MESSRS. WARD & DOWNEY’S LIST 
GOSSIP OF THE CENTURY: 
Personal and Traditional Memories — Social, Literary, Artistic. 
WITH MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED PORTRAITS. 
By tlie Jiutlxor of “njEMISU 
Two Vols., Royal 8vo, 1,050 pp. 42s. 
“The book is far too readable to be found much fault with. It is better conceived and better written than 
nine-tenths of its class. Our author appears to have had more or less acquaintance with nearly all the literary 
celebrities of the past half-century ; and about some of them — especially Rogers, Crabb Robinson, Harrison 
Ainsworth, and Bulwer Litton — he gives interesting reminiscences.” — The Atkenaum. 
“ In these two large and beautifully-printed volumes we have a great amount of the century’s best gossip. 
. . . . The two volumes are, in fact, a kind of encyclopaedia of gossip about monarchs, statesmen, 
doctors, writers, actors, singers, soldiers, men of fashion.” — The Daily News. 
“ Covering so wide a range, they (the volumes) should be of great value to the student of manners in the 
earlier half of the present century, the more as the old order is so rapidly changing.” — The Standard. 
“The copious illustrations, consisting principally of portraits of the celebrities mentioned, are full of 
interest.” — The Times. 
Angelica Kauffmann : A Biography. With a List of her Paintings and Drawings, and 
some Illustrative Reproductions thereof. By Frances A. Gerard, i Vol. 15s. Now Ready. 
Roundabout Recollections. By John Augustus O’Shea, Author of “ Leaves from 
the Life of a Special Correspondent.” 2 Vols. 21s. 
“ A book so lively in tone as these ‘ Roundabout Recollections ’ is not vouchsafed to us every day.” — 
Morning Post. 
A NEW BOOK OF POEMS. 
Fate in Arcadia and other Poems. By Edwin J. Ellis. With numerous Illustra- 
tions by the Author. 7s. 6d. 
A large-paper edition of 100 copies only at is. each, with 10 additional Illustrations, has been 
printed on hand-made paper. 
“ He who buys it will have obtained a wise comrade and an ever fascinating friend.” — The Bookman. 
THE TRIPLE ALLIANCE. 
Comedy and Comedians in Politics. By the Countess Hugo. 2s. 6d. 
“ The niece of Victor Hugo poses as the champion of Italy and the enemy of Signor Crispi. The book 
she has written is really a smart resume of contemporaneous Italian History." — Publishers' Circular. 
MRS. FENWICK MILLER'S BIOGRAPHICAL ESSAYS. 
In Ladies’ Company. Six Interesting Women. By Mrs. Fenwick Miller. Fcap. 5s. 
“ Mrs. Miller has given us a volume to be grateful for .” — Daily Chronicle. 
Club Cameos. Portraits of the Day. Demy 8vo, 2s. 6d. 
’Twixt Old Times and New. By Baron de Malortie. Demy 8vo. 3s. 6d. A 
New Edition. 
“ We may safely say that people who care for curious characters, military adventures, and the byways of 
histor>’ and politics, will find few dull pages in this \^ooV."—Spectaior. 
Picturesque London. By Percy Fitzgerald. With upwards of 100 Illustrations. 25s. 
“We are delighted to get a book like ‘Picturesque London,’ itself a triumph of the printer’s art.” — 
St. James's Gazette. 
“ It is all about the curiosities of London, the quaint old houses, and the odds and ends of archaeology and 
street lore .” — Daily News. ^ 
NEW NOVELS NOW READY. 
Honours Easy. By C. T. C. James, Author of “ Holy Wedlock.” 3 Vols. 
Miss Eyon, of Eyon Court. By Mrs. Macquoid. i Vol. 6s. 
The Incomplete Adventurer. By Tighe Hopkins, Author of “The Nugents of 
Carriconna.” i Vol. 6s. 
Ben Clough. By William Westall. i Vol. 6s. 
“ No modern novelist appears to be so well acquainted with the details of manufacturing and commercial 
life in Lancashire as Mr. William Manchester Examiner. 
In Fool’s Paradise. By H. B. Fi.nlay Knight, i Vol. 6s. 
“ Amongst the strongest of one-volume novels which have lately appeared. The faults are those common 
to a first work a certain lavishness of good things not necessary to the story, and a want of connection about 
the whole ."' — Daily News. ' 
^ NEW EDSTDONS. 
Miss Wentworth’s Idea. By W. E. Norris. 3s. 6d. 
A Bafling Quest. By Richard Dowling. 3s. 6d. 
WARD &, DOWNEY, York Street, Covent Garden. 
John Bale and Sons, Printers, 87-89, Gt. Titchfield Street, London, IV. 
