempest of passion and expectation Incidental to such a tale 

 the novelist evolves a charming story of love and constancy rising superior to 

 class prejudices, and of the sweet amenities of social ties and family affection, 

 —Frederick Mynon Cooper. 



Confessions of an English Opium-Eater and Selected Essays. 



By Thomas Db Quincey. Edited with notes by David Masson, 

 Professor of English Literature in the University of Edinburgh. 

 Portrait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 

 De Quincey'3 skill In narration, his rare pathos, his wide sympathies, the 



gomp of his dream-descriptions, his abounding though subtle humor, commend 

 im to a large class of rea,deTa,—Micyckipeclia Britannica. 



On the Heights. By Berthold Aubrbach. Translated from 

 the German by F. B. Bunnbtt. Portrait. 13mo, cloth, gilt top, 

 $1.00. 



Auerbaoh has been called the Charles Dickens of Germany. He is not only 

 a brilliant writer of fiction, but is at the same time a profound thinker and 

 elevated moralist. In " On the Heights," his most powerful work, education, 

 labor, wealth, poverty, and the relations of rich and poor; aristocracy, relig- 

 ion and philosophy, the rights of the individual, and their various applications 

 to our daily life, are illumed and illustrated by its progress and development. 

 It is a beautiful story, sad in its ending, but free from any tinge of coarseness 

 or sensationalism: pure, sweet, warm with human love and tenderness. — 

 Frederick Mynon Cooper. 



The Last Days of Pompeii. By Sir Edward Bulwer-Lttton, 

 Bart. Portrait. 12mo, cloth, gilt top, $1.00. 



The fate of the rich Campanian city, the most awful catastrophe which 

 history records, supplies a superb climax to the story. This is dramatic and 

 powerful throughout, and of absorbing interest. The characters arise natur- 

 ally from the scene of the story, and they move and speak m perfect accord 

 with their surroundings; with a human sympathy which easily bridges the 

 eighteen centuries which have rolled over the buned city, we follow with eager 

 hiterest this tale of the men and women of ancient Pompeu.— i?o6w« Thome. 



Far sale by aU BookseUere, or wiU be sent post-paid on receipt of price, by the pub- 

 lisher, A.. I,. BVKT, 66 Iteade Street, New YorH. 



