Works publisJud by Henry S. King &> Co. 



OVER VOLCANOES; OR, THROUGH FRANCE AND 



SPAIN IN 1871. By A. Kingsman. Crown 8vo. 10s. 6d. 



* The writer's tone is so pleasant, his language is so good, and his spirits are 

 so fresh, buoyant, and exhilarating, that you find yourself inveigled into read- 

 ing, for the thousand-and-first time, a description of a Spanish bull- fight.' — 

 Illustrated London News. 



1 The adventures of our tourists are related with a good deal of pleasantry 

 and humorous dash, which make the narrative agreeable reading.' — Public 

 Opinion. 



c A work which we cordially recommend to such readers as desire to know 

 something of Spain as she is to-day. Indeed, so fresh and original is it, that 

 we could have wished that it had been a bigger book than it is.' — Literary 

 World. 



ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE. Correspondence and Conver- 

 sations with Nassau W. Senior from 1833 to 1859. Edited by 

 Mrs. M. C. M. Simpson. 2 vols, large post 8vo. 21s. 



' Another of those interesting journals in which Mr. Senior has, as it were, 

 crystallised the sayings of some of those many remarkable men with whom he 

 came in contact.' — Morning Post. 



'A book replete with knowledge and thought.' — Quarterly Review. 



1 An extremely interesting book, and a singularly good illustration of the 

 value which, even in an age of newspapers and magazines, memoirs have and 

 will always continue to have for the purposes of history.' — Saturday Review. 



A MEMOIR OF NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, with Stories 



now first Published in this Country. By H. A. Page. Large post 8vo. 

 7s. 6d. 



' The Memoir is followed by a criticism of Hawthorne as a writer ; and the 

 criticism, though we should be inclined to dissent from particular sentiments, is, 

 on the whole, very well written, and exhibits a discriminating enthusiasm for 

 one of the most fascinating of novelists.' — Saturday Review. 



' Seldom has it been our lot to meet with a more appreciative delineation of 

 character than this Memoir of Hawthorne. . . . Mr. Page deserves the best 

 thanks of every admirer of Hawthorne for the way in which he has gathered 

 together these relics, and given them to the world, as well as for his admirable 

 portraiture of their author's life and character.' — Morning Post. 



'We sympathise very heartily with an effort of Mr. H. A. Page to make 

 English readers better acquainted with the life and character of Nathaniel Haw- 

 thorne. . . • He has done full justice to the fine character of the author of 

 "The Scarlet Letter." '—Standard. 



1 He has produced a well-written and complete Memoir. . . A model of 

 literary work of art.' — Edinburgh Courant. 



65, Comhffl, and 12 Paternoster Row, London. 



