NATURAL HISTORY ADVERTISER. 



SMITH, ELDER Co. CornhilU London, 



«« We must say that the descriptions of Mr Liddiard are at once 

 lively, accurate, and well chosen ; and that those persons who are 

 about to afford themselves the delight of a similar * Three Months' 

 Tour|in Switzerland and France,' cannot do a wiser thing than make this 

 book their carriage companion." — Court Journal. 



MRS BRAY'S HISTORICAL NOVELS. 



In Monthly Volumes, Price only 45. beautifully hound. 



On the first of September was published, Volume I. of a 

 uniform series fo Mrs Bray's HISTORICAL, LEGENDARY, 

 AND ROMANTIC NOVELS; to be comprised in Fifteen 

 Volumes, post 8vo. 



The whole of the Copyrights of these very excellent Works 

 having recently become the exclusive property of the Author, it 

 has been determined to produce a uniform Series, in the popular 

 style of the day, and at such a reduced price, as cannot fdil com- 

 manding an extensive sale. For the farther accommodation of the 

 public, each respective work will be completed in three vols, which 

 may either be procured, in separate volumes monthly, or in sets 

 of three volumes, as desired. 



The Series will commence with the Celebrated Novel of De 

 Foix ; or Sketches of the Manners and Customs of the Fourteenth 

 Century. 



*' Mrs Bray stands alone amongst our Fern ale Writers of Romance : 

 she aims at a high standard, and accomplishes her object with a 

 masculine energy." — Atlas. 



** Mrs Bray is well, and deserves to be yet better known, for her 

 Historical Novels." — Quarterly Review. 



In post Qvo. price 10s. elegantly hound in Morocco, and 

 Illustrated 6y P arris, 



LONDON NIGHTS* ENTERTAINMENTS : 



forming a New Edition, with Additions, of TALES AND CON- 

 FESSIONS. By Leitch Ritchie, author of " Schinderhannes, 

 the Robber of the Rhine," " Turner's Annual Tour," " Heath's 

 Picturesque Annual," and Editor of the " Library of Romance." 



This work is supposed by eminent critics to be his chef-(Vceurjre. The 

 original edition, it will be recollected, (although not containing, like 

 the present, any of the later eflorts of his pen,) was pronounced by 

 the London Rnviewers to be *' the most extraordinary work of fiction 

 that ha= for m;.ny years issued from the pr^jss." 



*' Mr Ritchie is by far our best writer of romantic and imaginary 

 Tales," was the dictum of the Literary Gazette on another occasion ; 

 and the Atlas pronounces him to be *'the Scott of the short, picturesque, 

 bold, and dramatic story." 



*' The power of fascinating the reader, of chaining him down, as it 

 were, while his fancy is tormented by terrible imaginings, is the 

 principle characteristic of Mr Ritchie's fiction." — London Weekly 

 Review. 



" This Scott of tale- writers." — National Standard. 



