D. APPLETON & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 



A CHARMING AUTOBIOGRAPHY. 



'J^HE LIFE OF AN ARTIST, By Jules Breton. 

 JL With Portrait. Translated by Mrs, Mary J. Serrano. 



i2ino. Bound in cloth, $1.50. 



". . , One of those books the success of which is assured from the first because 

 of its perfect naturalness. . . . The reader of Jules Breton's memoir . . . will close 

 the book without having experienced one misgiving as to its entire truthfulness. From 

 the first page to the last his memoir will be found not merely readable, but fascinating, 

 and the translator has very well reproduced his charms of style, his beautiful simplicity, 

 and that perfume of the love of Natuie which breathes through the book and ennobles 

 it" — Neiv York Tribune. 



" The method and spirit . . . are most delicate and delightful. . . . Filled with the 

 poet's glow and the philosopher's peace." — New York Sun. 



"One understands modem France the better for this autobiography of her highly 

 gifted son." — Boston Pilot, 



"Jules Breton, by writing his autobiography, has conferred a lasting favor on the 

 bversof this class of literature." — Detroit Journal. 



TJT'IDOW GUTHRIE, A Novel. By Richard Mal- 

 '^ '^ COLM Johnston. Illustrated by E. W. Kemble. i2mo. 

 Bound in cloth, $1.50. 



"/? is understood that Colonel yoknston regards * Widow Guthrie* as his 

 strongest work," 



"One of the happiest, sweetest, quaintest novels that have come from the press in 

 a long time is 'Widow Guthrie,' a vigorous, breezy, and faithful picture of life in the 

 South in the days before the war. There is no lack of virijity, but there is also a re- 

 finement which w exquisite because it is genuine, and a humor which is mellow and 

 sweet because it springs from a clean imagination." — Brooklyn Standard-Union. 



"It is fiill of str(}ng descriptions and curious and forcible character delineations. 

 There is remarkable freshness in the figures of the story. The duel and the slaying 

 of Duncan Guthrie are descriptive masterpieces." — New York Sun. 



"The Widow Guthrie stands out more boldly than any other figure we know— a 

 figure curiously compounded of cynical hardness, blind love, and broken-hearted 

 pathos. ... A strong and interesting study of Georgia characteristics without de- 

 pending upon dialect. There is just sufficient mannerism and change of speech to 

 give piquancy to the whole." — Baltimore Sun. 



"... Some remarkaA)Iy vivid portraitures of character. . . . The book is one that 

 will please men as well as women." — Boston Evening Gazette. 



New York: D. APPLETON & CO., i, 3, & 5 Bond Street. 



