Chapter 35

Romances of Colonial Virginia

By MAUD WILDER GOODWIN. Illustrated Holiday Edition. 2 vols. 16mo. Cloth, extra, gilt tops, put up in neat box, $3.00.

By MAUD WILDER GOODWIN. Illustrated Holiday Edition. 2 vols. 16mo. Cloth, extra, gilt tops, put up in neat box, $3.00.

I.The Head of a Hundred, in the Colony of Virgina, 1622

ByMaud Wilder Goodwin. Illustrated with five full-page photogravure plates from drawings by Jessie Willcox Smith, Sophie B. Steel, Charlotte Harding, and Winfield S. Lukens; four decorative headings by Clyde O. De Land; and an ornamental titlepage by K. Pyle.

II. White Aprons

A Romance of Bacon's Rebellion, Virginia, 1676. ByMaud Wilder Goodwin. Illustrated with five full-page photogravure plates from drawings by A. McMakin, Clyde O. De Land, L. R. Dougherty, Margaret F. Winner, and Violet Oakley; four decorative headings by Clyde O. De Land; and an ornamental titlepage by K. Pyle.

The Colonial Cavalier

Or, Southern Life Before the Revolution

ByMaud Wilder Goodwin. New edition, with notes. With numerous full-page and smaller illustrations by Harry Edwards. 12mo. Cloth, extra, gilt top, $2.00. Full crushed morocco, gilt edges, $4.50.

ByMaud Wilder Goodwin. New edition, with notes. With numerous full-page and smaller illustrations by Harry Edwards. 12mo. Cloth, extra, gilt top, $2.00. Full crushed morocco, gilt edges, $4.50.

This thoughtful and most suggestive and entertaining study of the domestic and social life of the early settlers of Virginia and Maryland has received the highest praise.It gives us, through the old-time gossip of letters and diaries, and the homely details of life and customs,a fireside intimacy with old Virginian and Maryland life which we have never had before.—New York Evening Post.A delightful sketch of the colonial cavalier in his home, church, state, and social relations.We are made acquainted with the whole man.—The Outlook.

This thoughtful and most suggestive and entertaining study of the domestic and social life of the early settlers of Virginia and Maryland has received the highest praise.

It gives us, through the old-time gossip of letters and diaries, and the homely details of life and customs,a fireside intimacy with old Virginian and Maryland life which we have never had before.—New York Evening Post.

A delightful sketch of the colonial cavalier in his home, church, state, and social relations.We are made acquainted with the whole man.—The Outlook.

LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY

Publishers · 254 Washington Street, Boston


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