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The Yellow Book
Index to Publishers’ Announcements
Ward & Downey . . . . . .3
Hurst & Blackett. . . . . . . 4
Chatto & Windus . . . . . . 5
W. Heinemann . . . . . . . 6
Chapman
& Hall . . . . . . 7
Sampson Low & Co. . . . . 8
A. D. Innes
& Co. . . . . . . 9
Virtue & Co. . . . . . . . 10
Dean &
Son . . . . . . . 11
F. V. White & Co. . . . . . . 12
“The Studio”
. . . . . . 13
Keynote Series . . . . . . . 14
The Yellow Book—Vol. IV. R
The Yellow Book AdvertisementsBOOKS BY JOHN DAVIDSON.
A FULL AND TRUE ACCOUNT OF THE WONDERFUL MISSION
OF
EARL LAVENDER, WHICH LASTED ONE NIGHT AND ONE DAY. With a
History
of the Pursuit of Earl Lavender and Lord Brumm by Mrs. Scamler and Maud
Emblem.
1 vol., crown 8vo, price 6s. [Now
Ready.
PERFERVID: The Career of Ninian Jamieson. With Illustrations
by HARRY
FURNISS. A few copies of the first edition
still remain, crown 8vo, cloth gilt, price 6s. New
and Cheaper
Edition, post 8vo, cloth, 2s. 6d.
“Cleverly written. . . . The scenes between the Provost of
Mintern and Cosmo Mortimer, especially
the opening scene on the railway,
are extremely comical.”—The World.
“A More fascinating story for boys, or for those who are
not too old to remember their boyhood, has
rarely been
written.”—Glasgow Herald.
THE GREAT
MEN AND A PRACTICAL NOVELIST. With Illustrations
by EDWIN J. ELLIS. Crown
8vo, price 3s 6d.
“Deserves admiration for its fresh and living humour, its
racy freedom, its happy power to amuse and
enthral. . . . The stories have
a clean-cut, dramatic vigour and a plenitude of unforced wit. . . . For
pure
and simple delight few modern books have beaten Mr.
Davidson’s.”—Anti-Jacobin.
IN A MUSIC
HALL, and other Poems. Crown 8vo, price 5s.
“Poetically graceful and morally courageous.”—Glasgow Herald.
“Mr. Davidson is nothing if not bluntly original. . . . In
these sketches he shows himself frankly as
a realist in
poetry.”—Scottish Leader.
BAPTIST
LAKE. Square crown 8vo, buckram, price 3s. 6d.
“Abounds in felicities of expression, in clean-cut,
inclusive portraiture, and in descriptive passages of
singular beauty that
linger on the mind.”—Daily News.
“One of the best things in the book is the conception of
the ‘Middle Class Club.’ This is really a
regal effort. . . . The book is
full of good things of another kind, of poets’ good things, which are the
best
to be had.”—The Star.
“Mr. John Davidson can write nothing that is not clever.
The imagination of the poet glows in
every page. . . . Full of enchantment
and grace.”—The Speaker.
WARD & DOWNEY, LTD., 12 YORK BUILDINGS, ADELPHI, W.C.
TWO NEW VOLUMES OF POEMS.
BALLADS AND SONGS. By JOHN DAVIDSON. Fcap. 8vo,
buck-
ram, 5s. net. [This Edition now ready.
“They are thoroughly considered ; seen as solid wholes ;
seen not only in front, but round at the
back. . . . Both the ‘Ballad in
Blank Verse ‘ and the ‘Ballad of a Nun ‘ contain very strong morals very
stoutly driven home. In each the poet has made up his mind : he has a theory of
life, and presents that
theory to us under cover of a parable of
tremendous force.”— A. T. Q. C., in the Speaker.
“An abundant
vigour, a lusty vitality, is the mark of all his work. He does not versify for
the sake
of versifying, but because his intensity of feeling seeks an
outlet in the most vehement and concentrated
form of
expression.”—Daily Chronicle.
“We must acknowledge that Mr.
Davidson’s work in this volume displays great power. . . . There
is
strength and to spare.”—Times.
“Mr. Davidson’s new book is the best
thing he has done, and to say this is a good deal. . . . Here,
at all
events, is a poet who is never tame or dull : who, at all events, never leaves
us indifferent. His verse
speaks to the blood, and there are times when
‘the thing becomes a trumpet'”—Saturday Review.
ODES, AND OTHER
POEMS. BY WILLIAM WATSON. FCAP. 8vo,
buckram, 4s. 6d. net. [Third Edition
now ready.
“Classic sobriety of form, perspicuity of thought, smoothness
and richness of cadence, ingenuity and
resonance of epithet, a pointed
concision of style . . . these are the abiding characteristics of Mr.
Watson’s
verse. . . . He is a writer, indeed, who can write like
this.”—Daily Chronicle.
“He is one of the very few verse-writers of
the present day who can be relied on to give us only
his best work, and in
that work we are certain to find the rare qualities of simplicity, sanity, and
proper-
tion.”—Saturday Review.
“Good as Mr. Watson’s earlier
volumes were, there is, we think, in this volume a very marked
advance in
craftsmanship and freedom.”—Westminster Gazette.
“Mr. Watson
sustains easily in this volume the reputation he has gained of far the greatest
poet still
amongst us.”—Spectator.
“His new volume contains
five or six poems which are real additions to literature.”—Times.
LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD.
Hurst & Blackett’s Publications.
Hurst & Blackett’s Three-and-Sixpenny Series.
Crown 8vo, uniformly
bound, bevelled boards, each 3s. 6d.
ROBERT CARROLL. By the Author of
“Mistress Beatrice Cope,” etc.
MARY FENWICK’S DAUGHTER. By BEATRICE
WHITBY.
THUNDERBOLT: An Australian Bushranging Story. By the Rev.
J. MIDDLETON MACDONALD, Bengal Chaplain.
THE AWAKENING
OF MARY
FENWICK. By BEATRICE WHITBY.
TWO ENGLISH GIRLS. By MABEL
HART.
HIS LITTLE MOTHER. By the
Author of “John Halifax, Gentleman.”
MISTRESS BEATRICE COPE.
By M. LE CLERC.
A MARCH IN THE RANKS. By
JESSIE FOTHERGILL.
NINETTE. By the Author of “Vera,”
“Blue Roses,” &c.
A CROOKED PATH. By Mrs.
ALEXANDER.
ONE REASON WHY. By BEATRICE
WHITBY.
MAHME NOUSIE. By G. MANVILLE
FENN.
THE IDES OF MARCH. By G.
M. ROBINS.
PART OF THE PROPERTY. By
BEATRICE WHITBY.
CASPAR BROOKE’S DAUGHTER.
By ADELINE SERGEANT.
JANET. A Novel. By Mrs.
OLIPHANT.
A RAINBOW AT NIGHT. By the
Author of “Mistress Beatrice Cope.”
IN THE SUNTIME OF
HER
YOUTH. By BEATRICE WHITBY.
MISS BOUVERIE. By Mrs. MOLES-
WORTH.
FROM HARVEST TO HAYTIME.
By the Author of “Two English Girls.”
THE WINNING OF
MAY. By the
Author of “Dr. Edith Romney.”
SIR ANTHONY. By ADELINE SER-
GEANT.
EDNA LYALL’S NOVELS.
Each in One Volume, crown 8vo, 6s.
TO RIGHT THE
WRONG. DONOVAN. KNIGHT ERRANT. WON BY WAITING.
WE TWO. IN THE GOLDEN DAYS.
A HARDY NORSEMAN.
A SELECTION OF HURST & BLACKETT’S
Standard Library of Cheap Editions of Popular Modern
Works.
Each work complete in one Vol., 5s. (any of which can be
had separately), elegantly printed
and bound, and Illustrated by Sir. J.
Gilbert, Sir. J. E. Millais, Hunt, Leech, Poynter, Foster, Tenniel.
Sandys,
E. Hughes, Sambourne, J. Laslett Pot, etc.
By the Author of “John Halifax.”
JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN.
A WOMAN’S
THOUGHT ABOUT WOMEN.
A LIFE FOR A LIFE.
NOTHING NEW.
MISTRESS AND
MAID.
THE WOMAN’S KINGDOM.
CHRISTIAN’S MISTAKE.
A NOBLE LIFE.
THE UNKIND WORD.
A BRAVE LADY.
STUDIES FROM LIFE.
YOUNG
MRS. JARDINE.
HANNAH.
By the Author of “Sam Slick.”
NATURE AND HUMAN NATURE.
WISE SAWS AND
MODERN INSTANCES.
THE OLD JUDGE; or, Life in a Colony.
TRAITS OF
AMERICAN HUMOUR.
THE AMERICANS AT HOME.
By Dr. George Macdonald.
DAVID ELGINBROD.
ROBERT FALCONER.
ALEC
FORBES.
SIR GIBBIE.
By Mrs. Oliphant.
ADAM GRÆME. LAIRD OF NORLAW. A ROSE IN JUNE.
PHɶBE, JUNIOR.
AGNES. LIFE OF IRVING. IT WAS A LOVER AND HIS
LASS.
LONDON: HURST & BLACKETT, LTD., 13 GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET, W.
CHATTO & WINDUS’S NEW BOOKS.
NEW LIBRARY NOVELS.
A LONDON LEGEND. By JUSTIN
HUNTLY McCARTHY. 3 vols., crown 8vo,
15s. nett. [Feb. 1.
MR JERVIS ; a
Romance of the Indian Hills. By B. M. CROKER, Author of “Diana
Barrington,” &c. 3 vols., crown 8vo, 15s. nett.
THE GOOD SHIP “MOHOCK.” By W. CLARK RUSSELL, Author of “My Shipmate
Louise,” &c. 2vols., crown 8v0, 10s. nett.
THE
CHARLATAN : A Story of To-Day. By ROBERT BUCHANAN and HENRY
MURRAY. 2 vols., crown 8vo, 10s. nett.
BEYOND THE
DREAMS OF AVARICE. By WALTER BESANT, Author of “All
Sorts of Conditions of Men.” Crown 8vo, cloth extra,
6s. [Shortly.
PEN AND PENCIL SKETCHES BY HENRY STACY MARKS, R.A. With 4
Photogravure Plates and 126 Facsimiles. 2 vols., demy 8vo,
cloth extra, 32s.
THE LIFE AND INVENTIONS OF THOMAS A. EDISON. By W. K. L. and
ANTONIA DICKSON. With 200 Illustrations by R. F. OUTCALT,
W. F. RICALTON, &c. Demy
4to, cloth gilt, 18s.
MEMOIRS OF THE DUCHESSE DE
GONTAUT (Gouvernante to the Children of
France during the Restoration), 1773-1836. Translated from
the French by Mrs. J. W. DAVIS.
With Photogravure Frontispieces. 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth
extra, 21s.
NEW THREE-AND-SIXPENNY NOVELS. THE MINOR CHORD : a
Story of a Prima Donna. By J. MITCHELL CHAPPLE.
THE PHANTOM DEATH, &c.
By W. CLARK RUSSELL. With a Frontispiece by
H. C. SEPPINGS WRIGHT.
PUDD’NHEAD WILSON. By MARK
TWAIN. With Portrait, and 6 Illustrations.
MADAME SANS-GÉNE. By E.
LEPELLETIER. A Romance founded on the Play
by Sardou and Moreau. Translated by J. A. J. DE VILLIERS.
[ Shortly.
THE
BELL-RINGER OF ANGEL’S, &c. By BRET HARTE. With 39 Illustratons
by A. S. BOYD, G. D. ARMOUR, DUDLEY HARDY, &c.
VERNON’S AUNT : being the Oriental Experiences of Miss Lavinia Moffat. By
SARA JEANNETTE DUNCAN ( Mrs. EVERARD COTES). With 47
Illustrations by HAL HURST.
RENSHAW FANNING’S QUEST : a Tale of the High
Veldt. By BERTRAM
MITFORD, Author of “The Gun-Runner,” “The Luck of Gerard
Ridgeley,” “The King’s
Assegai,” &c. With a Frontispiece by STANLEY L.
WOOD.
LOURDES. By EMILE ZOLA, Author of “The Downfall,” “The Dream,” “Money,”
and “Dr. Pascal.” Translated by E. A. VIZETELLY.
ROMANCES OF THE OLD SERAGLIO. By H. N. CRELLIN, Author of “Tales of
the Caliph.” With 28 Illustrations by STANLEY L. WOOD.
HIS VANISHED STAR. By CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK, Author of “The
Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains.”
SAINT ANN’S. By
W. E. NORRIS, Author of “The Rogue.”
THE ONE TOO MANY. By E. LYNN LINTON,
Author of “Patricia Kemball.”
CHRISTINA CHARD. By Mrs. CAMPBELL PRAED. With
a Frontispiece.
TWO OFFENDERS. By OUIDA, Author of “Under Two Flags.”
ORCHARD DAMEREL. By ALAN ST. AUBYN. [Shortly.
JACK DOYLE’S
DAUGHTER. By R. E. FRANCILLON. [Shortly.
DOROTHY DOUBLE.
By G. A. HENTY. [Shortly.
LONDON : CHATTO & WINDUS, 214 PICCADILLY, W.
Mr. Wm. Heinemann’s List.
WORKS OF ART.
MASTERPIECES OF GREEK SCULPTURE. A
Series of Essays
in the History of Art. By ADOLF FURTWANGLER. Authorised
Translation. Edited
by EUGENE SELLERS. Large 4to. With Nineteen Full-page
Photogravure Plates
and Two Hundred Text Illustrations. Price £3 3s. net.
Also an EDITION DE LUXE (limited to
Fifty Copies) printed on Japanese
Vellum, 2 vols.
Price £10 10s. net.
REMBRANDT.
Seventeen of his Masterpieces, from the Collection of
his Pictures in the Cassel Gallery. Reproduced in
Photogravure by the Berlin Photo-
graphic Company. Printed on the finest Japanese paper. With
an Essay by
FREDERICK WEDMORE. In Large Portfolio, 27 1/2 in. by 20 in.
Numbered Sets
(only 25) £21 net, others £12 12s. net.
REMBRANDT :
His Life, his Work, and his Times. By EMILE MICHEL.
Translated by FLORENCE
SIMMONDS, Edited by FREDERICK WEDMORE. A New
Edition to be completed in Sixteen Parts, each containing
Five Plates in Photogravure
and Colour. Parts I., II., III., and IV. are ready, price
2s. 6d. each net.
HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY.
THE STORY OF A THRONE :
Catherine II. of Russia. From the
French of K. WALISZEWSKI. With a Portrait. 2 vols. demy
8vo, 28s.
ALEXANDER THE THIRD. By CHARLES LOWE, M.A., Author of
“Prince Bismarck : an Historical Biography.” With Portrait.
Crown 8vo, 6s.
EDMOND AND JULES DE GONCOURT. With Letters and
Leaves from their Journals. Selected and Edited. With New
and Original Portriats.
2 vols. demy 8vo, 32s.
MEMOIRS OF THE PRINCE DE
JOINVILLE. (Vieux Souvenirs.)
Translated from the French by Lady MARY LOYD. With many
Illustrations from
Drawings by the Author. Demy 8vo, 15s. net.
NAPOLEON
AND THE FAIR SEX. (Napoléon et les Femmes.)
Translated from the French of FREDERIC MASSON. With 10
Portraits. Demy 8vo,
15s. net.
Uniformly bound. SHORT STORIES. Price 3s. 6d. each.
G. S. Street.
EPISODES. By the Author of
“The
Autobiography of a Boy.”
HUBERT CRACKENTHORPE.
WRECKAGE. Seven Studies.
2nd
Edition.
HENRY HARLAND.
MADEMOISELLE MISS, and other
Stories.
WOLCOTT BALESTIER.
THE AVERAGE WOMAN. With
a Biographical Sketch by HENRY JAMES.
FRANÇOIS COPPÉE.
BLESSED ARE THE POOR.
Translated by WINIFRED HEATON. With
an Introduction by T. P. O’CONNOR.
EMILE ZOLA.
THE ATTACK ON THE MILL.
With an
Essay on the Short Stories of M.
ZOLA, by EDMUND GOSSE.
* This volume is also issued with 26
Illustrations by E.
COURBOIN, five of which
are in colours. Small 4to, cloth, 5s.
LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN, 21 BEDFORD STRET, W.C.
Chapman & Hall’s New Books.
Woman in India. By MARY FRANCES BILLINGTON. With an Introduc-
tion by the MARCHIONESS of DUFFERIN and AVA, C.I.
Illustrated by H. Johnson and
others. Dedicated by permission to H.R.H. the Duchess of
Connaught. Demy 8vo, 14s.
The Marches of Wales : Notes and Impressions on
the Welsh
Borders, from the Severn Sea to the Sands o’ Dee. By
CHARLES G. HARPER. With
114 Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 16s.
The History of Art
in Primitive Greece (Mycenian). By
GEORGES PERROT and CHARLES CHIPIEZ. With 553 Illustrations.
2 vols. imperial
8vo, 42s.
The Adventures of Oliver Twist. By CHARLES
DICKENS. With
26 Water-Colour Drawings by George Cruikshank. An Édition
de Luxe, printed on
superfine paper. Bound in half-morocco, imperial 8vo, 42s.
net.
The Migration of British Birds : including their Post-Glacial
Emigration as Traced by the Application of a New Law of
Dispersal. By CHARLES
DIXON. With Maps. Crown 8vo. [Ready in January.
The
Progress of Science : Its Origin, Course, Promoters, and
Results. By V. MARMERY. Demy 8vo. [In January.
Essays,
Speculative and Suggestive. By JOHN ADDINGTON
SYMONDS. New Edition. Demy 8vo, 9s.
NEW NOVELS at 3s. 6d.
A Black Squire. By Mrs. ALFRED HUNT.
The Mystery
of the Patrician Club. By ALBERT D. VANDAM.
A New Edition. Crown 8vo.
The Star of Fortune : A
Story of the Indian Mutiny. By J. E.
MUDDOCK. A NEw Edition. Crown 8vo.
Clove Pink : A
Study from Memory. By ANNA C. STEELE, Author of
“Gardenhurst,” &c. Second Edition. Crown 8vo.
‘Midst the Wild Carpathians. By MAURUS JOKAI. Translated by
R. NISBET BAIN. A New Edition. Crown 8vo.
A Human
Document. By W. H. MALLOCK. Sixth Thousand.
Crown 8vo.
GEORGE MEREDITH’S WORKS.
A Uniform Edition. Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d. each.
Lord
Ormont and his Aminta.
One of our Conquerors.
Diana of the
Crossways.
Evan Harrington.
The Ordeal of Richard Feverel.
The
Adventures of Harry Richmond.
Sandra Belloni.
Vittoria.
Rhoda
Fleming.
Beauchamp’s Career.
The Egoist.
The Shavings of Shagpat
; and Farina.
The 6s. Edition is also to be had.
LONDON: CHAPMAN & HALL, LIMITED.
SCRIBNER’S MAGAZINE
FOR 1895.
THE constantly widening connection of “Scribner’s Magazine” in both literary and artistic work will be drawn upon during the coming year in novel and stimulating directions to make each issue represent the highest type of a progressive and popular American Magazine.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
The Amazing Marriage,
A NEW SERIAL NOVEL by GEORGE MEREDITH, will BEGIN in
the January Number of “SCRIBNER.”
The History of the Last Quarter-Century in the United States
Will be an important feature, extending over a number of
months.
To undertake the preparation of this history the
Magazine has been fortunate in securing
President E BENJAMIN ANDREWS, of Brown University, who
unites the closest study
of American history with the broad grasp of a man
of affairs. He possesses especially the fresh
point of view and
picturesque narrative which mean everything in a work of this character.
The Story of a Play
Will be a short novel by WILLIAM D. HOWELLS, the
experience of young playwright,
and one of Mr. Howell’s most delightful
pictures of New York life in a new field.
Another undertaking of interest in quite a different field
will be ROBERT GRANT’S
Papers on the Practical Problems of Life, under
the title of
“The Art of Living.”
“The Income.” “The
Commissariat.” “The Summer Problem.”
“The Dwelling.” “Education.” “Married
and Single Life.”
“The Case of Man” AND “The Case of Woman.”
“American Party Politics”
Will be a series of three articles by NOAH
BROOKS, dealing with the history of party
politic with the clearness,
entertaining quality and personal reminiscences of a man who has been
for
years a leading journalist and student of the subject.
No attempt will be made to give here a detailed announcement of the miscellaneous
articles which will
give permanence and lively interest to the numbers of
the Magazine for 1895. By their varied suggestiveness
and individuality
they will maintain its traditions of excellence and of close interest in the
activities of
contemporary life. But among the papers which will appear in
early numbers of the year may be especially
mentioned: Life at the Athletic
Clubs, by DUNCAN EDWARDS, illustrated by C. D. Gibson ; Country
and Hunt
Clubs, by EDWARDS S. MARTIN, illustrated ; A Tuscan Shrine, by Mrs. EDITH
WHARTON,
with superb illustrations recording an important artistic
discovery; Old-fashioned Gardens, by Mrs.
ALICE MORSE EARL, abundantly
illustrated from the finest of our old gardens; The Portraits of J. M.
W.
Turner, by COSMO MONKHOUSE; Coney Island, by JULIAN RALPH, illustrated by Henry
McCarter;
a story of Labrador, by GILBERT PARKER, illustrated by Albery
Lynch; Country Roads, written and
illustrated by FRANK FRENCH, the
well-known engraver; Sawney’s Deer-lick, by CHARLES D. LANIER,
illustrated
by A. B. Frost.
LONDON: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & COMPANY, LIMITED,
ST. DUNSTAN’S HOUSE,
FETTER LANE, FLEET STREET, E.C.
Some Books published by
A. D. INNES & CO.
VERSE TRANSLATIONS FROM GREEK AND LATIN POETS.
By ARTHUR D. INNES, M.A.
Large post 8vo, buckram, gilt top, 5s. net.
“A finely varied classical garland. . . . We would fain have a whole book of
Virgil from a trans-
lator who renders ‘Inter se coiisse viros et cernere
ferro’ by ‘Crash in the stern arbitrament of steel.’ . . .
Will not Mr.
Innes give us something more ambitious?”—National
Observer, October 20, 1894.
“It is not every lover of the classics who can be his own translator of them ; it
is not every translator
who can be the publisher of his own translations.
But Mr. Innes can, and he has admirably performed
both
functions.”—Daily Chronicle.
SEERS AND SINGERS. A Study of Five English Poets (BROWNING,
TENNYSON,
WORDSWORTH, MATTHEW ARNOLD, and Mrs. BROWNING). By ARTHUR
D. INNES, M.A.
Cloth antique extra, gilt top, 5s.
“Never were great poets and their gifts to us dealt with in a more reverential
and yet discriminating
fashion. Comments and criticisms are alike delicate
and suggestive. All followers of the great five
should possess this little
book, whose dainty get up is still its least charm.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
SOCIETY IN CHINA. By ROBERT H. DOUGLAS. An Account of the
Everyday Life of
the Chinese People: Social, Political, and Religious. Demy 8vo,
cloth, with
22 Illustrations. Second Edition. Price 16s.
“Not only does Mr. Douglas’s book supply a complete conspectus of the polity, institutions, manners, and sentiments of this petrified race, but it reviews clearly the history of foreign relations with China, and points a moral which British diplomatists would do well to lay to heart in future difficulties with China.” Times.
Novels.
By STANLEY WEYMAN.
MY LADY ROTHA. A Romance of the Thirty Years’ War. With 8
Illustrations by
JOHN WILLIAMSON. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s. 28th Thousand.
“Baron DE BOOK-WORMS says: “Mr. Stanley Weyman, Author of ‘A Gentleman of France’ and ‘Under the Red Robe,’ has not yet, excellent as were both these works, written anything so powerful, so artistic, so exciting, and so all-engrossing as ‘My Lady Rotha.'”—Punch.
By ANTHONY HOPE.
HALF A HERO. Fourth Edition.
Crown 8vo, cloth, 6s.
“The book is delightful to read, and an excellent piece of work.”—Standard.
MR. WITT’S WIDOW. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. 6d.
“In truth a brilliant little tale.”—Times.
SPORT ROYAL. Small crown 8vo, cloth, 2s.
“Among these eleven stories—frivolous, weird, humorous, or sparkling—there is no room for monotony or tedium.”—Athenæum.
By ROBERT BLATCHFORD.
A SON OF THE FORGE. Crown
8vo, cloth, 6s.
“A rattling good story.”—Literary World.
By F. CUNNINGHAM. BROOMIEBURN : Border Sketches. Crown 8vo, buckram, gilt top, 3s. 6d.
“Will prove delightful reading.”—Morning Post.
LONDON: A. D. INNES & CO., 31 & 32 BEDFORD STREET, STRAND.
A large and beautiful Copyright Etching after Sir FREDERIC
LEIGHTON
presented to all Purchasers of THE ART JOURNAL,
1895.
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT.
In order still further to increase the large circulation of THE ART JOURNAL,
the Proprietors have decided to PRESENT to all Annual Subscribers for
1895 a carefully printed and good impression on specially made Etching
Paper of a
VALUABLE ORIGINAL COPYRIGHT ETCHING,
now being etched by
the very competent Artist, G. A. MANCHON, of the
beautiful and decorative
Painting,
“HIT,”
By Sir Frederic Leighton, Bart.,
PRESIDENT OF
THE ROYAL ACADEMY.
The Etching will be of large dimensions, having an engraved surface of 21 x 16
in.
suitable for frames 30 1/2 x 22 1/2 in.
The scheme for the diffusion of a thoroughly good work of Art has the express
sanction of the President of the Royal Academy, who has kindly promised to
examine
the progress of the etching, and to sign the Artist’s Proofs, on
its completion to his
satisfaction
For further particulars see announcement in the January
Number of THE ART JOURNAL,
or Prospectus, to be obtained from the
Publishers.
LONDON: J. S. VIRTUE & CO., LTD., 26 IVY LANE, PATERNOSTER ROW. E.C.
Dean & Son’s List.
Under the Immediate Patronage of H.R.H. the
Duchess of Fife, H.I.M. the
Empress of
Germany, Right Hon. the Countess
of Aberdeen.
SECOND EDITION.
BABY’S SOUVENIR. Most
handsomely bound, gilt edges, &c., 10s. 6d.
A most charming book to preserve the Record of
a
Child’s Life from its Birth to its Majority, con-
taining Twenty-three
Coloured and other Illustra-
tions, printed in Facsimile of the Original
Aqua-
relles of F. M. BRUNDAGE. The following are a
few of the
subjects, with spaces left for filling in
details :
NAME OF BABY.
THE LOCK OF HAIR.
BABY’S FIRST WORD.
BABY’S FIRST TOOTH.
BABY’S
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KEYNOTES.
By GEORGE EGERTON.
Sixth Edition now ready.
“A rich, passionate temperament vibrates through every line. . . . We have met
nothing so lovely in its tenderness since Mr. Kipling’s ‘Without Benefit
of Clergy.'”
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up-to-date thoughts that
shake mankind.”—Daily
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A CHILD OF THE AGE.
By FRANCIS ADAMS.
Ready.
“The love incident is exquisite, and exquisitely told. ‘Rosy’ lives ; her
emotions
stir us. . . . One is grateful for the artistic revelation of the
sweet wormwood of pain.”
Saturday Review.
There is a bloom of romance upon their story which recalls Lucy and Richard
Feverel. . . . It is rarely that a novelist is able to suffuse his story with
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book.”—Realm.
“Only a man of big talent could have produced it.”—Literary World.
“It comes recognizably near to great excellence.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
“Possesses a depth and clearness of insight, a delicacy of touch, and a
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writer.”—Scotsman.
LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD.
The Keynote Series.
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THE DANCING FAUN.
By FLORENCE FARR.
Ready.
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“No one can deny its freshness and wit. Indeed there are things in it here
and
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of reputation.”
Woman.
“There is a lurid power in the very unreality of the story. One does not
quite
understand how Lady Geraldine worked herself up to shooting her
lover, but when she
has done it, the description of what passes through her
mind is magnificent.”—Athenæum
“As a work of art the book has the merit of brevity and smart writing ; while the
dénouement is skilfully prepared, and comes as a
surprise. If the book had been intended
as a satire on the ‘new woman’ sort
of literature, it would have been most brilliant ; but
assuming it to be
written in earnest, we can heartily praise the form of its construction
without agreeing with the sentiments expressed.”—St.
James’s Gazette.
“Shows considerable power and aptitude.”—Saturday Review.
THE GREAT GOD PAN AND THE
INMOST LIGHT.
By ARTHUR MACHEN.
Ready.
“The supernatural element is utilized with extraordinary power and effectiveness
in
both these blood-chilling masterpieces.”—Daily Telegraph.
“Since Mr. Stevenson played with the crucibles of Science in ‘Dr. Jekyll and
Mr.
Hyde,’ we have not encountered a more successful experiment of the sort.”
Pall Mall Gazette.
“Nothing more striking or more skilful than this book has been produced in the
way
of what one may call Borderland fiction since Mr. Stevenson’s
indefatigable Brownies
gave the world ‘Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde.'”—Glasgow Herald.
“Capital reading, we should say, for ghosts and vampires in their leisure moments.”
Daily Chronicle.
“For sheer gruesome horror Mr. Machen’s story surpasses anything that has
been
published for a long time.”—Scotsman.
LONDON : JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD.
The Keynote Series.
Each Volume with specially
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POOR FOLK.
Translated from the Russian of F. DOSTOIEVSKY.
By LENA
MILMAN.
WITH A PREFACE BY GEORGE MOORE.
Ready.
“These things seem small, but in the hands of Dostoievsky they make a work
of
genius.”—Black and White.
“One of the most pathetic things in literature, heart-rending, just because
its
tragedy is so repressed.”—Bookman.
“As to novels, the very finest I have read of late or for long is ‘Poor Folk,’
by
Fedor Dostoievsky, translated by Miss Lena Milman.”—Truth.
“Dostoievsky’s novel has met with that rare advantage, a really good translator.”—
Queen.
“This admirable translation of a great author.”—Liverpool Mercury.
“‘Poor Folk’ Englished does not read like a translation—indubitably a
master-
piece.”—Literary World.
DISCORDS.
By GEORGE EGERTON.
Ready.
“The student who would keep his finger on the pulse of the time cannot afford
to
ignore it.”—Speaker.
“It is another note in the great chorus of revolt . . . on the whole clearer,
more
eloquent, and braver than almost any I have yet heard.”—T.P.
(“Book of the Week”),
Weekly Sun, December 30.
“These masterly word sketches.”—Daily Telegraph.
“It will be called immoral, it may even be preached against in actual pulpits . .
.
but here it is, and must be scanned, a lurid picture of the seamy side,
painted in colours
mixed with tears and blood.”—Realm.
“On the whole we congratulate George Egerton.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
LONDON : JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD.
MLA citation:
Publishers’ Announcements. Advertisement. The Yellow Book vol. 4, January 1895, pp. 1-16. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanity, 2019. https://1890s.ca/YBV4_advertisements/