AUSTRALIA TO ENGLAND: A POEM. 
By John Farrell. 
Booklet , in envelope ready for posting Is.; post free , Is. Id. 
The Athenseum : “A poem at once stronger and more restrained than 
Australian poetry is wont to be.” 
SWEETHEART MINE : LYRICS OF LOVE AND 
FRIENDSHIP. 
By J. Le Gay Brereton. 
Crown Soo, 2s. Gd. A few copies on large paper , Us. 
THE BILLY BOILS SERIES, 
WHILE THE BILLY BOILS : AUSTRALIAN STORIES 
By Henry Lawson. 
Author of “In the Days when the World, was Wide.” 
Tenth Thousand. With eight plates and vignette title by F. P. Mahony. 
Crown 8 vo, cloth, 3s. Gd. ; paper cover , 2s. Gd. (postage, Gd.) 
The Academy : “ A book of honest, direct, sympathetic, humorous writing 
about Australia from within is worth a library of travellers’ tales. Mr. Lawson 
shows us what living in the bush really means. The result is a real book— a book 
in a hundred, llis language is terse, supple, and richly idiomatic.” 
A. Patciustt Martin, in Literature (London): “A book which Mrs. 
Campbell Praed, the Australian novelist, assured me made her f el that all she 
had written of bush life was pale and ineffective.’ 5 
The Spectator: “In these days when /hort, dramatic stories are eagerly 
looked for, it is strange that one we would venture to call the greatest Australian 
writer should be practically unknown in England. Short stories, but biting into 
the very heart of the bushman’s life, ruthless in truth, extraordinarily dramatic, 
and pathetically uneven. . . . .” 
The Times: “A collection of short and vigorous studies and stories of 
Australian life and character. A little in Bret Harte’s manner, crossed, perhaps, 
with that of Guy de Maupassant.” 
THE MUTINEER : A Romance of Pitcairn Island. 
By Louis Becke and Walter Jeffery. 
New Edition. Crown Svo, cloth, 3s. Gd . ; paper cover , 2s. Gd. (postage, Gd.) 
The Scotsman : “The charm of tho description of Tahitian scenery, the 
interest of the savage mythology and customs, the line simplicity and trustfulness 
of the native character as contrasted with the jealousies and disagreements of the 
mutineers, all combine to make an impressive story. The story is so true that it 
will prove especially welcome.” 
Saturday Review: “So skilfully is fact woven up with fiction that most 
readers will feel inclined to accept the narrative as a truthful record of actual 
events. The authors of this volume have produced a story of enduring interest.” 
Daily Mail : “All the circumstances of the ‘Mutiny of the Bounty ' are 
thrillingly described in this admirably-written book.” 
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