The Project Gutenberg EBook of Publisher's Advertising (1872), by Anonymous

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Title: Publisher's Advertising (1872)

Author: Anonymous

Editor: Harper & Brothers

Release Date: August 17, 2007 [EBook #22351]

Language: English

Character set encoding: UTF-8

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUBLISHER'S ADVERTISING (1872) ***




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Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
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This text was printed as a twelve-page addition to the James De Mille novel An American Baron, published 1872. Where available, the Project Gutenberg e-text number is given in brackets. Note that the e-text will probably not be based on the listed edition (Harper & Brothers, before 1872).

Full names of authors are given at the end of the text.

1

HARPER’S LIBRARY OF SELECT NOVELS.


The Library of Select Novels” has become an institution, a reliable and unfailing recreative resource essential to the comfort of countless readers. The most available entertainment of modern times is fiction: from the cares of busy life, from the monotonous routine of a special vocation, in the intervals of business and in hours of depression, a good story, with faithful descriptions of nature, with true pictures of life, with authentic characterization, lifts the mind out of the domain of care, refreshes the feelings, and enlists the imagination. The Harpers’ “Library of Select Novels” is rapidly approaching its four hundredth number, and it is safe to say that no series of books exists which combines attractiveness and economy, local pictures and beguiling narrative, to such an extent and in so convenient a shape. In railway-cars and steamships, in boudoirs and studios, libraries and chimney corners, on verandas and in private sanctums, the familiar brown covers are to be seen. These books are enjoyed by all classes; they appear of an average merit, and with a constant succession that is marvelous; and in subject and style offer a remarkable variety.—Boston Transcript.

PRICE
1.

Pelham. By Bulwer 7623

$0 75
2.

The Disowned. By Bulwer 7639

75
3.

Devereux. By Bulwer 7630

50
4.

Paul Clifford. By Bulwer 7735

50
5.

Eugene Aram. By Bulwer 7614

50
6.

The Last Days of Pompeii. By Bulwer 1565

50
7.

The Czarina. By Mrs. Hofland

50
8.

Rienzi. By Bulwer 1396

75
9.

Self-Devotion. By Miss Campbell

50
10.

The Nabob at Home

50
11.

Ernest Maltravers. By Bulwer 7649

50
12.

Alice; or, The Mysteries. By Bulwer 9774

50
13.

The Last of the Barons. By Bulwer 7727

1 00
14.

Forest Days. By James

50
15.

Adam Brown, the Merchant. By H. Smith

50
16.

Pilgrims of the Rhine. By Bulwer 8206

25
17.

The Home. By Miss Bremer 20746

50
18.

The Lost Ship. By Captain Neale

75
19.

The False Heir. By James

50
20.

The Neighbors. By Miss Bremer

50
21.

Nina. By Miss Bremer

50
22.

The President’s Daughters. By Miss Bremer

25
23.

The Banker’s Wife. By Mrs. Gore

50
24.

The Birthright. By Mrs. Gore

25
25.

New Sketches of Every-day Life. By Miss Bremer

50
26.

Arabella Stuart. By James

50
27.

The Grumbler. By Miss Pickering

50
28.

The Unloved One. By Mrs. Hofland

50
29.

Jack of the Mill. By William Howitt

25
30.

The Heretic. By Lajetchnikoff

50
31.

The Jew. By Spindler

75
32.

Arthur. By Sue

75
33.

Chatsworth. By Ward

50
34.

The Prairie Bird. By C. A. Murray

1 00
35.

Amy Herbert. By Miss Sewell

50
36.

Rose d’Albret. By James

50
37.

The Triumphs of Time. By Mrs. Marsh

75
38.

The H—— Family. By Miss Bremer

50
39.

The Grandfather. By Miss Pickering

50
40.

Arrah Neil. By James

50
41.

The Jilt

50
42.

Tales from the German

50
43.

Arthur Arundel. By H. Smith

50
44.

Agincourt. By James

50
45.

The Regent’s Daughter

50
46.

The Maid of Honor

50
47.

Safia. By De Beauvoir

50
48.

Look to the End. By Mrs. Ellis

50
49.

The Improvisatore. By Andersen

50
50.

The Gambler’s Wife. By Mrs. Grey

50
51.

Veronica. By Zschokke

50
52.

Zoe. By Miss Jewsbury

50
53.

Wyoming

50
54.

De Rohan. By Sue

50
55.

Self. By the Author of “Cecil”

75
56.

The Smuggler. By James

75
57.

The Breach of Promise

50
58.

Parsonage of Mora. By Miss Bremer

25
59.

A Chance Medley. By T. C. Grattan

50
60.

The White Slave

1 00
61.

The Bosom Friend. By Mrs. Grey

50
62.

Amaury. By Dumas

50
63.

The Author’s Daughter. By Mary Howitt

25
64.

Only a Fiddler, &c. By Andersen

50
65.

The Whiteboy. By Mrs. Hall

50
66.

The Foster-Brother. Edited by Leigh Hunt

50
67.

Love and Mesmerism. By H. Smith

75
68.

Ascanio. By Dumas

75
69.

Lady of Milan. Edited by Mrs. Thomson

75
70.

The Citizen of Prague

1 00
71.

The Royal Favorite. By Mrs. Gore

50
72.

The Queen of Denmark. By Mrs. Gore

50
73.

The Elves, &c. By Tieck

50

74, 75.   The Stepmother. By James

1 25
76.

Jessie’s Flirtations

50
77.

Chevalier d’Harmental. By Dumas

50
78.

Peers and Parvenus. By Mrs. Gore

50
79.

The Commander of Malta. By Sue

50
80.

The Female Minister

50
81.

Emilia Wyndham. By Mrs. Marsh

75
82.

The Bush-Ranger. By Charles Rowcroft

50
83.

The Chronicles of Clovernook

25
84.

Genevieve. By Lamartine

25
85.

Livonian Tales

25
86.

Lettice Arnold. By Mrs. Marsh

25
87.

Father Darcy. By Mrs. Marsh

75
88.

Leontine. By Mrs. Maberly

50
89.

Heidelberg. By James

50
90.

Lucretia. By Bulwer 7691

75
91.

Beauchamp. By James

75

92, 94.   Fortescue. By Knowles

1 00
93.

Daniel Dennison, &c. By Mrs. Hofland

50
95.

Cinq-Mars. By De Vigny 3953

50
96.

Woman’s Trials. By Mrs. S. C. Hall

75
97.

The Castle of Ehrenstein. By James

50
98.

Marriage. By Miss S. Ferrier 12669

50
99.

Roland Cashel. By Lever

1 25
100.

The Martins of Cro’ Martin. By Lever

1 25
101.

Russell. By James

50
102.

A Simple Story. By Mrs. Inchbald 22002

50
103.

Norman’s Bridge. By Mrs. Marsh

50
104.

Alamance

50
105.

Margaret Graham. By James

25
106.

The Wayside Cross. By E. H. Milman

25
107.

The Convict. By James

50
108.

Midsummer Eve. By Mrs. S. C. Hall

50
109.

Jane Eyre. By Currer Bell 1260

75
110.

The Last of the Fairies. By James

25
111.

Sir Theodore Broughton. By James

50
112.

Self-Control. By Mary Brunton

75

113, 114.   Harold. By Bulwer 7684

1 00
115.

Brothers and Sisters. By Miss Bremer

50
116.

Gowrie. By James

50
117.

A Whim and its Consequences. By James

50
118.

Three Sisters and Three Fortunes. By G. H. Lewes

75
119.

The Discipline of Life

50
120.

Thirty Years Since. By James

75
121.

Mary Barton. By Mrs. Gaskell 2153

50
122.

The Great Hoggarty Diamond. By Thackeray

25
123.

The Forgery. By James

50
124.

The Midnight Sun. By Miss Bremer

25

125, 126.   The Caxtons. By Bulwer 7605

75
127.

Mordaunt Hall. By Mrs. Marsh

50
128.

My Uncle the Curate

50
129.

The Woodman. By James

75
130.

The Green Hand. A “Short Yarn”

75
131.

Sidonia the Sorceress. By Meinhold 6700, 6701

1 00
132.

Shirley. By Currer Bell

1 00
133.

The Ogilvies. By Miss Mulock

50
2 134.

Constance Lyndsay. By G. C. H.

50
135.

Sir Edward Graham. By Miss Sinclair

1 00
136.

Hands not Hearts. By Miss Wilkinson

50
137.

The Wilmingtons. By Mrs. Marsh

50
138.

Ned Allen. By D. Hannay

50
139.

Night and Morning. By Bulwer 9755

75
140.

The Maid of Orleans

75
141.

Antonina. By Wilkie Collins 3606

50
142.

Zanoni. By Bulwer 2664

50
143.

Reginald Hastings. By Warburton

50
144.

Pride and Irresolution

50
145.

The Old Oak Chest. By James

50
146.

Julia Howard. By Mrs. Martin Bell

50
147.

Adelaide Lindsay. Edited by Mrs. Marsh

50
148.

Petticoat Government. By Mrs. Trollope

50
149.

The Luttrells. By F. Williams

50
150.

Singleton Fontenoy, R. N. By Hannay

50
151.

Olive. By Miss Mulock 22121

50
152.

Henry Smeaton. By James

50
153.

Time, the Avenger. By Mrs. Marsh

50
154.

The Commissioner. By James

1 00
155.

The Wife’s Sister. By Mrs. Hubback

50
156.

The Gold Worshipers

50
157.

The Daughter of Night. By Fullom

25
158.

Stuart of Dunleath. By Hon. Caroline Norton

50
159.

Arthur Conway. By Captain E. H. Milman

50
160.

The Fate. By James

50
161.

The Lady and the Priest. By Mrs. Maberly

50
162.

Aims and Obstacles. By James

50
163.

The Tutor’s Ward

50
164.

Florence Sackville. By Mrs. Burbury

75
165.

Ravenscliffe. By Mrs. Marsh

50
166.

Maurice Tiernay. By Lever

1 00
167.

The Head of the Family. By Miss Mulock

75
168.

Darien. By Warburton

50
169.

Falkenburg

75
170.

The Daltons. By Lever

1 50
171.

Ivar; or, The Skjuts-Boy. By Miss Carlen

50
172.

Pequinillo. By James

50
173.

Anna Hammer. By Temme

50
174.

A Life of Vicissitudes. By James

50
175.

Henry Esmond. By Thackeray 2511

75

176, 177.   My Novel. By Bulwer 7714

1 50
178.

Katie Stewart. By Mrs. Oliphant

25
179.

Castle Avon. By Mrs. Marsh

50
180.

Agnes Sorel. By James

50
181.

Agatha’s Husband. By Miss Mulock

50
182.

Villette. By Currer Bell 9182

75
183.

Lover’s Stratagem. By Miss Carlen

50
184.

Clouded Happiness. By Countess D’Orsay

50
185.

Charles Auchester. A Memorial

75
186.

Lady Lee’s Widowhood

50
187.

The Dodd Family Abroad. By Lever

1 25
188.

Sir Jasper Carew. By Lever

75
189.

Quiet Heart. By Mrs. Oliphant

25
190.

Aubrey. By Mrs. Marsh

75
191.

Ticonderoga. By James

50
192.

Hard Times. By Dickens 786

50
193.

The Young Husband. By Mrs. Grey

50
194.

The Mother’s Recompense. By Grace Aguilar 12361, 12362

75
195.

Avillion, and other Tales. By Miss Mulock

1 25
196.

North and South. By Mrs. Gaskell 4276

50
197.

Country Neighborhood. By Miss Dupuy

50
198.

Constance Herbert. By Miss Jewsbury

50
199.

The Heiress of Haughton. By Mrs. Marsh

50
200.

The Old Dominion. By James

50
201.

John Halifax. By Miss Mulock 2351

75
202.

Evelyn Marston. By Mrs. Marsh

50
203.

Fortunes of Glencore. By Lever

50
204.

Leonora d’Orco. By James

50
205.

Nothing New. By Miss Mulock

50
206.

The Rose of Ashurst. By Mrs. Marsh

50
207.

The Athelings. By Mrs. Oliphant

75
208.

Scenes of Clerical Life. By George Eliot 17780

75
209.

My Lady Ludlow. By Mrs. Gaskell 2524

25

210, 211.   Gerald Fitzgerald. By Lever

50
212.

A Life for a Life. By Miss Mulock

50
213.

Sword and Gown. By Geo. Lawrence 19121

25
214.

Misrepresentation. By Anna H. Drury

1 00
215.

The Mill on the Floss. By George Eliot 6688

75
216.

One of Them. By Lever

75
217.

A Day’s Ride. By Lever

50
218.

Notice to Quit. By Wills

50
219.

A Strange Story. By Bulwer 7701

1 00
220.

The Struggles of Brown, Jones, and Robinson. By Anthony Trollope

50
221.

Abel Drake’s Wife. By John Saunders

75
222.

Olive Blake’s Good Work. By Jeaffreson

75
223.

The Professor’s Lady

25
224.

Mistress and Maid. By Miss Mulock 13461

50
225.

Aurora Floyd. By M. E. Braddon

75
226.

Barrington. By Lever

75
227.

Sylvia’s Lovers. By Mrs. Gaskell 4537

75
228.

A First Friendship

50
229.

A Dark Night’s Work. By Mrs. Gaskell 2522

50
230.

Countess Gisela. By E. Marlitt

25
231.

St. Olave’s

75
232.

A Point of Honor

50
233.

Live it Down. By Jeaffreson

1 00
234.

Martin Pole. By Saunders

50
235.

Mary Lyndsay. By Lady Emily Ponsonby

50
236.

Eleanor’s Victory. By M. E. Braddon

75
237.

Rachel Ray. By Trollope

50
238.

John Marchmont’s Legacy. By M. E. Braddon

75
239.

Annis Warleigh’s Fortunes. By Holme Lee

75
240.

The Wife’s Evidence. By Wills

50
241.

Barbara’s History. By Amelia B. Edwards

75
242.

Cousin Phillis. By Mrs. Gaskell 4268

25
243.

What will he do with It? By Bulwer 7671

1 50
244.

The Ladder of Life. By Amelia B. Edwards

50
245.

Denis Duval. By Thackeray

50
246.

Maurice Dering. By Geo. Lawrence

50
247.

Margaret Denzil’s History

75
248.

Quite Alone. By George Augustus Sala

75
249.

Mattie: a Stray

75
250.

My Brother’s Wife. By Amelia B. Edwards

50
251.

Uncle Silas. By J. S. Le Fanu 14851

75
252.

Lovel the Widower. By Thackeray

25
253.

Miss Mackenzie. By Anthony Trollope

50
254.

On Guard. By Annie Thomas

50
255.

Theo Leigh. By Annie Thomas

50
256.

Denis Donne. By Annie Thomas

50
257.

Belial

50
258.

Carry’s Confession. By the Author of “Mattie: a Stray”

75
259.

Miss Carew. By Amelia B. Edwards

50
260.

Hand and Glove. By Amelia B. Edwards

50
261.

Guy Deverell. By J. S. Le Fanu

50
262.

Half a Million of Money. By Amelia B. Edwards

75
263.

The Belton Estate. By Anthony Trollope 4969

50
264.

Agnes. By Mrs. Oliphant

75
265.

Walter Goring. By Annie Thomas

75
266.

Maxwell Drewitt. By Mrs. J. H. Riddell

75
267.

The Toilers of the Sea. By Victor Hugo

75
268.

Miss Marjoribanks. By Mrs. Oliphant

50
269.

The True History of a Little Ragamuffin

50
270.

Gilbert Rugge. By the Author of “A First Friendship”

1 00
271.

Sans Merci. By Geo. Lawrence

50
272.

Phemie Keller. By Mrs. J. H. Riddell

50
273.

Land at Last. By Edmund Yates

50
274.

Felix Holt, the Radical. By George Eliot

75
275.

Bound to the Wheel. By John Saunders

75
276.

All in the Dark. By J. S. Le Fanu

50
277.

Kissing the Rod. By Edmund Yates

75
278.

The Race for Wealth. By Mrs. J. H. Riddell

75
279.

Lizzie Lorton of Greyrigg. By Mrs. E. Lynn Linton

75
280.

The Beauclercs, Father and Son. By Clarke

50
281.

Sir Brooke Fossbrooke. By Charles Lever

50
282.

Madonna Mary. By Mrs. Oliphant

50
283.

Cradock Nowell. By R. D. Blackmore

75
284.

Bernthal. From the German of L. Mühlbach

50
285.

Rachel’s Secret

75
286.

The Claverings. By Anthony Trollope 15766

50
287.

The Village on the Cliff. By Miss Thackeray

25
288.

Played Out. By Annie Thomas

75
289.

Black Sheep. By Edmund Yates

50
290.

Sowing the Wind. By Mrs. E. Lynn Linton

50
291.

Nora and Archibald Lee

50
292.

Raymond’s Heroine

50
293.

Mr. Wynyard’s Ward. By Holme Lee

50
294.

Alec Forbes of Howglen. By Mac Donald 18810

75
295.

No Man’s Friend. By F. W. Robinson

75
296.

Called to Account. By Annie Thomas

50
297.

Caste

50
298.

The Curate’s Discipline. By Mrs. Eiloart

50
299.

Circe. By Babington White

50
300.

The Tenants of Malory. By J. S. Le Fanu

50
301.

Carlyon’s Year. By the Author of “Lost Sir Massingberd,” &c.

25
302.

The Waterdale Neighbors. By the Author of “Paul Massie”

50
303.

Mabel’s Progress. By the Author of “Aunt Margaret’s Trouble”

50
304.

Guild Court. By George Mac Donald

50
305.

The Brothers’ Bet. By Emilie Flygare Carlen

25
306.

Playing for High Stakes. By Annie Thomas

25
307.

Margaret’s Engagement

50
308.

One of the Family. By the Author of “Carlyon’s Year”

25
309.

Five Hundred Pounds Reward. By a Barrister

50
310.

Brownlows. By Mrs. Oliphant

38
311.

Charlotte’s Inheritance. By M. E. Braddon 9259

50
3 312.

Jeanie’s Quiet Life. By the Author of “St. Olave’s,” &c.

50
313.

Poor Humanity. By F. W. Robinson

50
314.

Brakespeare. By Geo. Lawrence

50
315.

A Lost Name. By J. Sheridan Le Fanu

50
316.

Love or Marriage? By William Black

50
317.

Dead-Sea Fruit. By M. E. Braddon

50
318.

The Dower House. By Annie Thomas

50
319.

The Bramleighs of Bishop’s Folly. By Lever

50
320.

Mildred. By Georgiana M. Craik

50
321.

Nature’s Nobleman. By the Author of “Rachel’s Secret”

50
322.

Kathleen. By the Author of “Raymond’s Heroine”

50
323.

That Boy of Norcott’s. By Charles Lever

25
324.

In Silk Attire. By W. Black

50
325.

Hetty. By Henry Kingsley

25
326.

False Colors. By Annie Thomas

50
327.

Meta’s Faith. By the Author of “St. Olave’s”

50
328.

Found Dead. By the Author of “Carlyon’s Year”

50
329.

Wrecked in Port. By Edmund Yates

50
330.

The Minister’s Wife. By Mrs. Oliphant

75
331.

A Beggar on Horseback. By the Author of “Carlyon’s Year”

35
332.

Kitty. By the Author of “Doctor Jacob”

50
333.

Only Herself. By Annie Thomas

50
334.

Hirell. By John Saunders

50
335.

Under Foot. By Alton Clyde

50
336.

So Runs the World Away. By Mrs. A. C. Steele

50
337.

Baffled. By Julia Goddard

75
338.

Beneath the Wheels. By the Author of “Olive Varcoe”

50
339.

Stern Necessity. By F. W. Robinson

50
340.

Gwendoline’s Harvest. By the Author of “Carlyon’s Year”

25
341.

Kilmeny. By W. Black

50
342.

John: a Love Story. By Mrs. Oliphant

50
343.

True to Herself. By F. W. Robinson

50
344.

Veronica. By the Author of “Aunt Margaret’s Trouble”

50
345.

A Dangerous Guest. By the Author of “Gilbert Rugge”

50
346.

Estelle Russell

75
347.

The Heir Expectant. By the Author of “Raymond’s Heroine”

50
348.

Which is the Heroine?

50
349.

The Vivian Romance. By Mortimer Collins

50
350.

In Duty Bound. Illustrated

50
351.

The Warden 619 and Barchester Towers 2432, 3409. In 1 vol. By Anthony Trollope

75
352.

From Thistles—Grapes? By Mrs. Eiloart

50
353.

A Siren. By T. Adolphus Trollope 5179

50
354.

Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite. By Anthony Trollope. Illustrated

50
355.

Earl’s Dene. By R. E. Francillon

50
356.

Daisy Nichol. By Lady Hardy

50
357.

Bred in the Bone. By the Author of “Carlyon’s Year” 12024

50
358.

Fenton’s Quest. By Miss Braddon. Illustrated 11720

50
359.

Monarch of Mincing-Lane. By W. Black. Illustrated

50
360.

A Life’s Assize. By Mrs. J. H. Riddell

50
361.

Anteros. By Geo. Lawrence

50
362.

Her Lord and Master. By Florence Marryat

50
363.

Won—Not Wooed. By the Author of “Carlyon’s Year”

50
364.

For Lack of Gold. By Charles Gibbon

50
365.

Anne Furness. By the Author of “Mabel’s Progress”

75
366.

A Daughter of Heth. By W. Black

50
367.

Durnton Abbey. By T. A. Trollope

50

Mailing Notice.—Harper & Brothers will send their Books by Mail, postage free, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the Price.


NOVELS BY STANDARD AUTHORS

Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.


Harper & Brothers publish, in addition to others, including their Library of Select Novels, the following Standard Works of Fiction:

(For full titles, see Harper’s Catalogue.)

BLACKWELL’S The Island Neighbors. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents.

WILKIE COLLINS’S* Armadale. Illustrations. 8vo, Cloth, $2 00; Paper, $1 50. 1895

Man and Wife. Illustrations. 8vo, Cloth, $1 50; Paper, $1 00. 1586

Moonstone. Ill’s. 8vo, Cloth, $2 00; Paper, $1 50. 155

No Name. Ill’s. 8vo, Cloth, $2 00; Paper, $1 50. 1438

Woman in White. Illustrations. 8vo, Cloth, $2 00; Paper, $1 50. 583

Queen of Hearts. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50. 1917

BAKER’S (Wm.) New Timothy. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50.

Inside. Illustrated by Nast. 8vo, Cloth, $1 75; Paper, $1 25.

BOUND to John Company. Ill’s. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents.

BRADDON’S (M. E.)* Birds of Prey. Illustrations. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents. 9362

BRONTE Novels:

Jane Eyre. By Currer Bell (Charlotte Bronté). 12mo, Cloth, $1 50. 1260

Shirley. By Currer Bell. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50.

Villette. By Currer Bell. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50. 9182

The Professor. By Currer Bell. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50. 1028

Tenant of Wildfell Hall. By Acton Bell (Anna Bronté). 12mo, Cloth, $1 50. 969

Wuthering Heights. By Ellis Bell (Emily Bronté). 12mo, Cloth, $1 50. 768

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4

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* For other Novels by the same author, see Library of Select Novels.


1

THE DOMESTIC LIFE

OF

THOMAS JEFFERSON.

COMPILED FROM

FAMILY LETTERS AND REMINISCENCES

BY HIS GREAT-GRANDDAUGHTER,

SARAH N. RANDOLPH.

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS.

Crown 8vo, Illuminated Cloth, Beveled Edges, $2 50.


This volume brings the life of Jefferson in a brief space within the reach of all. While not writing of him as of the great man or statesman, Miss Randolph has given sufficient outline of the contemporary public events, especially of those in which Jefferson was engaged, to make the history of his times sufficiently clear. Her object, however, she says, has been to give a faithful picture of Jefferson as he was in private life, and for this she was particularly well fitted. Her biography is so artless, so frank, and so uncolored, differing so completely from the lives of public men as generally written. * * * This extremely interesting volume.—Richmond Whig.

One of the most charming and entertaining of books, and its pages will be a source of continual surprise and pleasure to those who, while admiring the statesman, have had their admiration tempered by the belief that he was a demagogue, a libertine, a gamester, and a scoffer at religion. The age in which Jefferson lived was one in which political rancors and animosities existed with no less bitterness than in our later day, and in which, moreover, mutual abuse and malignant recrimination were indulged in with equal fury and recklessness. Charges were made against Jefferson, by his political opponents, that clung to his good name and sullied it, making it almost a by-word of shame, and its owner a man whose example was to be shunned. The prejudices and calumnies then born have existed down to the present day; but the mists of evil report that have hemmed his life and his memory about are now clearing away, and this sunny book will dispel the last shadow they have cast, and will display the maligned victim of party hate in his true character—as a fond, an amiable, and a simple-hearted father; a firm friend; a truly moral and God-fearing citizen, and one of those few great men who have had the rare fortune to be likewise good men.—Boston Saturday Evening Gazette.

The author of this charming book has had access to the best possible sources of information concerning the private character of Mr. Jefferson, embracing both the written testimony of his correspondence and the oral testimony of family tradition. From these materials, guided by a profound reverence for the subject, the writer has constructed a most interesting personal biography. * * * A most agreeable addition to American literature, and will revive the memory of a patriot who merits the respect and gratitude of his countrymen.—Philadelphia Age.

This handsome volume is a valuable acquisition to American history. It brings to the public observation many most interesting incidents in the life of the third President; and the times and men of the republic’s beginnings are here portrayed in a glowing and genial light. The author, in referring to the death-scenes of Jefferson, reports sentiments from his lips which contradict the current opinion that the writer of the Declaration of Independence was an infidel. We are glad to make this record in behalf of truth. Young people would find this book both entertaining and instructive. Its style is fresh and compact. Its pages are full of tender memories. The great man whose career is so charmingly pictured belongs to us all.—Methodist Recorder.

There is no more said of public matters in it than is absolutely necessary to make it clear and intelligible; but we have Jefferson, the man and the citizen, the husband, the father, the agriculturist, and the neighbor—the man, in short, as he lived in the eyes of his relatives, his closest friends, and his most intimate associates. He is the Virginian gentleman at the various stages of his marvelous career, and comes home to us as a being of flesh and blood, and so his story gives a series of lively pictures of a manner of existence that has passed away, or that is so passing, for they are more conservative at the South, socially speaking, than are we at the North, though they live so much nearer the sun than we ever can live. * * * We can commend this book to every one who would know the main facts of Mr. Jefferson’s public career, and those of his private life. It is the best work respecting him that has been published, and it is not so large as to repel even indolent or careless readers. It is, too, an ornamental volume, being not only beautifully printed and bound, but well illustrated. * * * Every American should own the volume.—Boston Traveller.

A charmingly compiled and written book, and it has to do with one of the very greatest men of our national history. There is scarcely one on the roll of our public men who was possessed of more progressive individuality, or whose character will better repay study, than Thomas Jefferson, and this biography is a great boon.—N. Y. Evening Mail.

Both deeply interesting and valuable. The author has displayed great tact and taste in the selection of her materials and its arrangement.—Richmond Dispatch.

A charming book.—New Orleans Times.

2

It is a series of delightful home pictures, which present the hero as he was familiarly known to his family and his best friends, in his fields, in his library, at his table, and on the broad verandah at Monticello, where all the sweetest flavors of his social nature were diffused. His descendant does not conceal the fact that she is proud of her great progenitor; but she is ingenious, and leaves his private letters mostly to speak for themselves. It has been thought that “a king is never a hero to his valet,” and the proverb has been considered undeniable; but this volume shows that Jefferson, if not exactly the “hero” to whom a little obscurity is so essential, was at least warmly loved and enthusiastically esteemed and admired by those who knew him best. The letters in this volume are full of interest, for they are chiefly published for the first time now. They show a conscientious gentleman, not at all given to personal indulgences, quick in both anger and forgiveness, the greatest American student of his time, excepting the cold-blooded Hamilton, absolutely without formality, but particular and exacting in the extreme—just the man who carried his wife to the White House on the pillion of his gray mare, and showed a British embassador the door for an offense against good-breeding.—Chicago Evening Post.

The reader will recognize the calm and philosophic yet earnest spirit of the thinker, with the tenderness and playful amiability of the father and friend. The letters can not but shed a favorable light on the character of perhaps the best-abused man of his time.—N. Y. Evening Post.

No attempt is made in this volume to present its subject as a public man or as a statesman. It is simply sought to picture him as living in the midst of his domestic circle. And this it is which will invest the book with interest for all classes of readers, for all who, whatever their politics, can appreciate the beauty of a pure, loving life. * * * It is written in an easy, agreeable style, by a most loving hand, and, perhaps, better than any other biography extant, makes the reader acquainted with the real character of a man whose public career has furnished material for so much book-making.—Philadelphia Inquirer.

The perusal of this interesting volume confirms the impression that whatever criticisms may be brought to bear upon the official career of Mr. Jefferson, or his influence upon the politics of this country, there was a peculiar charm in all the relations of his personal and social life. In spite of the strength of his convictions, which he certainly often expressed with an energy amounting to vehemence, he was a man of rare sunniness of temperament and sweetness of disposition. He had qualities which called forth the love of his friends no less than the hatred of his opponents. His most familiar acquaintance cherished the most ardent admiration of his character. His virtues in the circle of home won the applause even of his public adversaries.—N. Y. Tribune.

It lifts up the curtain of his private life, and by numerous letters to his family allows us to catch a glimpse of his real nature and character. Many interesting reminiscences have been collected by the author and are presented to the reader.—Boston Commercial Bulletin.

These letters show him to have been a loving husband, a tender father, and a hospitable gentleman.—Presbyterian.

Jefferson was not only eloquent in state papers, but he was full of point and clearness amounting to wit in his minor correspondence.—Albany Argus.

It is the record of the life of one of the most extraordinary men of any age or country.—Richmond Inquirer.

With the public life of Thomas Jefferson the public is familiar, as without it no adequate knowledge is possible of the history of Virginia or of the United States. Its guiding principles and great events, as likewise its smallest details, have long been before the world in the “Jefferson Papers,” and in the laborious history of Randall. But to a full appreciation of the politician, the statesman, the publicist, and the thinker, there was still wanting some complete and correct knowledge of the man and his daily life amidst his family. This want Miss Randolph has endeavored most successfully to supply. As scarcely one of the founders of the republic had warmer friends, or exerted a deeper and a wider influence upon the country, so scarcely one encountered more bitter animosity or had to live down slander more envenomed. Truth conquered in the end, and the foul rumors, engendered in partisan conflicts, against the private life of Jefferson have long shrunk into silence in the light of his fame. Nevertheless, it is well done of his descendant thus to place before the world his life as in his letters and his conversation it appeared from day to day to those nearest and dearest to him. Nor is it a matter of small value to bring to our sight the interior life of our ancestors as it is delineated in the letters of Jefferson, touching incidently on all the subjects of dress, food, manners, amusements, expenditures, occupations—in brief, neglecting nothing of what the men of those days were and thought and did. It is of such materials that consist the pictures of history whose gaunt outlines of battles, sieges, coronations, dethronements, and parliaments are of little worth without the living and breathing details of everyday existence. * * * The author has happily performed her task, never obtruding her own presence upon the reader, careful only to come forward when necessary to explain some doubtful point or to connect the events of different dates. She may be congratulated upon the grace with which she has both written and forborne to write, never being beguiled by the vanity of authorship or that too great care which is the besetting sin of biography.—Petersburg Daily Index.

It is a highly interesting book, not only as a portraiture of the domestic life of Jefferson, but as a side view of the parties and politics of the day, witnessed in our country seventy years ago. The correspondence of the public characters at that period will be read with special interest by those who study the early history of our government.—Richmond Christian Observer.

In the unrestrained confidence of family correspondence, nature has always full sway, and the revelations presented in this book of Mr. Jefferson’s real temper and opinions, unrestrained or unmodified by the caution called for in public documents, make the work not only valuable but entertaining.—N. Y. World.

The author has done her work with a loving hand, and has made a most interesting book.—N. Y. Commercial Advertiser.

It gives a picture of his private life, which it presents in a most favorable light, calculated to redeem Jefferson’s character from many, if not all, the aspersions and slanders which, in common with most public characters, he had to endure while living.—New Bedford Standard.

The letters of Jefferson are models of epistolary composition—easy, graceful, and simple.—New Bedford Mercury.

The book is a very good picture of the social life not only of himself but of the age in which he lived.—Detroit Post.

One of the most charming memoirs of the day.—N. Y. Times.


THE TOM BROWN BOOKS.

Arthur Hughes (author of Tom Brown books)

TOM BROWN’S SCHOOL DAYS. 1480

By An Old Boy. New Edition. Beautifully Illustrated by Arthur Hughes and Sydney Prior Hall. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents.

Nothing need be said of the merits of this acknowledged on all hands to be one of the very best boy’s books ever written. “Tom Brown” does not reach the point of ideal excellence. He is not a faultless boy; but his boy-faults, by the way they are corrected, help him in getting on. The more of such reading can be furnished the better. There will never be too much of it.—Examiner and Chronicle.

Can be read a dozen times, and each time with tears and laughter as genuine and impulsive as at the first.—Rochester Democrat.

Finely printed, and contains excellent illustrations. “Tom Brown” is a book which will always be popular with boys, and it deserves to be.—World (N. Y.).

For healthy reading it is one book in a thousand.—Advance.


TOM BROWN AT OXFORD.

By the Author of “Tom Brown’s School Days.” New Edition. With Illustrations by Sydney Prior Hall. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents.

A new and very pretty edition. The illustrations are exceedingly good, the typography is clear, and the paper white and fine. There is no need to say any thing of the literary merits of the work, which has become a kind of classic, and which presents the grand old Tory University to the reader in all its glory and fascination.—Evening Post.

A book of which one never wearies.—Presbyterian.

Fairly entitled to the rank and dignity of an English classic. Plot, style, and truthfulness are of the soundest British character. Racy, idiomatic, mirror-like, always interesting, suggesting thought on the knottiest social and religious questions, now deeply moving by its unconscious pathos, and anon inspiring uproarious laughter, it is a work the world will not willingly let die.—Christian Advocate.


Both books, in One Volume, 8vo, Cloth, $1 50.


Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.


Harper & Brothers also publish

RECOLLECTIONS OF ETON. By an Etonian.

With Illustrations. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents.


Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price.



TWO VALUABLE HOUSEHOLD BOOKS

Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.


OUR GIRLS.

By DIO LEWIS, A.M., M.D.

NEW EDITION. 12mo, Cloth, $1 50.


The book not only deserves to be read; it will be read, because it is full of interest, concerning itself, as it does, with such matters as girls’ boots and shoes; how girls should walk; low neck and short sleeves; outrages upon the body; stockings supporters; why are women so small? idleness among girls; sunshine and health; a word about baths; what you should eat; how to manage a cold; fat and thin girls, etc., etc.—N. Y. Evening Post.

Dr. Dio Lewis has written a sensible and lively book. There is not a dull page in it, and scarcely one that does not convey some sound instruction. We wish the book could enter thousands of our homes, fashionable and unfashionable; for we believe it contains suggestions and teaching of precisely the kind that “our girls” every where need.—N. Y. Independent.

This really important book.—Christian Union.

Written in Dr. Lewis’s free and lively style, and is full of good ideas, the fruit of long study and experience, told in a sensible, practical way that commends them to every one who reads. The whole book is admirably sensible.—Boston Post.

Full of practical and very sensible advice to young women.—Episcopalian.

Dr. Lewis is well known as an acute observer, a man of great practical sagacity in sanitary reform, and a lively and brilliant writer upon medical subjects.—N. Y. Observer.

We like it exceedingly. It says just what ought to be said, and that in style colloquial, short, sharp, and memorable.—Christian Advocate.

The whole tone of the book is pure and healthy.—Albany Express.

Every page shows him to be in earnest, and thoroughly alive to the importance of the subjects he discusses. He talks like one who has a solemn message to deliver, and who deems the matter far more essential than the manner. His book is, therefore, a series of short, earnest appeals against the unnatural, foolish, and suicidal customs prevailing in fashionable society.—Churchman.

A timely and most desirable book.—Springfield Union.

Full of spicy, sharp things about matters pertaining to health; full of good advice, which, if people would but take it, would soon change the world in some very important respects; not profound or systematic, but still a book with numberless good things in it.—Liberal Christian.

The author writes with vigor and point, and with occasional dry humor.—Worcester Spy.

Brimful of good, common-sense hints regarding dress, diet, recreation, and other necessary things in the female economy.—Boston Journal.

Dr. Lewis talks very plainly and sensibly, and makes very many important suggestions. He does not mince matters at all, but puts every thing in a straightforward and, not seldom, homely way, perspicuous to the dullest understanding. His style is lively and readable, and the book is very entertaining as well as instructive.—Register, Salem, Mass.

One of the most popular of modern writers upon health and the means of its preservation.—Presbyterian Banner.

There is hardly any thing that may form a part of woman’s experience that is not touched upon.—Chicago Journal.


THE BAZAR BOOK OF DECORUM:

CARE OF THE PERSON, MANNERS, ETIQUETTE, AND CEREMONIALS.

16mo, Toned Paper, Cloth, Beveled Edges, $1 00.


A series of sensible, well-written, and pleasant essays on the care of the person, manners, etiquette, and ceremonials. The title Bazar Book is taken from the fact that some of the essays which make up this volume appeared originally in the columns of Harper’s Bazar. This in itself is a sufficient recommendation—Harper’s Bazar being probably the only journal of fashion in the world which has good sense and enlightened reason for its guides. The “Bazar Book of Decorum” deserves every commendation.—Independent.

A very graceful and judicious compendium of the laws of etiquette, taking its name from the Bazar weekly, which has become an established authority with the ladies of America upon all matters of taste and refinement.—N. Y. Evening Post.

It is, without question, the very best and most thorough work on the subject which has ever been presented to the public.—Brooklyn Daily Times.

It would be a good thing if at least one copy of this book were in every household of the United States, in order that all—especially the youth of both sexes—might read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest its wise instruction, pleasantly conveyed in a scholarly manner which eschews pedantry.—Philadelphia Press.

Abounds in sensible suggestions for keeping one’s person in proper order, and for doing fitly and to one’s own satisfaction the thousand social duties that make up so large a part of social and domestic life.—Correspondence of Cincinnati Chronicle.

Full of good and sound common-sense, and its suggestions will prove valuable in many a social quandary.—Portland Transcript.

A little work embodying a multitude of useful hints and suggestions regarding the proper care of the person and the formation of refined habits and manners. The subject is treated with good sense and good taste, and is relieved from tedium by an abundance of entertaining anecdotes and historical incident. The author is thoroughly acquainted with the laws of hygiene, and wisely inculcates them while specifying the rules based upon them which regulate the civilities and ceremonies of social life.—Evening Post, Chicago.

* * * It would be easy to quote a hundred curt, sharp sentences, full of truth and force, and touching points of behavior and personal habitude that concern us all.—Springfield Republican.

By far the best book of the kind of which we have any knowledge.—Chicago Journal.

An eminently sensible book.—Liberal Christian.


Harper & Brothers will send either of the above works by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price.


SCIENCE FOR THE YOUNG.

BY JACOB ABBOTT,

Author of “The Young Christian Series,” “Marco Paul Series,” “Rainbow and Lucky Series,” “Little Learner Series,” “Franconia Stories,” Illustrated Histories, &c., &c.


Few men enjoy a wider or better earned popularity as a writer for the young than Jacob Abbott. His series of histories, and stories illustrative of moral truths, have furnished amusement and instruction to thousands. He has the knack of piquing and gratifying curiosity. In the book before us he shows his happy faculty of imparting useful information through the medium of a pleasant narrative, keeping alive the interest of the young reader, and fixing in his memory valuable truths.—Mercury, New Bedford, Mass.

Jacob Abbott is almost the only writer in the English language who knows how to combine real amusement with real instruction in such a manner that the eager young readers are quite as much interested in the useful knowledge he imparts as in the story which he makes so pleasant a medium of instruction.—Buffalo Commercial Advertiser.


HEAT:

Being Part I. of Science for the Young. By Jacob Abbott. Copiously Illustrated. 12mo, Illuminated Cloth, black and gilt, $1 50.


Perhaps that eminent and ancient gentleman who told his young master that there was no royal road to science could admit that he was mistaken after examining one of the volumes of the series “Science for the Young,” which the Harpers are now bringing out. The first of these, “Heat,” by Jacob Abbott, while bringing two or three young travelers from a New York hotel across the ocean to Liverpool in a Cunarder, makes them acquainted with most of the leading scientific principles regarding heat. The idea of conveying scientific instruction in this manner is admirable, and the method in which the plan is carried out is excellent. While the youthful reader is skillfully entrapped into perusing what appears to be an interesting story, and which is really so, he devours the substance and principal facts of many learned treatises. Surely this is a royal road for our young sovereigns to travel over.—World, N. Y.

It combines information with amusement, weaving in with a story or sketch of travel dry rules of mechanics or chemistry or philosophy. Mr. Abbott accomplishes this object very successfully. The story is a simple one, and the characters he introduces are natural and agreeable. Readers of the volume, young and old, will follow it with unabating interest, and it can not fail to have the intended effect.—Jewish Messenger.

It is admirably done. * * * Having tried the book with children, and found it absolutely fascinating, even to a bright boy of eight, who has had no special preparation for it, we can speak with entire confidence of its value. The author has been careful in his statements of facts and of natural laws to follow the very best authorities; and on some points of importance his account is more accurate and more useful than that given in many works of considerable scientific pretensions written before the true character of heat as what Tyndall calls “a mode of motion” was fully recognized. * * * Mr. Abbott has, in his “Heat,” thrown a peculiar charm upon his pages, which makes them at once clear and delightful to children who can enjoy a fairy tale.—N. Y. Evening Post.

* * * Mr. Abbott has avoided the errors so common with writers for popular effect, that of slurring over the difficulties of the subject through the desire of making it intelligible and attractive to unlearned readers. He never tampers with the truth of science, nor attempts to dodge the solution of a knotty problem behind a cloud of plausible illustrations. The numerous illustrations which accompany every chapter are of unquestionable value in the comprehension of the text, and come next to actual experiment as an aid to the reader.—N. Y. Tribune.

LIGHT:

Being Part II. of Science for the Young. By Jacob Abbott. Copiously Illustrated. 12mo, Illuminated Cloth, black and gilt, $1 50.


Treats of the theory of “Light,” presenting in a popular form the latest conclusions of chemical and optical science on the subject, and elucidating its various points of interest with characteristic clearness and force. Its simplicity of language, and the beauty and appropriateness of its pictorial illustrations, make it a most attractive volume for young persons, while the fullness and accuracy of the information with which it overflows commends it to the attention of mature readers.—N. Y. Tribune.

Like the previous volume, it is in all respects admirable. It is a mystery to us how Mr. Abbott can so simplify the most abstruse and difficult principles, in which optics especially abounds, as to bring them within the grasp of quite youthful readers; we can only be very grateful to him for the result. This book is up to our latest knowledge of the wonderful force of which it treats, and yet weaves all its astounding facts into pleasing and readable narrative form. There are few grown people, indeed, whose knowledge will not be vastly increased by a perusal of this capital book.—N. Y. Evening Mail.

Perhaps there is no American author to whom our young people are under so great a debt of gratitude as to this writer. The book before us, like all its predecessors from the same pen, is lucid, simple, amusing, and instructive. It is well gotten up and finely illustrated, and should have a place in the library of every family where there are children.—N. Y. Star.

It is the second volume of a delightful series started by Mr. Abbott under the title or “Science for the Young,” in which is detailed interesting conversations and experiments, narratives of travel, and adventures by the young in pursuit of knowledge. The science of optics is here so plainly and so untechnically unfolded that many of its most mysterious phenomena are rendered intelligible at once.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

It is complete, and intensely interesting. Such a series must be of great usefulness. It should be in every family library. The volume before us is thorough, and succeeds in popularizing the branch of science and natural history treated, and, we may add, there is nothing more varied in its phenomena or important in its effects than light.—Chicago Evening Journal.

Any person, young or old, who wishes to inform himself in a pleasant way about the spectroscope, magic-lantern cameras, and other optical instruments, and about solar, electric, calcium, magnesium, and all other kinds of light, will find this book of Mr. Abbott both interesting and instructive.—Lutheran Observer.


Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

Either of the above works sent by mail, postage free, to any part of the United States, on receipt of $1 50.


By Anthony Trollope.


Anthony Trollope’s position grows more secure with every new work which comes from his pen. He is one of the most prolific of writers, yet his stories improve with time instead of growing weaker, and each is as finished and as forcible as though it were the sole production of the author.—N. Y. Sun.


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Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

Harper & Brothers will send either of the above works by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price.


By the Author of “John Halifax.”

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From the North British Review.
MISS MULOCK’S NOVELS.

She attempts to show how the trials, perplexities, joys, sorrows, labors, and successes of life deepen or wither the character according to its inward bent.

She cares to teach, not how dishonesty is always plunging men into infinitely more complicated external difficulties than it would in real life, but how any continued insincerity gradually darkens and corrupts the very life-springs of the mind: not how all events conspire to crush an unreal being who is to be the “example” of the story, but how every event, adverse or fortunate, tends to strengthen and expand a high mind, and to break the springs of a selfish or merely weak and self-indulgent nature.

She does not limit herself to domestic conversations, and the mere shock of character on character; she includes a large range of events—the influence of worldly successes and failures—the risks of commercial enterprises—the power of social position—in short, the various elements of a wider economy than that generally admitted into a tale.

She has a true respect for her work, and never permits herself to “make books,” and yet she has evidently very great facility in making them.

There are few writers who have exhibited a more marked progress, whether in freedom of touch or in depth of purpose, than the authoress of “The Ogilvies” and “John Halifax.”


Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

Harper & Brothers will send the above works by mail, postage paid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price.


TENNYSON’S

COMPLETE

POETICAL WORKS.

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

POETICAL WORKS OF ALFRED TENNYSON, Poet Laureate. With numerous Illustrations and Three Characteristic Portraits. Forty-fifth Thousand. Including many Poems not hitherto contained in his collected works. New Edition, containing “The Window; or, The Loves of the Wrens;” with Music by Arthur Sullivan. 8vo, Paper, 75 cents; Cloth, $1 25.

Tennyson is, without exception, the most popular of living poets. Wherever the English language is spoken, in America as well as in England, his name has become familiar as a household word, and some volume of the many he has published is to be found in almost every library. For several years a complete cheap edition of his poetical works has been an acknowledged desideratum. Messrs. Harper & Brothers, taking advantage of the conclusion of the Arthurian Poems, have now supplied this want by publishing an attractive household edition of the Laureate’s poems, in one volume, clearly and handsomely printed, and illustrated with many engravings after designs by Gustave Doré, Rossetti, Stanfield, W. H. Hunt, and other eminent artists. The volume contains every line the Laureate has ever published, including the latest of his productions, which complete the noble cycle of Arthurian legends, and raise them from a fragmentary series of exquisite cabinet pictures into a magnificent tragic epic, of which the theme is the gradual dethronement of Arthur from his spiritual rule over his order, through the crime of Guinevere and Lancelot; the spread of their infectious guilt, till it breaks up the oneness of the realm, and the Order of the Round Table is shattered, and the ideal king, deserted by many of his own knights, and deeply wounded in the last great battle with the traitor and the heathen, vanishes into the darkness of the world beyond.


The print is clear and excellent; the paper is good; the volume has illustrations from Doré, Millais, and other great artists. Really, the edition is a sort of prodigy in its way.—Independent.

Those who want a perfect and complete edition of the works of the great English Poet Laureate should purchase the Harper edition.—Troy Budget.

A marvel of cheapness.—The Christian Era.

The whole get-up and style of this edition are admirable, and we are sure it will be a welcome addition to every book-case, large or small. But the marvelous thing about it is the price, which is only one dollar for the handsome cloth binding.—Tribune (Wilmington, Del.).

A marvelous instance of blended beauty and cheapness.—Charleston Courier.


Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

Sent by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price.

The Authors

Authors from “Select Novels” and “Standard Authors”, listed alphabetically, with full name where possible:

Some authors on this list were either not named at all, or identified only as “Author of...”: see following lists. Most were identified only by last name, usually but not always with “Miss” or “Mrs.” if female.

Author Titles
Aguilar, Grace The Mother’s Recompense
Allan-Olney, Mary Estelle Russell

Andersen, Hans Christian
(“Andersen”)

The Improvisatore
Only a Fiddler, &c.
Auerbach, Berthold The Professor’s Lady

Baker, William M.
(“Baker (Wm.)”)

Inside
New Timothy
Bell (“Currer, Acton, Ellis”) see under Bronte
Bell, Martin (“Mrs. Bell”) Julia Howard
Benedict, Frank Lee Miss Van Kortland
My Daughter Elinor
Betham-Edwards, Matilda Kitty

Black, William
(“W. Black”)

Kilmeny
A Daughter of Heth
Monarch of Mincing-Lane
In Silk Attire
Love or Marriage?
Blackmore, R. D. Cradock Nowell
Blagden, Isa Nora and Archibald Lee

Braddon, Mary Elizabeth
(“M. E. Braddon”, “Miss Braddon”)

Aurora Floyd
Birds of Prey
Bound to John Company
Charlotte’s Inheritance
Dead-Sea Fruit
Eleanor’s Victory
Fenton’s Quest
John Marchmont’s Legacy

Bremer, Fredrika
(“Miss Bremer”)

Brothers and Sisters
The H—— Family
The Home
New Sketches of Every-day Life
The Midnight Sun
The Neighbors
Nina
Parsonage of Mora
The President’s Daughters

Bronte, Anne
[aka Acton Bell]

Tenant of Wildfell Hall

Bronte, Charlotte
[aka Currer Bell]

Jane Eyre
Shirley
Villette
The Professor

Bronte, Emily
[aka Ellis Bell]

Wuthering Heights

Brooks, Shirley
(“Brooks”)

Silver Cord
Sooner or Later
The Gordian Knot
Brunton, Mary Self-Control

Bulwer-Lytton, Edward George
(“Bulwer”)

A Strange Story
Alice; or, The Mysteries
The Caxtons
Devereux
The Disowned
Ernest Maltravers
Eugene Aram
Godolphin
Harold
The Last Days of Pompeii
The Last of the Barons
Leila
Lucretia
My Novel
Night and Morning
Paul Clifford
Pelham
Pilgrims of the Rhine
Rienzi
What will he do with It?
Zanoni

Bulwer, Robert
(“Owen Meredith”)

The Ring of Amasis

Burbury, E. J.
(“Mrs. Burbury”)

Florence Sackville

Campbell, Harriette
(“Miss Campbell”)

Self-Devotion

Flygare-Carlèn, Emilie
(“Miss Carlen”)

The Brothers’ Bet
Ivar; or, The Skjuts-Boy
Lover’s Stratagem

Clarke, Charles
(“Clarke”)

The Beauclercs, Father and Son

Cleghorn, Elizabeth
(“Mrs. Gaskell”)

Cousin Phillis
Cranford.
A Dark Night’s Work
Mary Barton
Moorland Cottage
My Lady Ludlow
North and South
Right at Last, &c.
Sylvia’s Lovers
Wives and Daughters
Clyde, Alton Under Foot
Collins, Mortimer The Vivian Romance
Collins, Wilkie Antonina
Armadale
Man and Wife
Moonstone
No Name
Queen of Hearts
Woman in White

Craik, Dinah Maria Mulock
(“Miss Mulock”)

Agatha’s Husband
Avillion, and other Tales
A Brave Lady
Christian’s Mistake
John Halifax
The Head of the Family
A Life for a Life
Mistress and Maid
A Noble Life
Nothing New
The Ogilvies
Olive
Two Marriages
The Unkind Word and Other Stories
The Woman’s Kingdom
Craik, Georgiana M. Mildred
Curtis, G. W. Trumps
Curtis, Harriot F. Jessie’s Flirtations
De Bawr, Mme. The Maid of Honor

De Beauvoir, Roger
(“De Beauvoir”)

Safia

De Forest, John William
(“De Forest”)

Miss Ravenel’s Conversion from Secession to Loyalty

Douglas, Ann Jane Dunn
(“Mrs. George Cupples”)

The Green Hand. A "Short Yarn"

De Mille, James
(“De Mille”)

Cord and Creese
The Cryptogram
The Dodge Club

De Vigny, Alfred
(“De Vigny”)

Cinq-Mars
De Witt (Madame) A French Country Family
Motherless

Dickens, Charles
(“Dickens”)

Hard Times
Drury, Anna H. Misrepresentation

Dumas, Alexandre
(“Dumas”)

Amaury
Ascanio
Chevalier d’Harmental
The Regent’s Daughter

Dupuy, Eliza A.
(“Miss Dupuy”)

Country Neighborhood
Eastlake, Lady Elizabeth Rigby Livonian Tales

Edgeworth, Maria
(“Edgeworth”)

Novels
Frank
Harry and Lucy
Moral Tales
Popular Tales
Rosamond
Edwards, Amelia B. Barbara’s History
Debenham’s Vow
Half a Million of Money
Hand and Glove
The Ladder of Life
Miss Carew
My Brother’s Wife
Edwards, Annie A Point of Honor

Eiloart, Elizabeth (Mrs. C. J.)
(“Mrs. Eiloart”)

The Curate’s Discipline
From Thistles—Grapes?
Eliot, George Adam Bede
Felix Holt, the Radical
The Mill on the Floss
Romola
Scenes of Clerical Life
Silas Marner

Ellis, Sarah
(“Mrs. Ellis”)

Look to the End

Ferrier, Susan Edmonstone
(“Miss S. Ferrier”)

Marriage

Francillon, Robert Edward
(“R. E. Francillon”)

Earl’s Dene

Fullom, Stephen Watson
(“Fullom”)

The Daughter of Night

Gardiner, Harriet Anne Frances
(“Countess D’Orsay”)

Clouded Happiness
Gaskell (Mrs.) see under Cleghorn
Gibbon, Charles For Lack of Gold
Goddard, Julia Baffled

Gore, Catherine Grace Frances (Moody)
(“Mrs. Gore”)

The Banker’s Wife
The Birthright
Peers and Parvenus
The Queen of Denmark
The Royal Favorite
Self

Grattan, Thomas Colley
(“T. C. Grattan”)

A Chance Medley
Greenwood, Frederick Margaret Denzil’s History
Greenwood, James The True History of a Little Ragamuffin

Grey, Elizabeth Caroline
(“Mrs. Grey”)

The Bosom Friend
The Gambler’s Wife
The Young Husband

Hall, Anna Maria (Mrs. S. C.)
(“Mrs. Hall”)

The Whiteboy
Midsummer Eve
Woman’s Trials

Hamilton, Mrs. Charles Granville
(“G. C. H.”)

Constance Lyndsay
Hamley, Edward Bruce Lady Lee’s Widowhood

Hannay, James
(“Hannay”)

Singleton Fontenoy, R. N.

Hannay, David
(“D. Hannay”)

Ned Allen

Hardy, Mary (McDowell) Duffus
(“Lady Hardy”)

Daisy Nichol
Which is the Heroine?

Harwood, Isabella
[aka Ross Neil]

The Heir Expectant
Kathleen
Raymond’s Heroine
Henningsen, Charles Frederick The white slave
Hofland (Mrs.) The Czarina
Daniel Dennison, &c.
The Unloved One
Housekeeper, M. R. My Husband’s Crime
Howitt, Mary The Author’s Daughter
Howitt, William Jack of the Mill
Hubback (Mrs.) The Wife’s Sister
Hughes, Arthur Tom Brown’s School Days
Tom Brown at Oxford
Hugo, Victor The Toilers of the Sea
Hunt, Leigh The Foster-Brother

Inchbald, Elizabeth
(“Mrs. Inchbald”)

A Simple Story
Jackson, Henry A Dangerous Guest
A First Friendship
Gilbert Rugge

James, George Payne Rainsford
(“James”)

Agincourt
Agnes Sorel
Aims and Obstacles
The Ancient Régime
Arabella Stuart
Arrah Neil
Attila
Beauchamp
The Castle of Ehrenstein
Charles Tyrrel
The Club Book
The Commissioner
The Convict
Corse de Lion
Darnley
De L’Orme
The Desultory Man
The False Heir
The Fate
Forest Days
The Forgery
The Gentleman of the Old School
The Gipsy
Gowrie
Heidelberg
Henry Masterdon
Henry Smeaton
Henry of Guise
The Huguenot
The Jacquerie
John Marston Hall
The King’s Highway
The Last of the Fairies
Leonora d’Orco
A Life of Vicissitudes
The Man at Arms
Margaret Graham
Mary of Burgundy
Morley Ernstein
The Old Dominion
The Old Oak Chest
One in a Thousand
Pequinillo
Philip Augustus
Richelieu
The Robber
Rose d’Albret
Russell
Sir Theodore Broughton
The Smuggler
The Stepmother
The String of Pearls
Thirty Years Since
Ticonderoga
A Whim and its Consequences
The Woodman

Jeaffreson, John Cordy
(“Jeaffreson”)

Isabel
Live it Down
Not Dead Yet
Olive Blake’s Good Work
Jerrold, Douglas William The Chronicles of Clovernook

Jewsbury, Geraldine Endsor
(“Miss Jewsbury”)

Constance Herbert
Zoe
Johnstone, Charles Frederick Recollections of Eton
Jolly, Emily Caste

Kingsley, Charles
(“Kingsley”)

Alton Locke
Yeast: a Problem
Kingsley, Henry Hetty
Stretton

Knowles, James Sheridan
(“Knowles”)

Fortescue
Knox, Isa Craig In Duty Bound
Lajetchnikoff The Heretic

Lamartine, Alphonse de
(“Lamartine”)

Genevieve

Lawrence, George
(“Geo. Lawrence”)

Anteros
Brakespeare
Breaking a Butterfly
Guy Livingstone
Maurice Dering
Sans Merci
Sword and Gown

Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan
(“J. S. Le Fanu”)

All in the Dark
Guy Deverell
A Lost Name
The Tenants of Malory
Uncle Silas

Lee, Holme
[aka Harriet Parr]

Annis Warleigh’s Fortunes
Kathie Brande
Mr. Wynyard’s Ward
Sylvan Holt’s Daughter

Lever, Charles James
(“Lever”)

Barrington
The Bramleighs of Bishop’s Folly
The Daltons
A Day’s Ride
The Dodd Family Abroad
Fortunes of Glencore
Gerald Fitzgerald
Luttrell of Arran
The Martins of Cro’ Martin
Maurice Tiernay
One of Them
Roland Cashel
Sir Brooke Fossbrooke
Sir Jasper Carew
That Boy of Norcott’s
Tony Butler

Lewes, George Henry
(“G. H. Lewes”)

Three Sisters and Three Fortunes
Liès, Eugène The Female Minister

Linton, Elizabeth Lynn
(“Mrs. E. Lynn Linton”)

Sowing the Wind
Lizzie Lorton of Greyrigg
MacDonald, George Alec Forbes of Howglen
Annals of a Quiet Neighborhood
Guild Court

Marlitt, Eugenie
(“E. Marlitt”)

Countess Gisela
Marryat, Florence Her Lord and Master

Marsh-Caldwell, Anne
(“Mrs. Marsh”)

Adelaide Lindsay
Aubrey
Castle Avon
Emilia Wyndham
Evelyn Marston
Father Darcy
The Heiress of Haughton
Lettice Arnold
Mordaunt Hall
Norman’s Bridge
Ravenscliffe
The Rose of Ashurst
Time, the Avenger
The Triumphs of Time
The Wilmingtons
Masterman, G. J. Belial
McCarthy, Justin H. My Enemy’s Daughter
The Waterdale Neighbors
Meinhold Sidonia the Sorceress

Melville, Herman
(“Melville”)

Mardi
Moby-Dick
Omoo
Pierre
Redburn
Typee
Whitejacket

Milman, Edward Augustus
(“E. H. Milman”, “Captain Milman”)

Arthur Conway
The Wayside Cross
Monkland, Mrs. The Nabob at Home
More, Hannah Complete Works

Mühlbach, Luise
(“L. Mühlbach”)

Bernthal
Mulock see under Craik

Murray, Charles Augustus
(“C. A. Murray”)

The Prairie Bird
Murray, Hamilton Falkenburg
Neale (“Captain”) The Lost Ship
Norton, Hon. Caroline Stuart of Dunleath

Notley, Frances Eliza Millet
[aka Francis Derrick]

Beneath the Wheels

Oliphant, Margaret Oliphant Wilson
(“Mrs. Oliphant”)

Agnes
The Athelings
Brownlows
Chronicles of Carlingford
John: a Love Story
Katie Stewart
Laird of Norlaw
Last of the Mortimers
Lucy Crofton
Madonna Mary
The Minister’s Wife
Miss Marjoribanks
Quiet Heart
Perpetual Curate
A Son of the Soil
Paalzow, Henriette Wach von The Citizen of Prague
Payn, James A Beggar on Horseback
Bred in the Bone
Carlyon’s Year
Found Dead
Gwendoline’s Harvest
One of the Family

Won—Not Wooed
[title also published as Not wooed but won]

Pickering, Ellen
(“Miss Pickering”)

The Grandfather
The Grumbler
Ponsonby, Lady Emily The Discipline of Life
Mary Lyndsay
Pride and Irresolution

Prittie, Kate Charlotte
(“Mrs. Maberly”)

The Lady and the Priest
Leontine
Reade, Charles The Cloister and the Hearth
Foul Play
Griffith Gaunt
Hard Cash
It is Never Too Late to Mend
Love Me Little, Love Me Long
Peg Woffington and Other Tales
Put Yourself in His Place
Terrible Temptation
White Lies

Riddell, Charlotte Eliza Lawson
(“Mrs. J. H. Riddell”)
[Mrs. Joseph H. Riddell, aka F. G. Trafford]

A Life’s Assize
Maxwell Drewitt
Phemie Keller
The Race for Wealth
Robinson, Emma The Gold Worshipers
The Maid of Orleans

Robinson, Frederick William
(“F. W. Robinson”)

Carry’s Confession
Christie’s Faith
For Her Sake
Mattie: A Stray
No Man’s Friend
Poor Humanity
Stern Necessity
True to Herself
Rowcroft, Charles The Bush-Ranger
Sala, George Augustus Quite Alone
Saunders, John Abel Drake’s Wife
Martin Pole
Bound to the Wheel
Hirell
Savage, M. W. My Uncle the Curate

Sedgwick, Catharine Maria
(“Miss Sedgwick”)

Hope Leslie
Live and Let Live
Married or Single?
Means and Ends
Poor Rich Man and Rich Poor Man
Stories for Young Persons
Tales of Glauber Spa
Wilton Harvey and Other Tales

Sedgwick, Susan Anne Livingston Ridley
(“Mrs. Sedgwick”)

Walter Thornley

Sewell, Elizabeth Missing
(“Miss Sewell”)

Amy Herbert
Sheppard, Elizabeth Sara Auchester, Charles. A Memorial

Sherwood, Mary Martha
(“Mrs. Sherwood”)

Works
Henry Milner
Lady of the Manor
Roxobel

Sinclair, Catherine
(“Miss Sinclair”)

Sir Edward Graham
Skene, Felicia The Tutor’s Ward

Smith, Horace
(“H. Smith”)

Adam Brown, the Merchant
Arthur Arundel
Love and Mesmerism

Smythies, Harriet M. G. (Mrs. Gordon)

The Breach of Promise
The Jilt
Spindler The Jew

Steele, Anna Caroline (Wood)
(“Mrs. A. C. Steele”)

So Runs the World Away
Stephenson, Eliza Tabor Nature’s Nobleman
Meta’s Faith
Jeanie’s Quiet Life
Rachel’s Secret
St. Olave’s

Sue, Eugène
(“Sue”)

Arthur
The Commander of Malta
De Rohan

Temme, Jodocus Donatus Hubertus
(“Temme”)

Anna Hammer

Anne Isabel Thackeray (Ritchie)
(“Miss Thackeray”)

The Village on the Cliff

Thackeray, William Makepeace
(“Thackeray”)

The Adventures of Philip
Denis Duval
The Great Hoggarty Diamond
Henry Esmond
Lovel the Widower
The Newcomes
Pendennis
Vanity Fair
The Virginians
Thomas, Annie [later Cudlip] False Colors
Called to Account
Denis Donne
The Dower House
On Guard
Only Herself
Played Out
Playing for High Stakes
Theo Leigh
Walter Goring

Thomson, A. T.
(“Mrs. Thomson”)

Lady of Milan

Tieck, Ludwig
(“Tieck”)

The Elves, &c.

Trollope, Frances Milton
(“Mrs. Trollope”)

Petticoat Government
Trollope, Anthony Barchester Towers
The Belton Estate
Bertrams
Can You Forgive Her?
Castle Richmond
The Claverings
Doctor Thorne
Framley Parsonage
He Knew He was Right
Last Chronicle of Barset
Miss Mackenzie
Phineas Finn
Orley Farm
Rachel Ray
Ralph the Heir
Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite
Small House at Allington
The Struggles of Brown, Jones, and Robinson
Three Clerks
Vicar of Bullhampton
The Warden
Trollope, Frances Eleanor Anne Furness
Mabel’s Progress
Veronica
Trollope, T. Adolphus Durnton Abbey
Lindisfarn Chase
A Siren

Warburton, Eliot
(“Warburton”)

Darien
Reginald Hastings

Ward, R. Plummer
(“Ward”)

Chatsworth
White, Babington Circe

Wigram, W. Knox
(“a Barrister”)

Five Hundred Pounds Reward
Wiley, Calvin Henderson Alamance

Wilkinson, Janet W.
(“Miss Wilkinson”)

Hands not Hearts

Williams, Robert Folkestone
(“F. Williams”)

The Luttrells

Wills, William Gorman
(“Wills”)

Notice to Quit
The Wife’s Evidence
Wright, Caleb E. Wyoming, A Tale
Wynne, Catherine Simpson Margaret’s Engagement
Yates, Edmund Black Sheep
Kissing the Rod
Land at Last
Wrecked in Port

Zschokke, Heinrich
(“Zschokke”)

Veronica
“Author of...”:
Book Author
Aunt Margaret’s Trouble Frances Eleanor Trollope
Carlyon’s Year James Payn
Cecil Mrs. Gore
Doctor Jacob Matilda Betham-Edwards
A First Friendship Henry Jackson
Gilbert Rugge Henry Jackson
Lost Sir Massingberd James Payn
Mabel’s Progress Frances Eleanor Trollope
Mattie: a Stray F. W. Robinson
Olive Varcoe Frances Eliza Millet Notley (Francis Derrick)
Paul Massie Justin H. McCarthy
Rachel’s Secret Eliza Tabor (Stephenson)
Raymond’s Heroine Isabella Harwood (Ross Neil)
St. Olave’s Eliza Tabor (Stephenson)
Books Identified Only by Title:

Some titles have been used for many different books. In case of ambiguity, the one known to have been published by Harper & Brothers in or before 1872 was assumed.

Book Author
Alamance Calvin Henderson Wiley
Belial G. J. Masterman
Bound to John Company M. E. Braddon
The Breach of Promise

Harriet M. G. (Mrs. Gordon) Smythies

Caste Emily Jolly
Charles Auchester. A Memorial by Elizabeth Sara Sheppard
The Chronicles of Clovernook Douglas William Jerrold
The Citizen of Prague Henriette Wach von Paalzow
The Discipline of Life Lady Emily Ponsonby
Estelle Russell Mary Allan-Olney
Falkenburg Hamilton Murray
The Female Minister Eugène Liès
A First Friendship Henry Jackson
The Gold Worshipers Emma Robinson
The Green Hand. A “Short Yarn” Mrs. George Cupples
In Duty Bound Isa Craig Knox
Jessie’s Flirtations Harriot F. Curtis
The Jilt

Harriet M. G. (Mrs. Gordon) Smythies

Lady Lee’s Widowhood Edward Bruce Hamley
Livonian Tales Lady Elizabeth Rigby Eastlake
The Maid of Honor De Bawr, Mme.

Full Title: The Maid of Honor; or, The Massacre of St. Bartholomew. A Tale of the Sixteenth Century

The Maid of Orleans Emma Robinson
Margaret Denzil’s History Frederick Greenwood
Margaret’s Engagement Catherine Simpson Wynne
Miss Van Kortland Frank Lee Benedict
My Daughter Elinor Frank Lee Benedict
My Husband’s Crime M. R. Housekeeper
My Uncle the Curate M. W. Savage
The Nabob at Home Mrs. Monkland
Nora and Archibald Lee Isa Blagden
A Point of Honor Annie Edwards
Pride and Irresolution Lady Emily Ponsonby
The Professor’s Lady Berthold Auerbach
Rachel’s Secret Eliza Tabor (Stephenson)
Raymond’s Heroine Isabella Harwood (aka Ross Neil)
Recollections of Eton. Charles Frederick Johnstone
The Regent’s Daughter Dumas
St. Olave’s Eliza Tabor (Stephenson)
Tales from the German

Full Title: Tales from the German, comprising specimens from the most celebrated authors

Tom Brown (both titles)

Arthur Hughes

The True History of a Little Ragamuffin

James Greenwood
The Tutor’s Ward Felicia Skene
Which is the Heroine? Lady Mary Duffus Hardy
The White Slave Charles Frederick Henningsen

Full Title: The white slave; or, The Russian peasant girl

Wyoming Caleb E. Wright

Full Title: Wyoming, A Tale






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