THE SNOWY RIVER SERIES. 
AT DAWN AND DUSK : POEMS. 
By Victor J. Daley. 
Third Thousand. With photogravure portrait., Crown 8vo , cloth gilt, gilt 
top, 5s. ; post free, 5s, 5d. 
, Sydney Morning* Herald.: “There is undeniable music in these poems 
ariO there is lavish .yet fastidious and artistic colouring. Verses that are touched 
with the true spirit of the old romances. Mr. Daley's book marks a distinct 
advance for Australian verse in ideality, in grace and polish, in the study of 
the rarer forms of verse, and in true faculty of poetic feeling and expression.” 
-n Australasian : “ft is unmistakable poetry . . . Mr. Daley has a 
gift of delicate construction — there is barely a crude idea or a thought rough y 
moulded in the book.” b * 
Queenslander: “The book, we repeat, is worthy of a place in our 
literature. Victor J. Daley is one of the singers Australia will remember.*' 
Sydney Daily Telegraph: “In ‘Lethe* Mr. Daley touches a dis 
tinutly major conception, the stern ami solemn splendour of his treatment of 
which will assuredly be recognised by the critics, who are kingmakers in the 
realms of poetry. Complete and perfectly-worded thought abounds plentifully.” 
RHYMES FROM THE MINES AND OTHER LINES. 
By Ki.vvaki) Dyson, Author of “A Golden Shanty.” 
Second Thousand. With, photogravure portrait and vignette title. Crown 800, 
cloth, gilt top , 5s. ; post free, 5s. 5d. 
The Academy: “ Here from within we have the Australian miner com- 
plete : the young miner, the old miner, the miner in luck, and the miner out of it 
the miner in love, and the miner in peril. Mr. Dyson knows it all. What we prize 
in Mr. Dyson, as in Mr. Lawson, is the presentation of some observed oddity of 
human nature.” 
Sydney Morning Herald: “Mr. Dyson has done good work in this 
book.” 
The Queenslander: “His work lias a ring that will always make it 
popular in Australia.” 
Melbourne Punch: “The mines have wanted a man to sing their 
stories, arid the hour and the man have arrived. The hour is now, and the man 
is Edward Dyson." 
Daily Telegraph : “Shows the traine i intelligence of an observant eye, a 
musical ear, and a mind and taste in sympathy with his subject.” 
WHERE THE DEAD MEN LIE AND OTHER POEMS. 
By Bakohoft Henry Boakk. 
Second Thousand. With photogravure portrait, and 8f' illustrations by Mahonv , 
Lambert , and Fischer. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt top, 5s. ; post free, 5 s. 5d. 
J. Lrunton Stkpiikns, in The Bulletin : “The contents of the volume 
amply justify their reproduction in collected form. The impression of native 
power is confirmed by reading the poems in bulk. Doake’s work is often praised 
for its local colour; but it lias something better than that. It has atmosphere— 
Australian atmosphere, that makes you feel the air of the place— breathe the 
breat h of the life.” 
Sydney Morning Herald : “There is no question, can be none, of the 
intimate faithfulness of every touch that gives us landscape, atmosphere." 
Sydney Daily Telegraph: “ An essential publication, full of human 
interest. It is among the most excellently-printed and illustrated books issued in 
Australia." 
The Australasian: “There is enough merit in these remains to show 
that lioake was, to say the least, a writer of premise, and to make us regret that 
his life was cut short in so sad and untimely a manner.” 
9 
