HA RD WICKE'S SCIENCE-GOSSIP. 



lxxix 



CHATTO AND WINDUS'S NEW BOOKS. 



RICHARD PRYCE'S NEW NOVEL. — 2 vols. At all Libraries. 



MISS MAXWELL'S AFFECTIONS. 



By RICHARD PRYCE, Author of " The Ugly Story of Miss Wetherby." 



GRANT ALLEN'S NEW NOVEL.— On October 8, in 3 vols. At all Libraries. 



DUMIRESQ'S DAUGHTER. 



By GRANT ALLEN, Author of " The Tents of Shem," etc. 



NEW NOVEL BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE LOST HEIRESS." 

 In the press, crown 8vo., cloth extra, 3^. 6d. 



THE FOSSIGKER: A Romance of Mashonaland. 



By ERNEST GLANVILLE. With a Frontispiece and Vignette by Hume Nisbet. 



Crown 8vo., cloth extra, 2> s - 6d. 



TWO GIRLS ON IL BARGE. 



By V. CECIL COTES. With 44 Illustrations by F. H. Townsend. 



"An amusing little volume, well worth reading." — Daily Chronicle. 



OUIDA'S NEW STORItS.— In the press, square 8vo., cloth extra, 6s. 



SANTA BARBARA, &C. By Ouida, Author of " Under Two Flags," &c. 



Author's Notf. — " With the exception of ' Santa Barbara,' which was written for ' Les Lettres et les Arts,' all these stories are now 

 printed and published for the first time." 



DICK DONOVAN'S NEW BOOK.— Post 8vo., picture boards, 2*. ; cloth, 2s. 6d. 



A DETECTIVE'S TRIUMPHS. By Dick Donovan, Author of "The Man-Hunter," 



" Who Poisoned Hetty Duncan ?" &c. 



DAGONET'S NEW BOOK.— Crown 8vo., is. ; cloth, is. 6d. 



DAGONET DITTIES. By George R. Sims, Author of "How the Poor Live," "The 



Dagonet Reciter," &c. 



" The satirical humour, the playful extravagance, and the skilful knack of versifying which he brings to bear upon topics of the hour — 

 political, social, judicial, clerical, and military — will afford abundant entertainment." — Daily News. 



Cheaper Edition, post 8vo., picture boards, 2s. ; cloth, as. 6d. 



THE BURNT MILLION. By James Payn, Author of" By Proxy," etc. 



"Mr. James Payn has the peculiar gift of writing a novel as if he were telling you a story viva voce, and interesting you in.it, not only 

 by reason of its plot, but also by his way of narrating it. . . . The story will interest the million and delight thousands." — Punch. 



"LOOKING FORWARD."— Crown 8vo., cloth extra, 6s. 



FREELAND : a Social Anticipation. By Dr. Theodor Hertzka. Translated by 



Arthur Ransom. 



"Dr. Theodor Hertzka is an author who deserves to be widely known. A journalist and economist by special profession, he now 

 ppears before the European public as the author of one of those ideal reconstructions, or rather evolutions, of society which form so- 

 haracteristic a feature in contemporary literary effort. ' Freeland: a Social Anticipation,' is the title of his story, the scene of which is 

 aid in one of those enchantingly beautiful regions of Inner Africa with which modern explorers have made us all so familiar. 4 Freeland ' 

 as first published in Vienna, and is now translated into English by Mr. Arthur Ransom. Dr. Hertzka is not, like most of those who have 

 ssayed this kind of imaginative literature, a mere spinner of ingenious fancies. As an economist and thinker of wide acquirements and . 

 reat natural power be enjoys a continental reputation. He has scientific reasons for the inspiring faith that is in him, and he sets them, 

 forth in his preface to ' Freeland ' with a fulness of detail to which it is impossible for us to do justice in a brief note." — Echo. 



HUME NISBET'S NEW BOOK.-Crown 8vo., cloth, qs. 6d. a 



LESSONS IN ART. By Hume Nisbet. With 22 Illustrations. 



" A readable little volume. . . . The author has endeavoured to write out some of the strictly necessary rules and laws of drawing: 

 and painting for the use of students, so that they may be able to work at home, and spare their masters a number of questions if they are: 

 at art schools. The book deals with drawing and painting in water and oil colour, and concludes with * .Hints on General Art.' • • . Art 

 students will, no doubt, find the little work helpful, and the general reader may dip into it with pleasure." — Pall A/all Gazette. 



A NEW AFRICAN TRAVEL BOOK.— In the press, demy 8 vo. cloth extra, z6s. 



MY SECOND JOURNEY THROUGH EQUATORIAL AFRICA, from 



the Congo to the Zambesi, in the years 1886 and 1887. By Major Hermann von Wissmann. Translated by M. J. A. Bergmann. 

 With a Map by F. S. Weller, and 92 Illustrations by R. Hellgrewe and Klein-Chevalier. 



PERCY FITZGERALD'S NEW BOOK.— 2 vols., demy 8vo., cloth extra, 24*. 



LIFE OF JAMES BOSWELL. With an Account of His Sayings, Doings, and 



Writings. By Percy Fitzgerald, M. A. With 4 Portraits. 



" Mr. Fitzgerald has written two very interesting volumes. In these volumes, in which there is not a single dull chapter, we have a 

 very lifelike picture of ' Bozzy.' Mr. Fitzgerald's biography of this extraordinary man will no doubt find its way into every well-appointed 

 library.". — Manchester Examiner. 



" It is interesting, as any life of Johnson's inimitable biographer must be ; it is well informed, and it is manifestly the fruit of much- 

 patient and laborious industry." — Times. 



Small demv 8vo. cloth extra, 7s. 6d. 



LIFE OF JANE WELSH CARLYLE. By Mrs. Alexander Ireland. Witb 



Portrait and Facsimile Letter. Second Edition. 

 "This life of Mrs. Carlyle is a sweet and sad story, told with all tenderness and sympathy. . . . The volume contains some letters ■ 

 never before published, but, even without these, it must be valuable to every reader, if only for its subtle and withal sympathetic analysis 

 of character." — Daily News. 



"This is a most welcome addition to the books which have to do with the life of Thomas Carlyle and of his wife Jane. . . . 

 Mrs. Ireland has added some most suggestive material to the stock previously available. . . . The merits of Mrs. Ireland's book consist 

 less in the absolute freshness of the matter than in the intelligence and industry with which she has brought together the facts already 

 given in scattered places. Here, at least, is a complete and a lifelike picture of the woman whose story is to be told. . . . Mrs. Ireland 

 preserves throughout the temper which should animate the ideal biographer. It has apparently never occurred to her to play the partisan, 

 or to don the robe of the advocate. She does not attempt to apportion blame between man and wife, but, speaking with the voice or 

 sympathetic common sense, she tells the tale almost wholly in the words of those to whom it relates. Where she judges r she judges with, 

 wisdom, yet with charity." — Standard. 



London: CHATTO & WINDUS, 214, Piccadilly, W. 



