Chapter 30

THE END

THE END

THE END

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ANNE HEREFORD. Fifty-fifth Thousand.

DENE HOLLOW. Sixtieth Thousand.

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A LIFE’S SECRET. Sixty-fifth Thousand.

THE HOUSE OF HALLIWELL. Fifteenth Thousand.

POMEROY ABBEY. Forty-eighth Thousand.

COURT NETHERLEIGH. Forty-sixth Thousand.

THE MASTER OF GREYLANDS. Fiftieth Thousand.

THE STORY OF CHARLES STRANGE. Fifteenth Thousand.

ASHLEY. Fifteenth Thousand.

BESSY RANE. Forty-second Thousand.

JOHNNY LUDLOW. Third Series. Twenty-third Thousand.

ORVILLE COLLEGE. Thirty-eighth Thousand.

LADY GRACE. Twenty-first Thousand.

ADAM GRAINGER. Fifteenth Thousand.

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BARBARA HEATHCOTE’S TRIAL.20th Thousand.

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ROBERT ORD’S ATONEMENT.17th Thousand.

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WOOED AND MARRIED.21st Thousand.

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HERIOT’S CHOICE.18th Thousand.

MORNING POST.—“Deserves to be extensively known and read.... Will doubtless find as many admirers as readers.”

QUEENIE’S WHIM.18th Thousand.

GUARDIAN.—“A thoroughly good and wholesome story.”

MARY ST. JOHN.16th Thousand.

JOHN BULL.—“The story is a simple one, but told with much grace and unaffected pathos.”

NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS.19th Thousand.

NEW YORK HOME JOURNAL.—“One of the sweetest, daintiest, and most interesting of the season’s publications.“

FOR LILIAS.14th Thousand.

VANITY FAIR.—“A simple, earnest, and withal very interesting story; well conceived, carefully worked out, and sympathetically told.”

UNCLE MAX.15th Thousand.

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ONLY THE GOVERNESS.15th Thousand.

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LOVER OR FRIEND?12th Thousand.

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BASIL LYNDHURST.10th Thousand.

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SIR GODFREY’S GRAND-DAUGHTERS.8th Thousand.

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THE OLD, OLD STORY.9th Thousand.

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THE MISTRESS OF BRAE FARM.10th Thousand.

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THEMETTLE OF THE PASTURE

THE

METTLE OF THE PASTURE

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MIRANDA OF THE BALCONY

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YOUNG APRIL

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YOUNG APRIL

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VALDA HÂNEMTHE ROMANCE OF A TURKISH HARÎM

VALDA HÂNEMTHE ROMANCE OF A TURKISH HARÎM

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THE ROMANCE OF A TURKISH HARÎM

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By WINSTON CHURCHILLAUTHOR OF “THE CELEBRITY,” ETC. ETC.WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BYCARLTON T. CHAPMANANDMALCOLM FRASERUpwards of 130,000 Copies have been sold in America sincepublication.

By WINSTON CHURCHILLAUTHOR OF “THE CELEBRITY,” ETC. ETC.WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BYCARLTON T. CHAPMANANDMALCOLM FRASERUpwards of 130,000 Copies have been sold in America sincepublication.

By WINSTON CHURCHILL

AUTHOR OF “THE CELEBRITY,” ETC. ETC.

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY

CARLTON T. CHAPMANANDMALCOLM FRASER

Upwards of 130,000 Copies have been sold in America since

publication.

BOOKMAN.—“A spirited tale of wandering and adventure, with a wholesome love story to keep it fresh and sweet and provide for it a happy ending.”

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ONE OF THE GRENVILLESBy SYDNEY ROYSE LYSAGHTAUTHOR OF “THE MARPLOT”

ONE OF THE GRENVILLESBy SYDNEY ROYSE LYSAGHTAUTHOR OF “THE MARPLOT”

ONE OF THE GRENVILLES

By SYDNEY ROYSE LYSAGHT

AUTHOR OF “THE MARPLOT”

GUARDIAN.—“We shall tell no more of Mr. Lysaght’s clever and original tale, contenting ourselves with heartily recommending it to any on the look-out for a really good and absorbing story.”

SATURDAY REVIEW.—“Mr. Sydney Lysaght should have a future before him among writers of fiction.One of the Grenvillesis full of interest.”

BOOKMAN.—“Is so high above the average of novels that its readers will want to urge on the writer a more frequent exercise of his powers.”

ACADEMY.—“There is freshness and distinction aboutOne of the Grenvilles.... Both for its characters and setting, and for its author’s pleasant wit, this is a novel to read.”

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“Since he wroteThe Marplot, Mr. Lysaght has degenerated neither in freshness, originality, nor sense of humour.”

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THE GAME AND THE CANDLEBy RHODA BROUGHTON

THE GAME AND THE CANDLEBy RHODA BROUGHTON

THE GAME AND THE CANDLE

By RHODA BROUGHTON

OBSERVER.—“The story is an excellent one.... Miss Rhoda Broughton well maintains her place among our novelists as one capable of telling a quiet yet deeply interesting story of human passions.”

SPECTATOR.—“The book is extremely clever.”

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THETREASURY OFFICER’S WOOING

THETREASURY OFFICER’S WOOING

THE

TREASURY OFFICER’S WOOING

By CECIL LOWIS

GUARDIAN.—“An exceedingly well-written, pleasant volume.... Entirely enjoyable.”

LITERATURE.—“A capital picture of official life in Burma.”

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“Emphatically of a nature to make us ask for more from the same source.... Those who appreciate a story without any sensational incidents, and written with keen observation and great distinction of style, will find it delightful reading.... Cannot fail to please its readers.”

SPECTATOR.—“Mr. Lowis’s story is pleasant to read in more senses than one. It is not only clever and wholesome, but printed in a type so large and clear as to reconcile us to the thickness of the volume.”

ATHENÆUM.—“The author writes in a clear, attractive style, and succeeds in maintaining the reader’s interest from the first page to the last.”

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OFF THE HIGH ROADBy ELEANOR C. PRICEAUTHOR OF “YOUNG DENYS,” “IN THE LION’S MOUTH,“ ETC.

OFF THE HIGH ROADBy ELEANOR C. PRICEAUTHOR OF “YOUNG DENYS,” “IN THE LION’S MOUTH,“ ETC.

OFF THE HIGH ROAD

By ELEANOR C. PRICE

AUTHOR OF “YOUNG DENYS,” “IN THE LION’S MOUTH,“ ETC.

ATHENÆUM.—“A pleasant tale.”

SPEAKER.—“A charming bit of social comedy, tinged with just a suspicion of melodrama.... The atmosphere of the story is so bright and genial that we part from it with regret.”

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“At once ingenious, symmetrical, and entertaining.... Miss Price’s fascinating romance.”

LITERATURE.—“A simple, but very pleasant story.”

SPECTATOR.—“The notion of an orphan heiress, the daughter of an Earl, and the cynosure of two London seasons, flying precipitately from her guardians, who are endeavouring to force her into a match with a man she detests, and hiding herself under an assumed name in a remote rural district of the Midlands, is an excellent motive in itself, and gains greatly from the charm and delicacy of Miss Price’s handling.”

ACADEMY.—“A quiet country book in the main, with more emotion than action, and continuous interest.”

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THE PRIDE OF JENNICOBEING A MEMOIR OFCAPTAIN BASIL JENNICOBy EGERTON CASTLE

THE PRIDE OF JENNICOBEING A MEMOIR OFCAPTAIN BASIL JENNICOBy EGERTON CASTLE

THE PRIDE OF JENNICO

BEING A MEMOIR OF

CAPTAIN BASIL JENNICO

By EGERTON CASTLE

ACADEMY.—“A capital romance.”

COUNTRY LIFE.—“This story of the later years of the eighteenth century will rank high in literature. It is a fine and spirited romance set in a slight but elegant and accurate frame of history. The book itself has a peculiar and individual charm by virtue of the stately language in which it is written.... It is stately, polished, and full of imaginative force.”

LIVERPOOL DAILY MERCURY.—“The book is written in a strong and terse style of diction with a swift and vivid descriptive touch. In its grasp of character and the dramatic nature of its plot it is one of the best novels of its kind since Stevenson’sPrince Otto.”

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Crown 8vo. 6s.

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STORIES FROM AMERICAN HISTORYBUCCANEERS AND PIRATESOF OUR COASTSBy FRANK R. STOCKTONAUTHOR OF “RUDDER GRANGE”WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BYGEORGE VARIANANDB. WEST CLINEDINST

STORIES FROM AMERICAN HISTORYBUCCANEERS AND PIRATESOF OUR COASTSBy FRANK R. STOCKTONAUTHOR OF “RUDDER GRANGE”WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BYGEORGE VARIANANDB. WEST CLINEDINST

STORIES FROM AMERICAN HISTORY

BUCCANEERS AND PIRATES

OF OUR COASTS

By FRANK R. STOCKTON

AUTHOR OF “RUDDER GRANGE”

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY

GEORGE VARIANANDB. WEST CLINEDINST

PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“A fine book.... They are exciting reading.... Eminently informing.”

ACADEMY.—“Mr. Frank R. Stockton is always interesting, whether he writes for young or old.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

HER MEMORYBy MAARTEN MAARTENSAUTHOR OF “MY LADY NOBODY,” ETC.

HER MEMORYBy MAARTEN MAARTENSAUTHOR OF “MY LADY NOBODY,” ETC.

HER MEMORY

By MAARTEN MAARTENS

AUTHOR OF “MY LADY NOBODY,” ETC.

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“Full of the quiet grace and literary excellence which we have now learnt to associate with the author.”

DAILY NEWS.—“An interesting and characteristic example of this writer’s manner. It possesses his sobriety of tone and treatment, his limpidity and minuteness of touch, his keenness of observation.... The book abounds in clever character sketches.... It is very good.”

ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.—“There is something peculiarly fascinating in Mr. Maarten Maartens’s new story. It is one of those exquisitely told tales, not unhappy, nor tragic, yet not exactly ‘happy,’ but full of the pain—as a philosopher has put it—that one prefers, which are read, when the reader is in the right mood, with, at least, a subdued sense of tears, tears of pleasure.”

ATHENÆUM.—“Maarten Maartens has never written a brighter social story, and it has higher qualities than brightness.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

THEADVENTURES OF FRANCOISFoundling, Thief, Juggler, and Fencing Masterduring the French RevolutionBy S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D.AUTHOR OF “HUGH WYNNE,” ETC.

THEADVENTURES OF FRANCOISFoundling, Thief, Juggler, and Fencing Masterduring the French RevolutionBy S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D.AUTHOR OF “HUGH WYNNE,” ETC.

THE

ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS

Foundling, Thief, Juggler, and Fencing Master

during the French Revolution

By S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D.

AUTHOR OF “HUGH WYNNE,” ETC.

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“It is delightfully entertaining throughout, and throws much instructive light upon certain subordinate phases of the great popular upheaval that convulsed France between 1788 and 1794.... Recounted with unflagging vivacity and inexhaustible good humour.”

DAILY MAIL.—“This lively piece of imagination is animated throughout by strong human interest and novel incident.”

Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.

CHARACTERISTICSBy S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D. LL.D. (Harvard)AUTHOR OF “THE ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS”

CHARACTERISTICSBy S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D. LL.D. (Harvard)AUTHOR OF “THE ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS”

CHARACTERISTICS

By S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D. LL.D. (Harvard)

AUTHOR OF “THE ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS”

SPECTATOR.—“Very well worth reading.”

ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.—“This charming book.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

“WAR TO THE KNIFE”OrTANGATA MAORIBy ROLF BOLDREWOOD

“WAR TO THE KNIFE”OrTANGATA MAORIBy ROLF BOLDREWOOD

“WAR TO THE KNIFE”

OrTANGATA MAORI

By ROLF BOLDREWOOD

SPEAKER.—“A stirring tale.... We are inclined to think thatWar to the Knifeis the best story we have had from Mr. Boldrewood since he gave us the inimitableRobbery under Arms.”

ACADEMY.—“A stirring romance.”

OUTLOOK.—“Anyone who likes a good story, combined with any amount of information on strange lands, should get this book.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

AROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWNAND OTHER STORIESBy ROLF BOLDREWOOD

AROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWNAND OTHER STORIESBy ROLF BOLDREWOOD

A

ROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWN

AND OTHER STORIES

By ROLF BOLDREWOOD

CONTENTS

CONTENTS

CONTENTS

A Romance of Canvas Town—The Fencing of Wandaroona: A Riverina Reminiscence—The Governess of the Poets—Our New Cook: A Tale of the Times—Angels Unawares

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“Eminently readable, being written in the breezy, happy-go-lucky style which characterizes the more recent fictional works of the author of that singularly earnest and impressive romance,Robbery under Arms.”

DAILY MAIL.—“As pleasant as ever.”

GLASGOW HERALD.—“They will repay perusal.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

THE FOREST LOVERSA ROMANCEBy MAURICE HEWLETT

THE FOREST LOVERSA ROMANCEBy MAURICE HEWLETT

THE FOREST LOVERS

A ROMANCE

By MAURICE HEWLETT

SPECTATOR.—“The Forest Loversis no mere literarytour de force, but an uncommonly attractive romance, the charm of which is greatly enhanced by the author’s excellent style.”

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“Mr. Maurice Hewlett’sForest Loversstands out with conspicuous success.... He has compassed a very remarkable achievement.... For nearly four hundred pages he carries us along with him with unfailing resource and artistic skill, while he unrolls for us the course of thrilling adventures, ending, after many tribulations, in that ideal happiness towards which every romancer ought to wend his tortuous way.... There are few books of this season which achieve their aim so simply and whole-heartedly as Mr. Hewlett’s ingenious and enthralling romance.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

THEGOSPEL OF FREEDOMBy ROBERT HERRICKAUTHOR OF “THE MAN WHO WINS,” “LITERARY LOVE LETTERS, ANDOTHER STORIES”

THEGOSPEL OF FREEDOMBy ROBERT HERRICKAUTHOR OF “THE MAN WHO WINS,” “LITERARY LOVE LETTERS, ANDOTHER STORIES”

THE

GOSPEL OF FREEDOM

By ROBERT HERRICK

AUTHOR OF “THE MAN WHO WINS,” “LITERARY LOVE LETTERS, AND

OTHER STORIES”

DAILY MAIL.—“Distinctly enjoyable and suggestive of much profitable thought.”

SCOTSMAN.—“The book has a deal of literary merit, and is well furnished with clever phrases.”

ATHENÆUM.—“Remarkably clever.... The writing throughout is clear, and the story is well constructed.”

W.D. HowellsinLITERATURE.—“A very clever new novel.”

GUARDIAN.—“The novel is well written, and full of complex interests and personalities. It touches on many questions and problems clearly and skilfully.”

DAILY CHRONICLE.—“A book which entirely interested us for the whole of a blazing afternoon. He writes uncommonly well.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.100,000 copies of this work have been soldTHE CHOIR INVISIBLEBy JAMES LANE ALLENAUTHOR OF “SUMMER IN ARCADY,” “A KENTUCKY CARDINAL,” ETC.

Crown 8vo. 6s.100,000 copies of this work have been soldTHE CHOIR INVISIBLEBy JAMES LANE ALLENAUTHOR OF “SUMMER IN ARCADY,” “A KENTUCKY CARDINAL,” ETC.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

100,000 copies of this work have been sold

THE CHOIR INVISIBLE

By JAMES LANE ALLEN

AUTHOR OF “SUMMER IN ARCADY,” “A KENTUCKY CARDINAL,” ETC.

ACADEMY.—“A book to read, and a book to keep after reading. Mr. Allen’s gifts are many—a style pellucid and picturesque, a vivid and disciplined power of characterization, and an intimate knowledge of a striking epoch and an alluring country.... So magical is the wilderness environment, so fresh the characters, so buoyant the life they lead, so companionable, so well balanced, and so touched with humanity, the author’s personality, that I hereby send him greeting and thanks for a brave book....The Choir Invisibleis a fine achievement.”

PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“Mr. Allen’s power of character drawing invests the old, old story with renewed and absorbing interest.... The fascination of the story lies in great part in Mr. Allen’s graceful and vivid style.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

A DRAMA IN SUNSHINEBy HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL

A DRAMA IN SUNSHINEBy HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL

A DRAMA IN SUNSHINE

By HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL

CONTENTS

CONTENTS

CONTENTS

The Prologue

Chapter I. Sausages and Palaver—II. Illumination—III. William Chillingworth—IV. Calamity Cañon—V. Speculations—VI. Which contains a Moral—VII. Of Blood and Water—VIII. Which ends in Flames—IX. “Is Writ in Moods and Frowns and Wrinkles Strange”—X. The Daughters of Themis

LITERATURE.—“It has the joy of life in it, sparkle, humour, charm.... All the characters, in their contrasts and developments, are drawn with fine delicacy; and the book is one of those few which one reads again with increased pleasure.”

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—“A story of extraordinary interest.... Mr. Vachell’s enthralling story, the dénouement of which worthily crowns a literary achievement of no little merit.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

HUGH GWYETHA ROUNDHEAD CAVALIERBy BEULAH MARIE DIX

HUGH GWYETHA ROUNDHEAD CAVALIERBy BEULAH MARIE DIX

HUGH GWYETH

A ROUNDHEAD CAVALIER

By BEULAH MARIE DIX

PALL MALL GAZETTE.—“A thoroughly interesting story.... We hope it will not be the last of its kind from the author.”

SATURDAY REVIEW.—“We found it difficult to tear ourselves away from the fascinating narrative.”

SPECTATOR.—“There is no gainsaying the spirit and fluency of the narrative.”

LEEDS MERCURY.—“The boy hero is admirably drawn, and his stirring adventures are told with uncommon vivacity.”

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

Crown 8vo. 6s.

BISMILLAHBy A.J. DAWSONAUTHOR OF “MERE SENTIMENT,” “GOD’S FOUNDLING,” ETC.

BISMILLAHBy A.J. DAWSONAUTHOR OF “MERE SENTIMENT,” “GOD’S FOUNDLING,” ETC.

BISMILLAH

By A.J. DAWSON

AUTHOR OF “MERE SENTIMENT,” “GOD’S FOUNDLING,” ETC.

A romantic story of Moorish life in the Riff Country and in Tangier by Mr. A.J. Dawson, whose last novel,God’s Foundling, was well received in the beginning of the year, and whose West African and Australian Bush stories will be familiar to most readers of fiction.Bismillahis the title chosen for Mr. Dawson’s new book, which may be regarded as the outcome of his somewhat adventurous experiences in Morocco last year.

ACADEMY.—“Romantic and dramatic, and full of colour.”

GUARDIAN.—“Decidedly clever and original.... Its excellent local colouring, and its story, as a whole interesting and often dramatic, make it a book more worth reading and enjoyable than is at all common.”

SPEAKER.—“A stirring tale of love and adventure.... There is enough of exciting incident, of fighting, intrigue, and love-making inBismillahto satisfy the most exacting reader.”

MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.—“An interesting and pleasing tale.”


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