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I
A GUIDE TO THE BEST
HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES
First Edition^ printed May, 1902. Pp. viii., 124,
Second Ediiion^ printed October^ 1902. With complete Indexes to Authors
and Titles. Pp. x., 156.
TTurd Edition, printed February^ 1904. Revised and onlarged. Pp. xvi.,
236.
Fourth Edition (Sixth Thousand), printed April, 191 1. Revised: with
large Supplement. Pp. jrviii., 522.
A Guide to the Best
Historical Novels and Tales
BY
JONATHAN NIELD
Cf
These Historical Novels have taught all men this truthi which looks
like a truism, and yet was as good as unknown to writers of history
and others, till so taught : that the bygone ages of the world were actually
filled by living men, not by protocols, state-papers, controversies, and
abstractions of men."
Carlyle on the W<sverley Novels,
LONDON: ELKIN MATHEWS
NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
1911
•J
M
t
TO THB
REV. R. C. RADCLIFFE
OF ETON COLLSGB
IN RECOGNITION OP MUCH
HELP AND KINDNESS
IN BYGONE DAYS
CONTENTS
PACK
Pre£Eice to the Fourth Edition ix
Preface to the Third Edition ..!..•• xiii
Preface to the Second Edition xvii
Introduction i
General List (Pre-Christian Era) 19
General List (First Century onwards) 21
Supplementary List (Semi-Historical) *ii7
Fifty Representative Historical Novels 129
Suggested Courses of Reading (Juvenile) . . • . 141
Bibliography 165
Index of Authors and Titles 175
Index of Titles 219
■ ■
Vll.
a 2
CONTEl!iTS--continued.
SUPPLEMENT
General List (Pre-Christian Era)
General List (First Century onwards)
Semi-Historical Novels and Tales
Notes on Juvenile Literature
Bibliography
Index of Authors and Titles (Supplement) .
Index of Titles (Supplement) . • . r
FACB
407
423
431
437
497
ntu
PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION.
Having apologised already for a third preface, I ought, no
doubt, to crave still tnore indulgence now that I come to write
a fourth. But, believing that I have something to say which
really needs saying, I shall risk whatever charges of inconsis-
tency and superfluity may ensue.
It has been very gratifying to learn that the " Guide " has
continued to sell regularly through all the seven years which
have elapsed since it appeared in its third life-stage at the
beginning of 1904; and this, in spite of competition in two
new quarters. The much longer pause in republication (the
last edition was by far the largest) has enabled me to effect
what I regarded in the first instance as an impossible ideal;
for, besides bringing my lists up to date through the entry of
new books, I have once again gone over old ground, and
have sought to include all those novels and tales which
ignorance or ill<onsideration caused me to omit in previous
editions. And, let it be stated here that^ in rectifying former
omissions, I have not gone to workers in the same field of
Bibliography and stolen their honey ; but I have, throughout,
taken an independent line. Hence, although, in the Supple-
ment now added, there are descriptive notes on several
hundred novels and tales which appeared before the publi-
cation of Mr. Bowen's ^'Catalogue of Historical Novels"
ix.
(second edition) and of Dr. Baker's " History in Fiction," not
one of these notes is based upon the particulars furnished in
either work. Wherever possible, I have obtained my infor-
mation from the actual novel or tale described.
Four years ago {vide Dr. Baker's kindly allusion in the
Preface to his admirable work just named), it was hinted that
the " Guide " was somewhat lacking in its '^ degree of com-
prehensiveness; " such a criticism could scarcely be maintained
now. If there is still exclusion to some extent, there is
(fourth edition) inclusion to a very much laiger extent. I have
allowed the utmost elasticity in my later decisions as to his-
torical qualification. How comprehensive has been my
selection, may be judged from the fact that, while in my
enlarged third edition the annotated lists covered between
twelve and thirteen hundred novels and tales, I have now
passed under review about seventeen hundred more. In the
total of nearly three thousand novels and tales thus reached,
over two thousand are not to be found in Mr. Bowen's
catalogue, and some thirteen hundred are absent from Dr.
Baker's lists. Comprehensiveness alone, however, would be
a poor advantage, and I believe that, in its present form,
besides being the largest bibliography of its kind, the " Guide "
is also the most accurate.
And this brings me to say a few words about certain
special aims that I have striven my utmost to embody in the
large supplementary portion of this edition. More and more,
I have come to see that, in a reference book of the kind —
making its appeal to readers of all ages and of varying tastes
— there should be large catholicity. And nowhere is such
inclusiveness more desirable than in the case of Juvenile
stories: the shortest and simplest tale, if it in any way
illustrates a bygone period, may prove of use and of interest.
X.
In both English and foreign history there are particular periods
which have been almost entirely overlooked or avoided by
writers of imaginative literature ; and, bearing this in mind, I
have not hesitated — after much laborious investigation — to
recommend very brief stories which deal with more or less
untouched times and peoples. Such recommendation, how-
ever, has of course been subject to the stories in question
reaching a certain standard of merit. Again, in regard to
longer tales, there are many which, if not to be ranked among
absolutely first-class examples of historical fiction, are very
good of their kind. Recognition of this has led me to reverse
many previous judgments. Hitherto, one really capable
author has fared somewhat badly at the hands of bibliographers.
I allude to Herbert Hayens ; his extremely interesting South
American tales fill a gap that much needed filling, and I have
been at pains to give an accurate account of each one of them.
Another writer who has been ignored to a very much greater
extent, is Miss Mary H. Debenham : many of her tales —
both long and short — deserve special recommendation. It is
strange that, although some fourteen volumes came from her
pen before 1905, only two were mentioned in Mr. Bowen's
" Catalogue," and not one appeared either in my own third
edition or in Dr. Baker's " History in Fiction." These
omissions are, I trust, fully atoned (so far as the " Guide " is
concerned) in the complete analyses of Miss Debenham's
stories which appear throughout the Supplement.
Turning from juvenile fiction to the novel proper, I have
very carefully considered my American and foreign sections,
as regards both old and new books. In the English sections
I have gone to one or two pre-Victorian authors for repre-
sentative writings, while omissions in the case of this or that
popular modem novelist have been made good. The fiction
zi.
published in the seven years since my last edition, has been
exhaustively treated. During that period not a few reputations
have been made; among the most deservedly popular of
recent imaginative writers I may specify Rafael Sabatini,
" Ashton Hilliers," Michael Barrington, Charles Major, Alfred
T. Sheppard, W. J. Eccott, "Morice Gerard," "Marjorie
Bo wen," "K. L. Montgomery," Philip L. Stevenson, Percy
J. Brebner, Howard Pease, and R. H. Forster (the two last-
named have specialised in Northumbrian romance). Of those
who cater for yoimg people, Herbert Strang, Captain Brereton,
Everett T. Tomlinson, " James Otis," E. E. Crake, Escott
Lynn, Dorothea Moore, Edith E. Cowper, Gertrude Hollis,
Tom Bevan, "Harry Collingwood," Ernest Protheroe, and
Harold Avery, may be mentioned as having come well to the
fore.
My sincere thanks are due to a large number of librarians,
authors, publishers, and booksellers, whom, owing to necessities
of space, I cannot name individually. Perhaps I ought to
make separate acknowledgment of my very considerable
obligation to officials in the British Museum Reading Room.
J.N.
March^ 1911.
xu.
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
Thbrb is a justifiable feeling against superfluous prefaces,
and the fact that this little voliune is entering the third
stage of its existence might appear to suggest that the time
had gone by for explanations. In the present instance,
however, when something like a '* new " book is offered,
an extra word or two may not be altogether out of place.
The old saying, *' experience teaches," holds good pre-
eminently in the case of a work of reference; errors of
omission and commission are pointed out in this or that
quarter, and not infirequently a criticism of the kind may
be accepted as the basis of genuine improvement. This
must be my plea in response to objectors who, possessing
the earlier incomplete editions, feel somewhat aggrieved on
learning that such substantial changes and additions have
been made I The very kind reception accorded my original
effort led me to at once embark on labours which, without
any such encouragement, I could scarcely have faced. At
this point I should like to specify the many suggestions
and criticisms from which I have tried to reap profit, but
conditions of space forbid, and I must content myself with
expressing my obligations in one direction only. To Prof.
C S. Fearenside, who has done such good work in the
department of History proper, I am indebted for exceed-
ingly valuable advice.
Xlll.
Perhaps I shall best serve those consulting my pages if
I briefly enumerate the principal features in this new
edition. Passing over general revision and enlargement, I
would call attention to the following points : —
(i.) Detailed description of individual books (with
special reference to localities and personages) ^ instead of
vague, general groupings like ** Norman Conquest,"
" French Revolution," &c., &c. It is hoped that the use-
fulness of the list will be thereby so greatly enhanced as to
justify the labour involved in this extra specification.
(2.) Large increase in the '* Supplementary List " of
semi-historical novels. It was felt that (as an appreciative
reviewer in The Journal of Education pointed out) many
works originally placed in the general list might, with
great advantage, be transferred to this supplementary
section. Moreover, several entirely new novels have been
brought in.
(3.) Specially good books have been marked. This will,
I trust, meet the objection made in a few quarters that my
choice was too comprehensive. Moreover, a list of ** Fifty
Representative Historical Novels " (already printed else-
where) is offered for the consideration of those readers who
approach Romance in a more or less critical mood.
(4.) Amalgamation of the two Juvenile Lists (English
History). Books with decidedly "Boyish" or "Girlish"
tendencies are marked accordingly. Many new tales have
been added in this department.
(5.) Throughout the volume American Publishers are
given as well as English.
(6.) Original publication dates have been given (Authors
and Titles Index) ; in the case of a translation, the date is
that of the book in its first form (French, German, Hun-
XIV.
garian, &c,) Wherever possible, the title-page date has
been taken. My special reason for inserting these dates, at
no little cost of time and pains, is to show those who care
for such knowledge, under what period of historical criticism
or non-criticism any book was written. Moreover, such
dates may be of assistance to bibliographers generally.
(7.) Lastly, three-column arrangement of lists — thus
enabling the tabular form to be straight down instead of
across the page ; this will, I feel sure, be much handier in
the case of quick reference.
There is one small matter to which I would allude.
Through the mis-reading, doubtless, of a passage in my
Introduction, I see that a too indulgent critic has ascribed
to me an achievement to which I cannot lay claim.
Though a lover of Historical Novels, I have not " read
thousands of such works " ; the compliment is a doubtful
onel
J.N.
January, 1904.
XV.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
Thb opinion having been very generally expressed that an
Index of Authors and Titles was essential in a work of refer-
ence such as the present, the author gladly avails himself
of the opportunity (so soon given !) to remedy the defect in
this respect. As regards the List itself, some mistakes of
spelling, &c., have been corrected, but no attempt has been
made to add fresh examples. In the two or three months
since preparation, very few noticeable historical romances
have appeared ; should, however, the kind reception given
to the little volume on its first appearance be extended to
it in this slightly enlarged form — ^thus admitting of still
further revision — every effort will be made to keep the List
as up-to-date as possible.
Several of the minor criticisms which have been passed
on the author's method scarcely call for notice, but some-
thing may, perhaps, be said in regard to two objections
which have been made. Firstly, a misunderstanding seems
to have prevailed in certain quarters over the Suggested
Courses of Reading (Juvenile). These were drawn up
primarily with a view to assist Parents and Teachers who
might wish to know of likely books dealing with the various
English Reigns; it never occurred to the compiler that
such *^ suggested courses " would be taken as dictating to
young people what they should readl Secondly, it has
xvii.
been urged that the List is too comprehensive (though, it
should be mentioned, this very feature of inclusiveness has
been specially commended in other critical quarters). In
the early stages of compilation a much more restricted
method was adopted, but, in deference to opinions ex-
pressed on the part of Educational and other authorities,
besides a growing conviction on the compiler's own part,
the List was greatly expanded. It was specially implied
that the term ** best " was to be taken in the sense of "best
available" for the several sections, and the choice was
made with a due regard to varieties of taste, &c. Certainly
it was nowhere hinted (as one reviewer seemed to suggest)
that writers like James, Ainsworth, Grant, &c., were to be
classed among " best authors " — ^indeed, the very contrary
was asserted in the Introduction itself. To anyone calling
in question the claim made for the List, that it is select and
something more than a mere Catalogue, at least one very
simple test may be suggested ; let such a sceptical reader
compare the list here offered with that compiled by Mr.
Bowen, and he will find that, of the zi6o or so books given
in the latter, not more than about 250 reappear.
That the " Guide " has proved of use to some may be
inferred from the fact that a new edition is called for within
so short a time. It has been stated in one quarter that the
idea of the book was praiseworthy enough, but impossible
to carry out ; may not the old saying— solvitur ambulando-^
be, to some extent, applied here 7
J.N.
July, 1902.
XVUl.
INTRODUCTION.
It is not proposed, in these preliminary remarks, to sketch
in detail the origin and growth of the Historical Novel ;
this has already been amply done by Professor Saintsbury
and others. I shall be content to approach the subject on
its general side, offering, at the same time, some critical
suggestions which will, I hope, not be without value to
readers of Romance.
But, first of all, I must explain how the List which
follows came to be compiled, and the object I have in offer-
ing it. For many years I have been an assiduous reader
of novels and tales in which the historical element appeared,
supplementing my own reading in this direction by a care-
ful study of all that I could find in the way of Criticism on
such works and their writers. Only in this way could I
venture on a selection involving a survey of several
thousand volumes ! With the above imderstanding, I can
say that no book has been inserted vnthoutsome reason, while
I have made all possible effort to obtain accuracy of
description. And this leads me to remark, that just in this
process of selection do I claim originality for my List,
Nearly twenty years ago an excellent ** Descriptive Cata-
logue of Historical Novels and Tales " was published ; Mr.
H. Courthope Bo wen was the compiler,* and I would here
• " A Descriptive Catalogue of Historical Novels and Tales, for the use
of School Libraries and Teachers of History," compiled and described by
H. Courthope Bowen, M. A. (£dwaid Stanford, 1SS2 : and Scribner and
Wclford, i8«4.)
B
mention my indebtedness to him. In Mr. Bowen's list,
however, one finds good and bad alike — all the works of
even such moderately endowed writers as G. P. R. James,
Ainsworth, Grant, &c., are there set down. It seemed to
me that, not only was there room for a new list of Histori-
cal Novels (Stevenson, Marion Crawford, Conan Doyle
Weyman, Mason, and a number of more or less capable
romancists having come forward in the last twenty years),
but, also, that more than ever was there a need for some
sort of clus in the search for such books. In the last year
or two there has been an almost alarming influx in this de-
partment of Fiction, and teachers in schools, besides
readers in general, may be glad to be saved a somewhat
tedious investigation.
Having thus attempted to justify the existence of my
little *' Guide," I pass on to deal with the subject of
Historical Fiction itself. Most of us, I suppose, at one
time or another have experienced a thrill of interest when
some prominent personage, whom we knew well by repute,
came before us in the flesh. We watched his manner, and
noted all those shades of expression which, in another's
countenance, we should have passed by unheeded. Well,
it seems to me that, parallel with this experience, is that
which we gain when, reading some first-rank romance, we
encounter in its pages a figure with which History has
made us more or less familiar. And I would remark that
the great masters do not, as a rule, make that mistake
which less skilful writers fall into — the mistake of intro-
ducing well-known historical figures too firequently. The
Cromwell of " Woodstock " has an element of mystery
about him, even while he stands out before our mental
vision in bold relief. Had Scott brought him more pro-
minently into the plot, and thus emphasized the fictional
aspect of his figure, our interest in the story, as such,
might have been sustained, but we should have lost that
atmosphere of vraismblance which, under a more careful
reserve, the hand of the master has wrought for us.
But it is not only this introduction of personalities which
constitutes a novel " historical " ; the mere allusion to real
events, or the introduction of dates, may give us sufficient
ground for identifying the period with which a novel deals.
Of course, the question as to whether a particular person
or event is truly historical^ is not always an easy one to
answer. By the adaptation in it of some purely mythical
character or event, a novel is no more constituted '* histori-
cal" than is a fairy-tale by the adaptation of folk-lore.
King Arthur and Robin Hood are unhistorical, and, if I
have ventured to insert in my list certain tales which deal
with the latter, it is not on that account, but because other
figures truly historical {i.g.^ Richard I.) appear. As there
has been some dispute on this question of the Historical
Novel proper, I offer the following definition : — A Novel is
rendered Historical by the introduction of dates, personages,
or events, to which identification can be readily given. I
am quite aware that certain well-known novels which give
the general atmosphere of a period — such, for example, as
Hawthorne's " Scarlet Letter " and Mr. Hewlett's «« Forest
Lovers " — do not come within the scope of my definition ;
but this is just why I have added a '* Supplementary List "
of semi-historical tales. And, while I am alluding to this
'* Supplementary List," I should like to give my reason for
omitting from it one remarkable book which has every
claim to be considered representative of the mid-nineteenth
century. Readers of " John Inglesant " may be reminded
B— 2
that in his interesting preface Mr. Shorthouse alludes to
William Smith's philosophical novel, " Thomdale." As a
picture of Thought developments in the early Victorian
period, the latter work has special historical interest for the
philosophical and theological student; in this respect it
may be likened to Pater's '< Marius the Epicurean," which
vividly reproduces the Intellectual ferment of an earlier
age. " Thorndale," however, is primarily didacHcy and the
philosophical dialogues (interesting as these are to the meta-
physician) hardly atone to the general reader for an almost
entire absence of plot. The above is, doubtless, an alto-
gether extreme instance, but the exclusion of several other
works from the category of Romance seems to follow on
something like the same grounds. Becker's ^' Charicles "
and '* Gallus " are little more than school textbooks, while,
turning to a less scholarly quarter, Ainsworth's " Preston
Fight," and even his better-known " Guy Fawkes," may be
cited as illustrating what Mr. Shorthouse means when he
speaks of novels *' in which a small amount of fiction has
been introduced simply for the purpose of relating History."
In all such cases the average novel-reader feels that he has
been allured on false pretences. I am well aware that not
a few of the books included in my List might be considered
to fall under the same ban, but I think it will be found that
in most of them there is at least a fair attempt to arouse
narrative interest.
Coming to the List itself, it will be noticed that I have
been somewhat sparing in the books given under the ^* Pre-
Christian " heading. Novels dealing with these very far-ofif
times are apt to be unsatisfactory ; the mist in which
events and personages are enveloped, takes away from that
appearance of reality which is the great charm of the histori-
cal novel. We are hardly concerned, in reading << Sarche-
don'* and similar books, to get away from the purely
imaginary pictures which spring from the Novelist's own
brain, and the danger is that the very elements which add
to our interest in the tale as such^ will go far to mislead us
in our conception of the period dealt with. There is none
of that sense of familiarity which we enjoy when reading a
sixteenth or seventeeth century romance: in the latter
case, the historical background, being easily perceptible,
merges for us with the creations of the author's own
imagination* Where the writer of an ** ancient " romance
happens to be a scholar like Ebers, we feel that — so far at
least as historical presentment goes — we cannot be far
wrong, but the combination of great scholarship and narra-
tive capacity is, alas, too rare I
I have likewise refrained from giving many tales deal-
ing with Early-Christian times. We are here, it must be
admitted, on controversial ground, and under the First
Century heading I have endeavoured to insert romances of
the highest quality only. For instance, I think that Dr.
Abbott's '• Philochristus " and Wallace's •« Ben Hur" ought
to satisfy two different types of readers. And this is the
place, doubtless, to say that in my lists will be found books
of widely differing merit and aim. School teachers, and
others in like capacity, will easily discriminate between
authors suitable for juvenile or untrained tastes, and
authors whose appeal is specially to those of maturer
thought and experience. Differing as much in method and
style as in choice of period and character type, Thackeray's
" Vanity Fair " and George Eliot's " Romola " have at
least this in common— they require a very high degree of
intelligence for their due appreciation. Who, among those
of us with any knowledge of such works, would dream of
recommending them to a youthful reader fresh from the
perusal of Miss Yonge's '< Little Duke," or Captain
Marryatt's « Children of the New Forest " ?
Naturally in a list of this kind there is boi^nd to be very
great inequality ; certain periods have been wholly ignored
by writers of the first rank, while in others we have
something like an embarras dc ticJusse. Consequently, I have
been compelled, here and there, to insert authors of only
mediocre merit In other cases, again, I have not hesitated
to omit works by writers of acknowledged position when
these have seemed below the author's usual standard, and
where no gap had to be filled. I would instance the
James II. — William III. period. Here Stanley We3mian
and ''Edna Lyall'* might have been represented, but,
there being no dearth of good novels dealing with both the
above reigns, I did not deem it advisable to call in these
popular writers at the point which has been very generally
considered their lowest. I mention this to show that omis-
sions do not necessarily mean ignorance, though, in cover-
ing such an immense ground, I cannot doubt that romances
worthy of a place in my list have been overlooked.
I think many will be surprised to find how large a pro-
portion of our best writers (English and American) have
entered the domain- of Historical or Semi - Historical
Romance* Scott, Thackeray, Dickens, George Eliot,
Charlotte Bronte, George Meredith, R. L. Stevenson,
Hawthorne, Peacock, Charles Kingsley, Henry Kingsley,
Charles Reade, Anthony TroUope, Mrs. Gaskell, Walter
Besant, Lytton, Disraeli, J. H. Newman, J. A. Froude, and
Walter Pater — these are a few of the names which appear
in the following pages; while Tolstoy, Dumas, Balzac,
George Sand, Victor Hugo, De Vigny, Prosper M^iin6e,
Flaubert, TWophile Gautier, Freytag, Scheflfel, Hauflf,
Auerbach, Manzoni, P^rez Gald6s, M^rejkowski, Topelius,
Sienkiewicz, and J6kai are, perhaps, the chief amongst those
representing Literatures other than our own.
"The Last Days of Pompeii," "The Gladiators,"
"Hypatia," "Harold," " Ivanhoe," "The Talisman,"
" Maid Marian," " The Last of the Barons," " Quentin
Durward," "Romola," "The Cloister and the Hearth,"
" In the Palace of the King," " Westward Ho !," " Kenil-
worth," "The Chaplet of Pearls," "A Gentleman of
France," " John Inglesant," " The Three Musketeers,"
"Twenty Years After," "Woodstock," "Peveril of the
Peak," " Old Mortality," " The Betrothed Lovers " (" /
Promessi Sposi "), " Loma Doone," " The Refugees," " In
the Golden Days," " The Courtship of Morrice Buckler,
" Dorothy Forster," " The Men of the Moss Hags,
"Esmond," "The Virginians," " Heart of Midlothian,
" Waverley," " The Master of Ballantrae," " Kidnapped,"
" Catriona," " The Chaplain of the Fleet," " The Seats of
the Mighty," " Bamaby Rudge," " A Tale of Two Cities,"
" War and Peace " — ^what visions do these mere titles arouse
within many of us ! And, though most of the books given
in my list cannot be described in the same glowing terms as
the masterpieces* just named, yet many " nests of pleasant
thoughts " may be formed through their companionship.
Hitherto allusion has been mainly in the direction of
modem authors, and I would now say a word or two in
regard to those of an earlier period who are also represented.
* " Masterpieces,*' that is, in their several degrees ; perhaps I was some-
what rash to invite the criticism that "Quentin Durward/' ** Esmond," &c.»
find themselves in very unequal company !
•f
8
Defoe, Fielding, Richardson, Goldsmith, Smollett, Frances
Bumey, Samuel Lover, John Gait, Maria Edgeworth,
Susan Ferrier, William Godwin, Mary Shelley, Fenimore
Cooper, J. G. Lockhart, Leigh Hunt, Thomas Moore,
Harriet Martineau, J. L. Motley, Horace Smith, Charles
Lever, Meadows Taylor, and William Carleton — these (in
greater or less degree) notable names were bound to have a
place; and, coming to less distinguished writers, I may
mention the brothers Banim, Gerald Griffin, Mrs. S. C.
Hall, Lady Morgan, the sisters Porter, W. G. Simms,
George Croly, Albert Smith, G. R. Gleig,* W. H. Maxwell,
Sir Arthur Helps, Eliot Warburton, Lewis Wingfield,
Thomas Miller, C. Macfarlane, Grace Aguilar, Anne Man-
ning, and Emma Robinson (author of " Whitefriars "). To
G. P. R. James, Harrison Ainsworth, and James Grant I
have previously alluded. It has been my endeavour to
choose the best examples of all the above-named novelists
— ^a task rendered specially difficult in some cases by the
fact of immense literary output. Doubtless not a few of
the works so chosen are open to criticism, but they will at
least serve to illustrate certain stages in the growth of
Historical Romance. With the exclusion of Mrs. Radcliffis,
Mrs. Marsh,t Mrs. Gore, Lady Blessington, Lady Fullerton,
Mrs. Bray, and Mrs. Child, few will, I imagine, find fault ;
but writers like Miss Tucker (A.L.O.E.) and Miss Emily
Holt still find so many readers in juvenile quarters, that
it has required a certain amoimt of courage to place them
also on my Index Expurgatorius I Turning once again to
* This author is not represented in the present (4th) edition.
t Mrs. Marsh's *' Father Darcy'* is now given a place in my List.
Mrs. Radciiffe, Mrs. Bray, Miss Tucker (A. L. O. £.), and Miss Emily
Holt, are also represented more or less fully {^nde Supplement).
writers of the sterner sex, I have ruled out * C. R. Maturin,
G. W. M. Reynolds, and Pierce Egan, Junr. ; and (quitting
the <' sensational" for the ^< mildly entertaining ") out of
the Rev. J. M. Neale's many historical tales I have selected
only one — *' Theodora Phranza/' which, besides being well
written, has the merit of dealing with a somewhat neglected
period. Stories possessing a background of History are to
be found in ** Tales from Blackwood," as also in " Wilson's
Tales of the Borders/' but their extremely slight character
seemed scarcely to justify insertion; while not even the
high literary position attained by him on other grounds
reconciled me to either of Allan Cunningham's novels —
•* Sir Michael Scott " and " Paul Jones."
Of the Foreign novelists appearing in my list, several
have been already named, but Marchese D'Azeglio, F. D.
Guerrazzi, Cesare Cantii, ** W. Alexis " (G. Hftring), H.
Laube, Louise Miihlbach (Klara M. Mundt), Nicolas
J6sika, Viktor Rydberg, Hendrik Conscience, Xavier B.
Saintine, Amed^e Achard, and '* Erckmann-Chatrian" here
call for notice as not coming under strictly contemporary
classification. I would forestall the criticism that two
writers have been passed over whose fame is greater than
any of those just mentioned, viz., *' Stendhal " (Henri
Beyle) and Alphonse Daudet. Beyle's '< La Chartreuse de
Parme," though containing the oft-praised account of
Waterloo, is far more Psychological than Historical ; and
Daudet's " Robert Helmont," while it depicts (under Diary
form) certain aspects of the Franco-German War, has
hardly any plot running through it. As the Waterloo and
* C. R. Maturia and G. W. M. Reynolds are now both represented ;
while the selection from the Rev. J. M. Neale's tales is on a very large
scale {^tfide Snpplement).
lO
Franco-German War periods were amply illustrated in
numerous other novels of more assured suitability, I had
the less hesitation in deciding against the two works just
named. In the selection from Foreign Historical Fiction
nothing more has been attempted than to include the lead-
ing examples ; most of these, it will be found, have been
translated into English.
Before leaving the subject of older writers, it may be
mentioned that not a few of the works chosen to represent
them are, at the moment, out of print. To anyone objecting
that something ought to have been done to indicate this in
each separate case, I would urge that the ** out of print "
line can never be drawn with precision in view of constant
reprints as well as of further extinctions.
Perhaps this introduction may be most fitly concluded by
something in the nature of apology for Historical Romance
itselL Not only has fault been found with the deficiencies
of unskilled authors in that department, but the question
has been asked by one or two critics of standing — What
right has the Historical Novel to exist at all ? More often
than not, it is pointed out, the Romancist gives us a mass
of inaccuracies, which, while they mislead the ignorant («.«.,
the majority), are an unpardonable ofience to the histori-
cally-minded reader. Moreover, the writer of such Fiction,
though he be a Thackeray or a Scott, cannot surmount
barriers which are not merely hard to scale, but absolutely
impassable. The spirit of a period is like the selfhood of a
human being — something that cannot be handed on ; try as
we may, it is impossible for us to breathe the atmosphere
of a bygone time, since all those thousand-and-one details
which went to the building up of both individual and
general experience, can never be reproduced. We con-
II
sider (say) the Eighteenth Century from the purely Histori-
cal standpoint, and, while we do so, are under no delusion
as to our limitations ; we know that a few of the leading
personages and events have been brought before us in a
more or less disjointed fiashiony and are perfectly aware
that there is room for much discrepancy between the
pictures so presented to us (be it with immense skill) and
the actual facts as they took place in such and such a year.
But, goes on the objector, in the case of a Historical
Romance we allow ourselves to be hoodwinked, for, imder
the influence of a pseudo-historic security, w;e seem to
watch the real sequence of events in so far as these affect
the characters in whom we are interested. How we seem
to Uv$ in those early years of the Eighteenth Century, as
we follow Henry Esmond from point to point, and yet, in
truth, we are breathing not the atmosphere of Addison and
Steele, but the atmosphere created by the brilliant Nine-
teenth Century Novelist, partly out of his erudite concep-
tion of a former period, and partly out of the emotions and
thoughts engendered by that very environment which was his
own, and from which he could not escape !
Well, to all such criticisms it seems to me there are
ample rejdnders. In the first place, it must be remembered
that History itself possesses interest for us more as the
unfolding of certain moral and mental developments than
as the mere enumeration of facts. Of course, I am aware
that the ideal of the Historian is Truth utterly regardless of
prejudice and inclination, but, as with all other human
ideals, this one is never fully realised, and there is ever that
discrepancy between Fact and its Narration to which I just
now aUuded. This being so, I would ask — Is not the
writer of Fiction justified in emphasizing those elements of
12
History which have a bearing on life and character in
general ? There is, doubtless, a wise and an unwise method
of procedure. One novelist, in the very effort to be
acciurate, produces a work which — being neither History
nor Fiction — ^is simply dull; while another, who has gauged
the true relation between fact and imagination, knows
better than to bring into prominence that which should
remain only as a background. After all, there are certain
root motives and principles which, though they vary in-
definitely in their application, underlie Human Conduct,
and are common to all ages alike* Given a fairly accurate
knowledge as regards the general history of any period,
combined with some investigation into its special manners
and customs, there is no reason why a truly imaginative
novelist should not produce a work at once satisfying to
romantic and historical instincts.
Again, if it be true that the novelist cannot reproduce
the far past in any strict sense, it is also true that neither
can he so reproduce the life and events of yesterday. That
power of imaginative memory, which all exercise in daily
experience, may be held in very different degrees, but its
enjoyment is not dependent on accuracy of representation —
for, were this so, none of us would possess it. In an
analogous manner the writer of Romance may be more or
less adequately equipped on the side of History pure and
simple, but he need not wait for that which will never come
— the power of reproducing in ioto a past age. If, in reading
what purports to be no more than a Novel, the struggle
between Christianity and Paganism (for example), or the
imbounded egotism of Napoleon, be brought more vividly
before our minds — and this may be done by suggestion as
well as by exact relation — then, I would maintain, we are to
13
some extent educated MstoricaUy^ using the word in a large
though perfectly legitimate sense.
I recently read a work which here presents itself as
admirably illustrating my meaning. In her too little known
'< Adventures of a Goldsmith," Miss M. H. Bourchier has
contrived to bring forcibly before us the period when
Napoleon, fast approaching the zenith of his power, was
known in France as the *' First Consul." The '* man of
destiny" himself— appearing on the scene for little more
than a brief moment — can in no sense be described as one
of the book's characters, and yet the whole plot is so skil-
fully contrived as to hinge on his personality. We are
made to feel the dominating influence of that powerful will
upon the fears and hopes of a time brimming over with
revolutionary movement. Whether the Chouan revolt is
in this particular story accurately depicted for us in all its
phases, or whether the motives which impelled certain
public characters are therein interpreted aright — ^both in
regard to these and other points there may be room for
doubt ; but at least Uu general forces of the period are placed
before us in such a way as to drive home the conviction
that, be the historical inaccuracies of detail what they may
in the eyes of this or that specialist, the picture as a whole is
one which, while it rivets our attention as lovers of romance,
does no injury to the strictest Historic sense.
I know well that numerous novels might be cited which,
besides abounding in anachronisms, are harmful in that
they present us with a misleading conception of some
personality or period; moreover, I acknowledge that this
defect is by no means confined to romances of an inferior
literary order. That Cromwell has been unreasonably
vilified, and Mary Queen of Scots misconceived as a saintly
martyr — ^how often are these charges brought against not a
few of our leading exponents of Historical Fiction. Let
this be fully granted, it remains to ask — ^To whom were our
novelists originally indebted for these misconceptions?
Were not the historians of an earlier generation responsible
for these wrong judgments ? True, the real Science of
History — the sifting of evidence, and the discovery and un-
ravelling of ancient documents — may be described as an
essentially modem attainment, so it would be unreasonable
to blame our older historians for errors which it was largely,
if not wholly, beyond their power to overcome. And it is
just here that I would emphasize my defence of the
Romancist. If Historians themselves have differed (and
still differ I) may it not be pleaded on behalf of the Histori*
cal Novelist that he also must be judged according to the
possibilities of his time ? For, while he may have too
readily adopted false conceptions in the past, there is no
necessity why, in the future, he also — ^profiting by the
growth of Critical Investigation — should not have due
regard, in the working out of his Historical background, for
all the latest '< results." And, I would further add, even
though it be true that Scott and others have misled us in
certain directions, this does not prevent our acknowledg-
ment that, given their aspect of a particular period^ it was only
fitting that the scheme of their novels should be in harmony
with it. If " bloody Mary " was a cruel hypocrite, then
our reading of her period will be influenced by that real (or
supposed) fact ; but, if further investigation reverses this
severe judgment on the woman herself, then, in Heaven's
name, let us mould our general conception afresh. The
foimtains of Romance show no sign of running dry, and,
though we may look in vain at the moment for a genius of
15
the very highest type, the Future has possibilities within it
which the greatest literary pessimist among us cannot
wholly deny. If, then, fault can be found with the older
Romancists for the spreading here and there of false histori-
cal notions, let us look to future workers in the same sphere
for adjustment. I believe, however, that one notable critic
has pronounced the mischief already done to be quite
irreparable, seeing that the only '^ History " at all widely
spread is that derived from those very romances in which
errors are so interwoven with the sentimental interest of
the plot itself that readers inevitably '< hug their delusions I "
But I think that this danger need not be contemplated
seriously. The Historical Novel exists primarily as FicHan^
and, even though in our waking moments we may be per-
suaded of the imreality of that '' dream " which a Scott or
a Dumas has produced for us, we shall still be able to place
ourselves again and again imder the spell of their delightful
influence. Moreover, while admitting Dumas* carelessness
of exact detail, it wotdd hardly be contended by the most
sceptical that his works (still less those of Scott) are with-
out any background of Historic suggestiveness. Scott,
indeed, shows signs of having possessed something of that
** detachment " which is one important qualification in the
Historian proper ; there is a fairness and prevision in his
historical judgments which we look for in vain when read-
ing the works of his contemporaries.*
* That there was no fundamental antagonism between the Romantic
and the Scientific Movements of last Century has been shown by that veiy
brilliant American thinker, Professor Josiah Royce, of Harvard University.
''The very spirit," he writes, '* that in Great Britain expressed itself m
Scott's romances, once wedded to the minuteness of German scholarship,
was destined to transform the whole study of history." (The Spirit if
Modem Philosophy^ page 279.)
i6
And, having thus touched on what I believe to be the
true relation between Fomance and History, I may note,
as a last word, the use of the Historical Tale to those who
have the training of young folk. That ^'desire to know,"
which is an essential for all true learning, is sometimes
best fostered by methods outside the ordinary School
routine. Thus, as r^ards History, where the text-book
fails in arousing interest, the tale may succeed, and, once
the spirit of inquiry has been stimulated, half the battle is
gained. In saying this, I am far from wishing to imply
that the reading of romances can ever take the place of
genuine historical study. I know well that such a book as
Green's " Short History of the English People " may prove
to some more fascinating than any novel. There are, how-
ever, cases in which recourse may be had to a high-class
work of fiction for the attainment of a truer historic sense ;
while, taken only as supplement to more strictly Academic
reading, such a work may prove to have its uses. Con-
siderable discrimination is required — as I have already
hinted — ^in the choice of suitable books, and, as a help in
this direction, I have made out {vide " Suggested Courses of
Reading") two special lists for Boys and Girls respectively,
which will, I trust, be found useful.* If, besides being of
help to teachers, my recommendations should lead in any
degree to further appreciation of the great masters of
Romance, the labour (by no means inconsiderable) expended
on this little compilation will be amply rewarded.
* These two Juvenile lists have now (4th edition) been amalgamated.
J. N.
January^ 1902.
GENERAL LIST.
"Epitomes are not narratives, as skeletons are not human
figures. Thus records of prime truths remain a dead letter to
plain folk ; the writers have left so much to the imagination, and
imagination is so rare a gift. Here, then, the writer of fiction may
be of use to the public — as an interpreter."
Charles Reads, in '' The Cloister and the Hearth:'
" The picturesqueness of history is largely due to memoirs ;
and the countries and epochs which have produced them are
especially picturesque. Now it is great crises, periods of disrup-
tion, neat emergencies, which as a rule impress contemporaries
and nimish matter for close observation. . . . The Great
Rebelli<Mi and the French Revolution have furnished endless
motives to dramatists, novelists, and painters, because they suggest
possibilities of striking contrasts, and afford available situations.
The human interest is then most intense, and our sympathies are
most easily awakened." — Dr. Mandell Creighton^ on " The Pic-
iuresque in History I* in Historical Lectures and Addresses.
ERRATA.
Several important alterations have been (Fourth Edition) embodied in
the text of me older lists, but the following errors of description still
remain to be noted.
Page 24. — Crake's Tk£ Camp on the Severn is wrongly placed under Third
Century : this tale depicts Roman Britain, A.D. 303-304.
St. Alban (as martjrr) appears in the first chapter, and the
Emperor Constantius in the last.
Page 41. — ^James Baker's The Gleaming Dawn deals as much with England
as with Bohemia : the first half of the book depicts Lincoln-
shire and Oxford, 1396- 141 5, while in the second half the
reader is taken to Prague, etc, in the twelve years or so after
the burning of Huss.
Page 43. — Cancel the description of Baker's The CardinaTs Page^ and
substitute the following: Begins England, 1427, but deals
almost entirely with Bohemia in the years 1^^27-30; time of
Cardinal Beaufort's crusade against the Hussites.
Page 77. — ^In the description of S. C. Grier's Jn Furthest Ind^ the date
«l697" is misleading; as the half-title seU forth, this
" narrative " claims to nave been " written in 1697 " by one
who had previously been '*of the Hon. East India Co.'s
service," and the book as a whole covers the period 1664-97.
Page 114. — Cancel the description of Lytton's The Parisians^ and substi-
tute the following : Mainly Paris just before and during the
war, from the spring of 1869 to the end of 1870. The last
pages carry the reader to the autumn of 187 1.
NOTB.^Tke order in which the heohi an placed is^ on the whele^ aeeerding to the
periods dealt with ; occasionedly the grouping decided on has prevented absolute
eorrtctness in this respect. Books of special worth are marked with an asterisk.
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA.
TtTLB OF BOOK.
^Sa&chbdon
*Uaxda
*Tm King's Trsasurb
House
*Ths Pharaoh and
THB P&iBST (Far-
AON)
«Jezbbsl
•An Eotptian Prin-
AUTHOR AND FUBUSHBR.
G. J. Whyte Melville
(W. lliacker & Co.;
Ward, Lock, & Co.;
and Longmans & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Georg Ebers (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
and Appleton & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Wilhelm Walloth (trans.)
(W. S.Gott8berger,U.S. A. )
A. Glovatski (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.;
and little. Brown, U.S.A.)
Miss L. McLaws
(Constable & Co. ; and
Lothrop Pablishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Georg Ebers (trans.)
(Sunpson Low & Co. ;
and Appleton & Co.,
U.S.A.)
SU19BCT.
Ancient Babylon and the As-
syrians.
Egypt under Rameses IT.
(Thebes, Syria, &c.).
Ditto (Israelites)
Egypt— Rameses XIII. (Strug-
gle between the Secular and
Ecclesiastical forces, nth
Century B.C.)
Ahab and JesebeU
Egypt and Persia in the days
of Amasis and Cambyses,
6th Century B.a
« One of Mvend novdi fonnded on mora or loss dim Old Testam«nt diancten and cpiiodes. Ai
ktri^rieal ranuoices, such works are almost inevitably unsatisfying ; as /icHon, some oT them are
interesting and well written. I may here specify, among recent prodoctions of this kind. " BrJshawar,"
by W. S. Davis (Grant Richards ; and Doubleday, U.S.A.), and ** Jair the Apostate," by A. G. Hales
<Methnca & Co.); the last-named deals with Samson.
C— 2
20
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA-^-contimed.
title of book.
Thk Fall of Athens
(Callias)
GOEGO
A Young Mace-
donian
Tychiades
*SalammbO
Kallistratus
The Lion's Brood
Lords of the World
The Sisters
The Hammer
Deborah
Helon's Pilgrimage
TO Jerusalem
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
A. J. Church
(Seeley& Co. ; and Jacobs
& Co., U.S.A.)
Charles K. Gaines
(Lothrop Pablishing Ca»
U.S.A.)
A. J. Church
(Sedey & Co. ; and G. P.
Putnam's Sons, U.S.A.)
Alfred Dickeson
(Fisher Unwin)
Gustave Flaubert (trans.)
(Grant Ricliards; and G.P.
Putnam's Sons, U.S.A.)
A. H. Gilkes
(Longmans & Co.)
Dufiield Osborne
(W. Heinemann ; and
Doubleday & Co.,
U.S.A.)
A. J. Church
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S. A.)
George Ebers (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
ana Appleton & Co.,
U.S.A.)
A. J. Church and R. Seeley
(Seeley & Co ; and G. P.
Putnam's Sons, U.S. A.)
J. M. Ludlow
(J. Nisbet & Co. ; and F.
H. RevellCo.,U.S.A.)
F. Strauss (trans.)
(J. Mawman, London, 1824)
SUBJECT.
Peloponnesian War Period
(Alcibiades)
Ditto
(Socrates and
Alcibiades)
Alexander the Great*
Alexandria in its early growth
under the Ptolemies (3rd
Century B.a).
Hamilcar (Carthage and her
Mercenaries).
The Second Punic War.
Hannibal (Battle of Cannes).
Fall of Carthage and Corinth.
Egypt (Memphis^ — Ptolemy
Philometer and Euergetes
(2nd Century b.c.)
Maccab«an Times.
Ditto
ditta
Judaism in the Century pre-
ceding Christ.
az
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA^onHfwed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
T&USIAS
Two ThousandYears
Ago
Woe to the Con-
quered
*A Friend of Cesar
Cleopatra
author and publisher.
Ernst Eckstein (trans.)
(W.S. Gottsbcrger,U.S.A.)
A. J. Chnrch
(Blackie & Son ; and Dodd,
Mead & Co., U.S. A.)
Alfred Clark
(Sampson Low & Co.)
W. S. Davis
(Macmillan & Ca)
Georg Ebers (trans.)
"iampson
and Ap]
U.S. A.)
(Sunpson Low & Ca ;
and Appleton & Co.,
SUBJECT.
The Slsre Revolt vnder Spar*
tactts.
Rome — ^Spartacns and Mithri-
dates.
Roman Life, B.C. 73 — 71.
Pompey and Cxsar.
Latter Years of Cleopatra.
FIRST CENTURY,
title of book.
^NEiRRA
^Philochristus
*Ben Hue
Tarry Thou Till I
Comb (Salathiel)
author and publisher.
John W. Graham
(Macmillan & Co.)
Dr. Edwin A. Abbott
(Macmillaa & Co)
Lew Wallace
(Harper k Brothers, and
others)
G. Croly
(Funk St Wagnalls Co.)
SUBJECT.
Rome under Tiberius (A.D. 26).
Memoirs of a Disciple of
Christ
Rome in the time of Christ.
Judaism and Christianity (the
early strugg^ie).
22
FIRST CElHTURY^-cottUnued.
TITLE OP BOOK.
As Others Saw Him
dcBicRic THE Briton
*Onssimus
•Quo Vadis?
♦Nbro
Thb Burning of
ROMB
^Empress Octavia(Ok-
tavia)
Acts
Darkness and Dawn
•The Last Days of
Pompeii
•The Gladiators
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Pearl Maiden
Anonymous
(W. Heinemann, 1895 ;
and Houghton, Mifflin
& Co., U.S. A.)
G. A. Henty
(Bladde & Son ; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S A.)
Dr. Edwin A. Abbott
(Macmillan & Co.)
H. Sienkiewicz (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Ernst Eckstein (trans.)
(W.S. Gottsbcrger,U.S. A.)
A. J. Church
(Seeley & Co. ; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
Wilhdm Walloth (trans.)
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
V.SJl.)
Hugh Westbuiy
(BenUey)
Dean Farrar
(Longmans, Green & Co.)
Lytton
(Geo. Roiitledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, &
Co., U.S. A.)
G. J. Whyte Melville
(W. Thacker & Co.;
Ward, Lock,& Co.; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
H. Rider Haggard
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
SUBJECT.
Early Christianity (a.d. 54).
Roman invasion of Britain
(Boadicea), and Rome mider
Nero.
Memoirs of a Disciple of PauL
Rome in the time of Nero.
Ditto ditta
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Persecutions under Nero.
Time of Vespasian.
Fall of Jerusalem.
Ditto ditto.
a There are to few good tales illostxatlng the Roman period of oar Island History that I would draw
the attentioD of readers to a short storjr in Chamber^ Magattitu CChristxnas Number, xges) entitled
** lyvinda," by E. Lester Arnold ; it depicts Agricola's defeat of the Caledonians, a.d. 86.
33
FIRST CEHTXJRY—amtimud.
TTILB OF BOOK.
DOMITIA
Masters op tbb
World
'QuiNTUs Claudius
Amor Victor
AUTHOR AMD PUBUSHER.
S. Baring-Gould
(Methuen & Co. ; and
F.A. Stokes Co.,U.S.A.)
Mary A. M. Hoppns
(Bentley, 1888)
Ernst Eckstein (trans.)
(W. S. Gott8berger,U.S.A.)
Orr Kenyon
(Stokes (>>., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Time of Domitian.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditta
EphesQS and Rome, a.d. 95-
105.
SECOND CENTURY.
TITLE OP BOOK.
Valerius
To THE Lions
^Antinous
*Tbb Emperor
Narcissus
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
J. G. Lockhart
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
A. T. Church
(Sedey &(>>.; and G. P.
Putnam's Sons, U.S. A.)
George Taylor (trans.)
'jreen» &
C^ttsberger,
(Longmans, Green, &Co. ;
idW. S.
an<
U.S.A.)
Geoig Ebers (tran&)
(D. Appleton&Co., U.S.A.)
W. Bo^d Carpenter
(Sooety for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Time of Trajan (Rome)
Christians and the Younger
Pliny.
Time of Hadrian.
Ditto ditta
Christians about a.d. 160
^Athens, Alexandria> Rome,
ac).
M
SECOND CENTURY— iwrfMMMi.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
•Mawus the Epicu-
rean
One Traveller Re-
turns
W. Pater
(Macmillan ft Co.)
D. Christie Murray and
Henry Herman
(Chatto & Windus)
Time of Marcus Aurelins.
Britain (Dee District), mid
Second Century.
THIRD CENTURY,
title OF BOOK.
Per Aspera
Perpbtua
The Camp on the
Severn
•Callista
a The Epicurean
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Georg Ebers (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.)
S. Baring-Gould
(Isbister &. Co. ; and Dut-
ton & Co., U.S.A.
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray & Co.)
J. H. Newman
(Longmans, Green, & Co. )
Thomas Moore
(Downey & Co. : and Mc-
Clurg&Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Alexandria in time of Emperor
Caracalla.
Ntmes — beginning of Third
Century.
Persecution in Britain.
North Africa Persecutions.
Worship of Isis (Egypt)
a This tale, it must be admitted, is given a place mainly on account of its literary interest ; as
Aiticrka/ romance it has been very severely criticised.
35
THIRD CENTURY— «)«««iMi.
TITLX OF BOOK*
AURKLIAN
*Thb Last Days and
Fall op Palmyra
(Zknobia)
AUTHOR AND PUBLI8HBR.
W. Ware
( Wame & Co. $ and Estes
and Co., U.S.A.)
W. Ware
(Ca$seU&Ca, '<RedU-
brary," 1890); and A.
L. Bart Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Rome— late Third Centmy.
Zenobia and Longinag.
FOURTH CENTURY.
7
titlb op book.
*HoMO Sum
a* Our Forefathers
(Die Ahnen)
•A Captivb of the
Roman Eagles
(Bissula)
i
*The Last Athenian
author and pubushbr.
Geozg Eben (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
and Appleton & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Gnstav Frejrtag (trans.)
Asher & Co., 1873 ; and
Holt&Ca, U.S.A.}
Felix Dahn (trans.)
(A. a McQurg & Co.,
U.S.A.)
V. Rydbeig (trans.)
(T. B. Peterson and
Brothers, Philadelphia)
SUBJECT.
Christians in Arabia, ad. 330.
(Germany, a.d. 357.
Romans and Germans (Ale*
manni) in the Lake Con-
stance district, A.D. 378 (the
poet Ausonius).
Athens, A.D. 361.
a The oollective title of a aeries in whidi the htsuMy of a lemily is made to iUostrnte suooesnve
stages of Gennan dviUsation. Hie English transUtion does not extend beyond the first two stories,
dea&ng with the years 357 and 704 respectively ; the remaiRing four stories (published by Hircel, of
Leipiic, x874r>8o), depict Germaa life in Z826, 1519, 1647, and z8o5.
26
FOURTH CENTURY— conHnued.
TITLB OP BOOK.
^
a*THS Dbath of thb
Gods
Jetta
,0
\
Sbkapis
Saxccta Paula
A DUKB OF BmiTAlN
\ Thb Villa of Clau-
dius
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHB&.
D. M^rejkowski (trans.)
(CoDsUble & Co. ; and
G. P. Putnam's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Geocge Taylor (trans.)
(Trubner & Co., 1886;
and George Monro,
V.SJL.)
Georg Ebers (tians.)
(Appleton & Ca, U.S.A.)
W. Copland Perry
(Sonnenschein ft Co.)
Sir Herbert Maxwell
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
E. L. CntU
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
andYoong, U.S. A.)
8DBJBCT.
The Emperor Jolian.
Heidelberg under the Romans.
Alexandria, a.d. 391 (Hme of
Theodosins I.).
Roman Society and the
tian Chnrch in time of Je-
rome {362-^3),
Picts and Romans.
Roman oocnpation of Britain-
late Foorth Centnry.
« Nth B of dM trilocTi "Chriit and And-anrist" ; Che Moond TokuM m cIm aeriM appean in tha
Fifteenth Ceatory aecdon (Ut*); die Chisd—dealing with Peter the Great— alto appeazs in he tection.
FIFTH CENTURY.
TlTLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
Gathbring Clouds
Conquering and to
CONQUXR
Dean Farrar
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Mrs. Charles
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Dodd, Mead, & Co. ,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Chrysostom (late Foorth— early
Fifth Century).
Jerome, ditto.
27
FIFTH CENTURY— cwfrfw/ftf.
TITLE OF BOOK.
|V Fabxola(Thk Church
IN THE Catacombs)
♦Hypatia
. t, The Count of thb
\ ^ Saxon Shoue
i
/ T Attila
J iJ^tf'FBLICITAS
AUTHOR AND PUBU8HER.
Cardinal Wiseman
(Burns, 1855; <^d ^^'
acer Bro8.» U.S. A.)
Charles Kingsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
A. J. Church and Ruth
Putnam
(Sedey & Co. ; and
G. P. Putnam's Sons,
U.S.A.)
G. P. R. Tames
(Geo. Koutledee & Sons ;
and Wame & Co.)
Felix Dahn (trans.)
(Macmillan & Co. ; and
A. C McQuig & Co.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Rome, early Fifth Century.
Alexandria, ditta
Departure of Romans ftom
Britain.
Decline of Roman Empire.
The German Migrations, A.D.
476.
m The first Tohime of the wait»—IClrimg Rommng tmt der V0lkerwmndtrmnf : the seoond Tohmie
yfiMsmia) is gSren under the Fourth Ceuory, while the third volume (C»«/£MMr)wili he found under the
^M3CK&e
SIXTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Builders of
Waste
*The Scarlet Banner
(Gbumbr}
author and pubusher.
Thorpe Forrest
Puckworth & Co.)
Felix Dahn (trans.)
(A. C. McQuig & Co.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Britons V, Anglians in York-
shire.
Overthrow of the Vandal King
Gelimer by Bdisaiins, A.D.
533-4.
28
SIXTH CENTURY— co»tfiftt^.
TITLB OP BOOK.
^A Struggle for
Rome {D^r Kawpf
um Rom)
Antonina
Havblok thb Danb
Shavbn Crown
AUTHOR AND PUBLXSHBR.
Felix Dahn (trans.)
(R. Bentley, 1878)
Wilkie Collins
(Cluitto & Windus; and
Harper&Bros., U.S.A.)
C W. Whistler
(T. Nelson & Sons)
M. Bramston
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and E. & J. B. Young,
U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT.
The Ostrogoths and Belisarius.
Rome in 546.
Denmark and Eof^d.
Conversion of the Surrey Bor*
der (time of Ethelbert).
SEVENTH CENTURY.
TITLB OP BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
SUBJBCT.
Thb Son op ^lla
Gertrude Hollis
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
Conversion of Northumbria
(616-25).
A Scholar op Lin-
disparnb
CiEDWALLA
Thb Bridb op thb
NiLB
C^rtrude Hollis : Time of St. Aidan (636-51).
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
F. (^wper
(Seeley & Co.)
Georg Ebers (trans.)
( Appleton & Co. , U. S. A. )
Saxons in the Isle of Wight
Egypt, A.D. 643.
J
29
« EIGHTH CENTURY.
TITLB OP BOOK.
^Annals of an Anglo-
Saxon Family (Part
III.)
The Invasion
AUTHOR AND FUBLISHBIU
SUBJECT.
Mrs. Charles
(T. Nelson & Sons ; and
Dodd, U.S.A.)
G. Griffin
(Sannders & Otley, Lon-
don, 1832; and Dufiy,
Dublin, 1861)
St. Boniface.
Ireland and Northern Europe
in second half of the £%hth
Century.
a The Mcond tak fai Freytag't " Our Fordathera *' {yridt Fourth Centiny sectiaB) Qluttratcs the
G«nnany of ajd. 794.
h One of the stories in the semi-fictioDal " Sketches of Christian Life in the Olden Time " (m
America the Tolume appeared under the title of " The Early Dawn "). The story is very slight, and is
only giTcn hcxe as one of the very few attempts to illustrate this partioilar period.
NINTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
a* Passe Rose
A Thane of Wessex
The Wooing of Osyth
^Thb King's Sons
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
A. S. Hardy
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
C. W. WhUder
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Kate T. Sizer
(Jarrold & Sons ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
G. Manville Fenn
(£. Nister ; and Dtttton &
Co., U.S. A.)
SUBJKCr.
Time of Charlemagne (Ar-
dennes district)*
Ethelwulf (mid Ninth Century).
Edmund the Martyr.
Alfred and his times.
a Perhaps the most serious omission in my original list. I have to thank the American reviewer who
brought this charming tale to my notice ; havmg Just read it with immense eiyoyment, I can bear special
testimony in its favour.
& A very slight but charming story of Alfred's boyhood, specially suited for the very young.
30
NINTH CBHTVRY^^oniinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
In i£LFRBD*s Days
Undbr thb Black
Ravbn
Hastings the Pirate
*GoD Save King
Alfred
The Dragon and the
Raven
*KiNG Alfred's Vi-
king
A Hero King
A Lion of Wbssex
KORMAK THE ViKING
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Paul Creswick
(E. Nister; and Dutton
& Co.. U.S.A.)
£. Gilliat
(Macmillan & Co.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie dc Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U. S. A. )
C. W. WhUtler
(T. NeUon&Sons)
Eliza F. Pollard
(Partridge & Co.)
Tom Bevan
(Partridge & Co.)
J. F. Hodgetts, R.N.
(Religions Tract Society)
SUBJECT.
Alfred and his times. (Danes
in Wessex and Abroad).
Ditto (Edward Atheling.
Siege of Roche8ter,&c ).
Ditto (Saxon and Dane).
Ditto (First English Fleet).
Ditto (as Prince and King;
Winchester, the Danes,&c )
Ditto (Saxon and Dane).
Ditto (France, England, &c).
TENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
*Erling THB Bold
•The Little Duke
R. M. Ballantyne
(J. Nisbet; and Burt,
U.S. A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
Norway — the Vikings (early
Tenth Century).
Normandy— Richard the Fear-
less.
31
TENTH CEiiTURY'-'ConHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
^Ekkehard
a*THOftSTRIN OP THB
Mbkb
Edwy ths Fair
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
I Tbb Sims of a Saint
^Theophano
The Vikings of the
Baltic
*Thb Thrall of Leif
THE Lucky
Scheffel (traos.)
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
ana Crowell & Co.,
U.S. A.)
W. G. Collingwood
(E. Arnold;
A. D. Crake
Longmans, Green, & Co. ;
ami £. & T. B. Young,
U.S.A.)
J. R. Aitken
(Sonnenschein & Co. ; and
Appleton & Ca, U.S.A.)
Frederic Harrison
(Chapman & Hall)
G. W. Dasent
(Chapman & Hall, 1875)
Ottilie A. Liljenoantz
(A. a McClurg & Co.,
U.S.A.)
subject.
Germany— The Huns, &c.
Northmen in Lakeland (about
930)-
Britain — Dunstaa.
Ditto ditto.
The Byzantine Empire and the
Saracens in mid Tenth Cen-
tury (Nicephorus Phocas, &c.)
The Vikings — ^last quarter <^
Tenth Century.
The Vikings (Greenland).
a This wdl-written book was purpoiely omitted in my fonner editions, not being conddered
" fiction ** praper. As, however, toere are so few tales dealing with the peiiod, 1 now venture 10
It.
ELEVENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
subject.
Olaf the Glorious
Robert Leighton
(Blackie & Son; and C
Scribner'sSons,U.S.A.)
Russia and Norway.
32
ELEVENTH CBNTVRY-^contimed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thb Fall of Asoard
Harold the Norse-
man
King Olaf's Kinsman
WuLFRic THE Weapon
Thane
*Alf6Ar the Dane
♦The Ward of King
Canute
♦Harold
author and publisher.
William the Con-
queror
WuLF THE Saxon
The Camp op Refuge
'Hbrbward THE Wake
The Rival Heirs
Julian Corbett
(Macmillftn & Co.; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
F. Whishaw
(Nelson & Sons)
C. W. Whistler
(Blackie & Son)
C. W. Whistler
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons» U.S.A.)
A. D. Crake
(Longmans, Green, & Co. ;
and E. & T. B. Young,
U.S.A.)
Ottilie A. Liljencrantz
(A. C. McClurg & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Lytton
(George Routledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Sir Charles Napier
(George Routledge, 1858)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
C. Macfarlane
(ConsUble & Co; and
Longmans & Co., U.S. A. )
Charles Kingsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
A. D. Crake
(Longmans, Green, & Co. ;
and £. & J. B. Young,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
St. OlaTs Days.
Harold " Haardraada " (Battle
of Stamford Bridge, &c)
Ethelred the Unready (Dane
and Saxon).
Edmund Ironside (Danes in
East Anglia).
Ditto (Danes in Wessex — Ca-
nute).
Edmund Ironside and Canute.
The Norman Conquest (Harold
—William I. Battle of Has-
tings).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
The Norman (inquest (Here-
ward, 1070).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto (1066—71, and 1099).
33
ELEVENTH CEJiTURY^cofaimed.
TITLE OF BOOS.
Y
The Siege of Nor-
wich Castle
RUFUSy OE THE RSD
Kino.
In the Days of St.
Anselm
Count Robert of
Paris
•God Wills It
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
M. M. Blake
(Seeley & Co. ; and Mac-
miUan, U.S.A.)
J. Gregor Grant
(Saunders, 1838)
Gertmde HoUis
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black { and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
W. S. Davis
(Macmillan & Co.)
SUBJECT.
The Norman Conquest (1073—
96).
William II.
Ditto.
First Crusade (Constantinople,
1098).
Ditto (Palermo, Sidly, An-
▼ergne, and Syria— Godfrey
de Bouillon, &c.).
TWELFTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Pabo the Priest
*The Serf
For King or Em-
press?
The Knight of the
Golden Chain
AUTHOR and publisher.
S. Baring- Gould
(Methuen & Co. ; and F. A.
Stokes Co., U.S.A.)
C. Ranger GuU
(Greening & Co.)
C W. Whistler
(T. Nelson & Sons)
R. D. Chetwode
(C. A. Pearson ; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Time of Henry I. (Wales).
First Revolt against Serfdom
(Stephen).
Civil War between Stephen and
Matilda (Somerset and Nor-
wich).
Period of Stephen.
34
TWELFTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITUS OF BOOK.
<
^
A Lbgbnd op Read-
ing Abbby
«\r
Via Crucis
Forest Outlaws
*Thb Betrothed
*Der Hbiugb
*lN His Namb
HOHBNZOLLERN
Maid Marian
*The Life and Death
OF Richard Yea-
and-Nay
•The Talisman
AUTHOR and PUBUSHBR.
\ *Thb Assassins
\
^j • Ivan HOE
In Lincoln Grbbn
C Macfiurlane
(Constable & Co.; and
Longmans & Co., U.S.A.)
F. Marion Crawford
(Macmillan & Co.)
E. GilUat
(Seeley&Co.; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
C. F. Meyer
(Haessel, Leipsic)
E. Everett Hale
(Sceley Sl Co. ; and Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S. A.)
Cyrus T. Brady
(Century Co., U.S.A.)
Thomas Love Peacock
(Macmillan & Co.)
Maurice Hewlett
(Macmillan & Co.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S,A.)
Nevill M. Meakin
(W. Heinemann ; and Holt
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
E. GiUiat '
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S. A.)
SUBJECT.
Period of Stephen.
Second Crusade.
Henry II. (Hugh of Lincoln,
1186).
Ditto (Wales, 1187).
Thomas i Becket.
The Waldenses (Lyons hi time
of Pierre Waldo).
Black Forest in time of Emperor
Frederick L (*«Barbarossa*').
Henry IL — Richard L (Robin
Hood).
Richard as Prince and King
(Europe and the East).
Richard L (Syria, 1191).
Ditto (Siege of Acre).
Ditto (Yorkshire and Leices-
tershire, II 94).
Ditto (Robin Hood).
35
THIRTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
fl
royston gowkr
Uncanonized
RUNNYMEDB AMD LIN-
COLN Fair
Spurs and Bridb
Wolf's Head
Waldrmar
The Castle of £h-
rbnstein
The Most Famous
LOBA
•Philip Augustus
La Battaglia di
Benevento
•The Lord of the
Dark Red Star
The Blue Banner
author and publisher.
Thomas Miller
(Colbim, 1838)
Margaret H. Potter
(A. C. McClurg & Co.,
U.S.A.)
J. G. Edgar
(Ward, Lock, & Co ; and
Harper&Bros., U.S.A.)
Gertrude Ilollis
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge)
£. Gilliat
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
B. S. Ingemann (trans.)
(Saunders & Otley, 1841)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
N. K. Blisset
(Wm. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Appleton & Co.,
U.S. A.)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Koutledge & Sons ;
and Warne & Co.)
F. D. Guerrazzi
(Gniseppe Maspero, Milan,
1829)
£. Lee Hamilton
(W. Scott)
L^n Cahun (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co ; and
Lippincott & Co. , U. S A.)
SU^ECT.
Time of John (Papal Interdict).
Ditto (English Monastic Life).
Ditto (the Charter).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto (Robin Hood).
Denmark, 1204.
Germany (robber knights), be-
ginning of 13th Centuiy.
Persecution of the Albigenses—
Carcassonne.
France, late Twelfth to early
Thirteenth Century (Struggle
with John of England).
Italy — ^period of Emperor Fred-
erick II.
Ditto (Exzelino).
Period of Crusades and the
Mongol Conouest, 1194*1254.
(Mongolia, Turkestan, and
Syria).
D— a
36
THIRTEENTH CENTURY--cow«w«i.
title of book.
•'Nbath the Hoof of
THE Tartar; or,
The Soddrgs of
God
The Robber Baron
of Bedford Castle
A Stout English
Bowman
How I Won My Spurs
*A Clerk of Oxford
The Forest Prince
•Forest Days
•The Thirsty Sword
*The Prince and the
Page
•Christina
AUTHOR and PUBLISHEIU
subject.
Baron Nicolas J6sika (trans. ) Hungary — ^the Tartar Invasion.
(Jarrold & Sons)
*Thb King's Reeve
A. J. Foster and E. E. Cuthell
(T. Nelson & Sons)
E. Pickering
(Blackie He Son)
J. G. Tixigar
(Ward, Lock, & Co. : and
Harper & Bros., U.S. A. )
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Bryan W. Ward
(Digby, Long, & Co.)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Routledse St Sons ;
and Wamc « Co.)
Robert Leighton
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
Charlotte M. Yon^e
(Macmillan & Co.)
Emily Underdown
(Sonnenschein & Co.)
E. Gilliat
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dntton
& Co., U.S.A.)
Period of Henry IH. (1334—
27)
Ditto (Hampshire and France).
A boy's adventures in the
Barons* Wars.
Oxford, Kenilworth, &c. (Battle
of Lewes, 1264).
Prince Edward, Simon de Mont-
fort, &c
Henry III. and De Montfort
(Robin Hood).
Norse Invasion of Scotland,
1262—63.
Eighth Crusade,
Italy (Siena, &c.) in the period
ot Dante's in&ncy. Battle
of Tagliacozzo, 1268 (Con-
radin of Swabia).
Time of Edward I. (Welsh
Wars, &C.).
37
THIRTEENTH CENTURY-^n/iim^.
1 1TLB OF BOOK.
Thk Lord of Dynk-
OVB&
My Lady Joanna
•The Saint of the
Dragon's Dale
author and publisher.
£. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
E. Everett Green
Q. Nisbet&Co.)
W. S. DavU
(Macmillan & Ca)
subject.
Time of Edwanl L (Welah
Wars, &c.)
Ditto ditta
Germany in time of the sap-
pression of the robber knights
hj Kadolf I.
FOURTEENTH CENTURY.
title of book.
author and publisher.
SUBJECT.
•I'HE Lion of Flan<
DBRS
In Freedom's Cause
The Scottish Chiefs
Castle Dangerous
•The Days op Bruce
Flanders, 1298— 1302 (Battle
H. Conscience (trans.)
(Burns & Oates ; and , of Courtrai).
Murphy, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty i Wallace and Brace (from end
(Blackie & Son ; and C. j 13th Century).
Scribner'sSons,U.S.A.) !
The Chevalier of
the Splendid
Crest
Jane Porter
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Appleton&C^)., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes !
& Co., U.S.A.)
Grace Aguilar
(Warne & Co. ; Appleton
& Co., U.S.A. ; and
others)
Sir Herbert Maxwell Ditto ditta
(W. Blackwood & Sons) i
I
Wallace (Scotland, France, and
Eng^d, 1296—1314).
Scotch Wars (Ayrshire and
Lanarkshire, 1306).
Edward I. — IL(Bannockbum).
38
FOURTEENTH CENTURY— «mi«iiii«?.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^The Whistling Maid
^Valperga
Margo Visconti
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHXR.
E. Rhys
(Hutchinson & Co.)
Mary Shelley
(Whittaker,
i8a3)
Margherita Pus-
TRRLA
^RlBNZI
In the Shadow of
THE Crown
aTHB Countess Alys
(in "New Canterbury
Tales ")
In THE Days of
Chivalry
St. George for Eng-
land
Crb9y and Poictixrs
Thb Cross of Pearls
T. Grossi (trans.)
(Geo. Bell & Sons, Bohn's
Series, 1881 ; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
Cesare Cantd
(Felice Le Monnier, Flor-
ence, 1839)
Lytton
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, &
Co., U.S. A.)
M. Bidder
(Constable & Ck>.)
Maurice Hewlett
(Constable & Co. ; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
£. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C
Scribner*s Sons, U.S.A.)
J. G. Edgar
(Ward, Lock, and Co. ;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S.A.)
^Irs. C. Beame
(Elliot Stock)
subject.
Wales in time of Edward XL
Castrucdo Castracani, Duke of
Lucca (Guelphs and Ghibel-
lines).
Milan and Lake Como District
from 1329 (Guelphs and
Ghibellines).
Milan about 1340.
Rome (Cola di Rienzi, the
Tribune).
Edward IL— Edward IIL
Period of Edward IIL
Ditto (Cre^y and Poictiers).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
a Mr. Hewlett's Tolnme ouffht not to be described (I haTe seen it to in one quarter) as dealing with
the time of Henry VI. The ** tales'* are supposed to be Uid in 1430 by Pilgrims 00 their way to
CanteriMuy.
39
FOURTEENTH CENTURY— ccnHnned.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thk Gathering op
Brother Hilarius
The Lances of Lyk-
WOOD
AoftNOR DE MAULAoN
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
*Thb Whttb Company
GoDy The King, My
Brother
God Sate England
*£ric the Archer
The Jacquerie
In Chaucer's May-
time
*Long Will
*Thb Banner of St.
George
^Robert Annts, Poor
Priest
John Standish
Michael Fairless
(J. Momy; and Dutton
&Ca, U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(MacmiUan & 0>.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A)
Conan Doyle
(Smith, Elder, & Co. ; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
Marr F. Nixon Ronlet
(Ward, Lock, & Co. ; and
L.C. Page&Co.,U.S.A}
F. Breton
(Grant Richards)
Maurice H. Henrey
(Edward Arnold)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Roudedge & Sons)
Emil^ Richings
(Fisher Unwin)
Florence Converse
(Longmans & Co. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin, &
Co., U.S. A)
M. Bramston
(Duckworth & Ca)
Annie N. Meyer
(Macroillan & Co.)
E. Gilliat
(Seeley & Co. ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A)
Period of Edward III. (Gi«at
Pestilence, about 1348 —
50).
Ditto (Black Prince in Spain).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto (Hampshire, Bordeaux,
Pyrenees, &c. — Black
Prince, Dn Guesclin, and
Chandos).
Ditto (Spain).
Ditto (Winchelsea and Rye).
Sir John Chandos, ftc. (Eng-
land, France, and Spain).
France in time of the Hundred
Years War and Jacquerie.
England in the days of Chaucer
the poet.
Richafd II., WUl Langland,
Chaucer, Wat Tyler, and the
Peasant Revolt leaders.
Peasant Revolt (Herts and Es-
8ez--John Ball, &c).
Ditto (Ely, Bury St. Edmunds,
&c.— John Ball).
Ditto (Kent— Wat Tyler, Chau-
cer, &c.).
40
FOURTEENTH CENTU RY-^continned.
TtTLE OF BOOK.
A March on London
A Tdrbulbmt Town
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
OlTERBOURNE
Katb Cambron of
Brux
*A Man- AT- Arms
♦The Lion of St. Mark
^Knights of thrCross
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.& A.)
E. N. Hoare
(Society for Promotmi;
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
Anonymous
(R. Bentley, 1832)
J. £. Muddock
(Digby, Long, & Co.)
Clinton Scollard,
(£. Nash j and L. C. Page
& Ca, U.S. A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
H. Sienkiewicz (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; Sands
& Co.; and Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Enfrland (Peasant Revolt), and
Flanders (PhiUp Van Arte-
velde).
Flanders (Ghent, &&)— Philip
Van Artevelde, 1380 to Batde
of Rosebecqne.
Battle of Otteiboume, 1388.
Aberdeen and Bnemar district,
end of 14th Century.
Milan— Gian GaleasM ViscontL
Venice, late Fourteenth Century.
Poland— the Teutonic Knights.
FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
title of nooK.
The Fair Maid of
Perth
Old Margaret
AUTHOR and publisher.
Scott
(A. & C Black ; and
Estes & Co., U.S.A.)
Henry Kingsley
(Ward. Lock, & Co.; and
Longmans & Co.,U.S A.)
SUBJECT.
Perthshire, 1402.
Ghent, in early Fifteenth Cen-
tuiy.
41
FIFTEENTH CEHTVRY—coniitmed.
7
htlk of book.
*Tbb Gi^aming Dawn
Isabella Obsxni
Both Sides of tub
BO&OEA
Cambria's Chieftain
'Every Inch a King
In the Days of
Prince Hal
A Champion of the
Faith.
^ Coronation
^The Caged Lion
Agincourt
At Agincourt
*Whbn Spurs were
Gold
author and publisher.
J. Baker
(Chapman & Hall)
F. D. GuemuEzi
(Felice le Monnier, Flor-
ence, 1844)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A..)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
SUBJBCl*.
The Hnssites (Bohemia).
Italy— the Medici.
Period of Henry IV. (Stmgglet
on the Welsh and Scotch
BorderB).
Owen Glendower (Battle of
Shrewsbury, &c)
Joaephine C. Sawyer Prince Hal.
(Dodd«Mead,&Co.,U.S.A.) '
H. EbrinfTton
(Blackie & Son)
J. M. CaliweU
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
Bernard Hamilton
(Ward, Lock, & Co.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. BLoutledge & Sons;
and Wame & Co.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
Russell Gamier
(George Allen)
# By Weeping Cross Lady Laura Ridding
(Hodder & Stooghton)
Henry IV.— Henry V. (Lynd-
^ hurst District and Wuk'
Chester).
Ditto (Sir John Oldcasde).
Ditto (Agincourt).
James I. of Scotland, and Henry
V. of England (James's Cap-
tivity).
Henry V.
Ditta
Ditto (Catherine of France, fte.).
Southern France, 1424.
42
FIFTEENTH CE^TURY^continued.
TITLE OP BOOK.
Personal Rscollxc-
TiONS OP Joan op
Arc, by THE SlEUR
Louis db Contb
AUTHOR and PUBLISHER*
Mark Twain
(Chatto & Windns ; and
Haqxr & Bro8.,U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Joan of Arc
A Noble Purpose Miss Manning
(Arthur Hall, Virtue, &
Nobly Won
*A Monk op Fipb
NofiMi
Co., 1862).
A. Lang
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
S. Baring-Gould
(Methuen & Co.; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A.)
The Bbaupoy Ro- ' Hamilton Drummond
MANCBS (Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
j L.C.Page&Co.,U.S.A.)
*St. Clair op the ' Elizabeth Helme
Isles (F. Wane & Co.; and
Geo. Rotttledge & Sons)
Ditto.
Dittow
'Black Douglas
S. R. Crockett
(Smith, Eider, & Co.; and
Doubleday&Ca,U.S.A.)
The Captain op the i James Grant
Guard (Geo. Routledge & Sons)
/ .
Fra Lippo Lippi
•The Cardinal's Page
^Theodora Phranza
The Prince op India
Margaret Vere Farrington
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
J. Baker
(Chapman & Hall)
J. M. Neale
(Society for Promoting j
Christian Knowledge ; !
and Young, U.S.A.)
Lew Wallace
(Harper & Bros.)
Gnienne— Time of Charles VII.
France: Charles VII. — Henri
IV.
Hebrides (Island of Barra) and
Stirling, &c, in Tames I. — II.
period (Border War, 1448).
William, 6th Earl of Douglas,
I439f &C.— Gallowajr,Stiriing,
Edinbmgh, and Bnttany (De
Retz).
Edinbuigh, Galloway, and Flan-
ders (House of Douglas, 1440
to about 1450).
Italy (lippi the Painter), early
to mid Fifteenth Century.
Bohemia, middle of Fifteenth
Century.
Fall of Constantinople, 1453.
Ditta
43
FIFTEENTH CENTVRY-^catainued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^Captain of thk Jani-
ZAftlSS
Two PBN NILBSS Prin-
Grisly Gussbxx
*Thb Black Arrow
*How Dickon Cams
BY His Namb (in
"The Deserter and
other Stories")
•Where Avon Into
Severn Flows (in
"The Deserter and
other Stories")
In the Wars of the
Roses
•The Last of the
Barons
White Wyvill and
Red RtTTHVBN
The Chantrey Priest
OF Barnbt
For the Red Rose
Red Rose and White
AUTHOR and publisher.
J. M. Ludlow
(Harper & Bros.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan&Co.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan 8t 0>,)
R* L. Stevenson
(Cassell & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Harold Frederic
(Lothrop Publishing Co.)
Harold Frederic
(Lothrop Publishing Co.)
£. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Lvtton
(Cjeo. Rontledge & Sons;
and Little, Brown, &
Co., U.S. A.)
£. Everett Green
(E. Nbter)
A. J. Church
(Seeley & Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Eliza F. Pollard
(Blackie & Son)
Alfred Armitage
(J. Macqueen)
SUBJECT.
Fall of Constantinople (1 443 —
56).
Scotland, England, and France
ofHenr^^
of James II. of Scotland).
m time of Henry VL (Sisters
Wars of the Roses. (1467—
The Kingmaker, Charles
the Bold, &C.)
Ditto (Richard of Gloster).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto (Tewkesbury).
Ditto (Prince Edward, son of
Henry VL).
Ditto (Edward IV. and Warwick
the Kingmaker).
Ditto (period generally).
Ditto ditta
Margaret of Anjon.
Time of Richard HI. (London,
Wales, &c. — Brecknock
Castle).
44
FIFTEENTH CEHTTJRY—coniinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Tub Woodman
Pbbkin Wakbbck
The Captain op thb
Wight
Wild Humphby
Kynaston
^Thb Yellow Frigate
*Mary of Burgundy
*Thb Dove in the
Eagle's Nest
^Thb Burgomaster of
Berlin
*Qubntin Dorward
*Annb of Geierstbin
If I Were King
•Marietta
*ROMOLA
author and publisher.
G. P. R. Junes
(Geo. Koutlcdge & Sons ;
and Wame & Co.)
Marv Shelley
(Colburn & Bentley, 1830)
F. Cowper
(Seeley & Co.; and E. &
J. B. Young, U.S.A.)
H. Hudson
(Kegan, Paul, & Co.)
James Grant
(Geo. Rotttledge ft Sons)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Warned 0>.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan k, Co.)
Wilibald Alexis (trans.)
(Saunders & ()tley» Los-
don, 1S43)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
& Ck>., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Justin H. McCarthy
(W. Heinemann; and R.H.
Russell, U.S.A.)
F. Marion Crawford
(Macmillan & Co.)
George Eliot
(W. Blackwood & Sons;
and Crowell & Ca,
U.S. A.)
8UBJBCT.
Time of Richard III. (Battle
of Bosworth).
Richard III.— Henry VIL
Time of Henry VII. (C
brooke).
Ditto (Sbfewsbury).
Dundee, &c., 1488 (James III.
of Scotland).
Ghent (1456— 1477}-
Time of Maximilian (1472 —
1531).
Germany, late Fifteenth Cen-
tury.
France and Flanders, 146S —
Louis XI.
Charles the Bold, Margaret of
Anjott, &C. (Switzerland,
Germany, and France, 1474).
Francois Villon.
Venice, 1470.
Florence — Savonarola.
45
FIFTEENTH CENTURY— «>ii«iMwi.
TITLE OP BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
*NOTRS DAMB
*The Cloister and
The Hearth
0*The Resurrection
OP The Gods
The Constable op
St. Nicholas
^The Vale of Cedars
The Black Disc
Leila
I Westward With
Columbus
b Columbia
Victor Hugo (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
«
Charles Reade
(Chatto & Windus ; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
D. M^rejkowski (trans.)
(Constable ^ Co.; and
G. P. Putnam's Sons,
U.S.A.)
E. Lester Arnold
(Chatto & Windus)
Grace Aguilar
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Jewish Publication So-
detj of America.)
Albert Lee
(Digby, Long, & Co.)
Lytton
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, &(}o.,
U.S. A.)
Gordon Stables
(Blackie & Son ; and C
Scribner'sSons, U.S. A.)
John R. Musick
(Funk & Wagnalls Ca)
SUBJECT.
Paris, late Fifteenth Ontuiy.
E veof the Reformation (Parents
of Erasmus) ; Flanders, Bur-
gundy, Germany, and Italy.
Leonardo da Vinci, 1494— 1519.
Siege of Rhodes.
Jewish Persecution in Spain.
Conquest of Granada.
Ditto.
(Christopher (^lumbns, 1493.
Discovery of America ((^lumbus
before and after, to 1493).
a The dtle in tb« origioal Ruattan, but the English publtsheis have adopted Th§ F^rtnmmtr^ and
the Americen, Tht Xcmance ^ Lvmardo da Vmc*,
h The fint of a Series (** Columbian Historical I
ctiog the irarioas ftagce of Americui bictory down to
Norelt**) of thirteen complete jaT«niIe itariet
46
SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thb Hbir of Has-
coMBB Hall
•The Honour of
Savelli
•Valentino
*Thb Challenge of
Barlbtta
*TiiE Maid of Flo-
rence (NiCOOLd db'^
Lapi)
•True Heart
In the Blub Pike
•Die Hosen des Herrn
VON Bredow
^Chronicles of thb
SchOnberg Cotta
Family
Not for Crown or
Sceptre
Karinb
Xichtenstein
author and publisher.
E. Everett Green
(T. NeUon & Sons)
S. Levett Yeats
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
ana Appleton & Co..
U.S.A.)
WiUiam Waldorf Astor
(Fisher Unwin; and C.
Scribncx's Sons)
M. D'Azeglio (trans.)
(W. H. Allen & Co., x8So)
M. D'Azeglio (trans.)
(R. Bendey, 1853)
F. Breton
(Grant Richards)
Georg Ebers (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.;
ana Appleton & Co.,
U.S.A.)
W.Alexis
(Janke, Berlin)
Mrs. Charles
(T. Nelson & Sons ; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.SA.)
D. Alcock
(Hodder & Stoughton)
Wilhelm Jensen (trans.)
(A. C. McCluig & C:o.,
U.S.A.)
W. Hauff (trans.)
(E. Nister ; and Dutton &
Co., U.S.A.)
subjbct.
Later period of Heni^ VII.
(Henry VHI. as Pnnce of
Wales); South of England
and London.
Italy — the Boigias.
Ditto ditto.
Goosaivo di Cordova, &e.
Florence, 1529—1550.
Switzerland, 1514-25 (Eras-
mus, &c)
Germany — ^time of Maximilian.
The Reformation Period.
Luther and His Family.
Reformation in Sweden (Gus*
tavus Vasa)
Time of Gnstavus Vasa.
(xermany. Early Sixteenth
Century.
47
SIXTEENTH CElHT\3ViY—conHnued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
author and publisher.
subject.
In the Oldxn Timb
Miss Roberts
(L<nigmans» GreeD,& Co. ;
andHolt&Co.,U.S.A.)
Germany, the Peasants* War.
In the King's Favor
J. E. Muddock
James IV. of Scotland, in the
last months of his reign,
ending Flodden, 1513.
ThzBrabsop Yarrow
•A Prince of Good
Fellows
C. Gibbon
(Chatto & Windas ; and
Harper&Bros.,U.S.A.)
Robert Barr
(Chatto & Windtts; and
McClure, U.S.A.)
James V. of Scotland (just after
Flodden) ; the Queen Regent,
the Boy King, and the £arl
of Angus, 1513-1514.
Adventures of James V. (Scot-
land).
Mary of Lorraine
James Grant
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
Battle of Pinkie, 1547.
i
By Right of Con-
quest
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner*s Sons, U.S.A.)
Conquest of Mexico.
1
The Fair God
Lew Wallace
(Warne & Co.; and Hough*
ton,Miffltn,&Co.U.S.A.)
Ditto.
Montezuma's Daugh-
TER
R. Rider Haggard
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Ditto.
The Spoils of Em-
pire
Francis N. Thorpe
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Spain & Mexico (Montezuma's
daughter).
I
The Inca's Ransom
Albert Lee
(Partridge & Co. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Conquest of Peru.
I
The Virgin of the
Sun
George Griffith
(C A. Pearson)
Ditto.
*Tbe Household of
Sir Thomas More
Miss Manning
(Geo. Routiedge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A,)
Period of Henry VHL (More,
Erasmus, &c., in Chelsea,
1522-35).
The Armourer's
'Prentices
Charlotte M. Yonge
(MacmiUan & Co.)
Ditto (early years of reign, up
to Fall of Wolsey).
48
SIXTEENTH CENTURY-«>frff«ftfi.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
My Friend Anne
V Defender of thf.
Faith
C) •Windsor Castle
•/
The House of the
Wizard
Henry VIII. and His
Court; or, Cathe-
rine Parr
ToNFORD Manor
When Knighthood
Was in Flower
The White Queen
^Darnlbv
Westminster Abbey
1/ Robert Aske
1
Like A Rasen Fiddler
Under Bayard*s Ban-
ner
Jessie Armstrong
(Wane & CoJ
FrtDk Mathew
(John Lane)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Routledge & Sons;
Gibbings & Co.; and
lippincott & Co., U.S.A.)
M. Imlay Taylor
(Gay & Bird ; and McClurg
& Co., U.S.A.)
Louise Miihlbach (trans.)
(D. Appleton & Co.)
S. Hancock
(Fisher Unwin)
E. Caskoden
(Sands & Co. ; and Bowen-
Merrill Co., U.S.A.)
Russell Gamier
(Harper & Bros.)
G. P. R. James
(Routledge & Sons; and
Wame & Co.)
Emma Robinson
(Routledge & Sons)
Eliza F. Pollard
(S. W. Partridge & Co.)
Mary E. Shipley
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
Henry Frith
(Cassell & Co.)
SUBJECT.
Period of Henry VIII. (Anne
Boleyn).
Ditto (Anne Boleyn and Wol-
sey).
Ditto (Wolsey, Anne Boleyn,
inA, Jane Seymour).
Ditto (Thomas Cromwell, &c.)
Ditto (1543 to death of Henry).
Canterbury in early years of
Henry VIIL (Eve of Refor-
mation).
Duke of Suffolk and Mary
Tudor.
Ditto.
Time of Wolsey (Field of the
Cloth of Gold, &c.)
Wolsey, Cranmer, &c, 1527.
Tyndale, Cardinal de la Pole,
&c. (Reformation).
Destruction of the Monasteries,
1536 (Lincolnshire).
Chevalier de Bayard (Battle of
Ravenna, &c.).
49
SIXTEENTH CEl^TURY-^continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
John op Strath^
BOURNS
ASCANIO
1
Margubritb de Ro-
BERYAL
Under the Rose
St. Leon
*The Master Mosaic
Workers
aThb Duke's Page ;
OR, In the Days
OF Luther
Barbara Blombsrg
•Royal Favour
. / •The Prince and the
Pauper
The Maid op London
Bridge
I 7^ Seething Days
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
R. D. Chetwode
(C. A. Pearson ; and Ap-
pletOD&Co., U.S.A.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
T. 6. Marottis
(Fisher Unwin)
Frederic S. Isham
(Bobbs-MerriU Co. ,U.S. A.)
William Godwin
(G. G. & J. Robinson,
London, 1799)
Geoige Sand (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & (^.,
U.S.A.)
Sarah M. S. Clarke
(J. Nisbet & Co.)
Georg Ebers (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.; and
Appleton & (>>.,U.S. A.)
A S. C. Wallis (trans.)
(Sonnensc)iein & Co.)
Mark Twun
(Chatto & Windus; and
Hfljrper& Bros., U.S.A.)
S. Gibney
(Jarrold & Sons)
Caroline C. Holroyd
(A. D. Innes & Ck>.)
SUBJECT.
Period of Fhincis I. (France
and Italy, 1520).
Ditto (Benventtto Cellini, 1540).
Ditto (Exploration of Canada).
Ditto (Court and Adyentnre).
Battle of Pavia, 1525.
Venice in time of Tintoretto
Dnke Maurice of Saxony,
Charles V., Luther, &c.,
1539 to 1553-
(Carles V. and the Protestants
from 1546 (Ratisbon).
Time of Melancthon and Eric
XIV. of Sweden.
Edward VI. (as Prince and
King).
Ditto (Rett's Rebellion).
Edwaxd VI. — Mary period.
a Really " from the German/ though the ktest English edItioB has ** S. M. S. Clarke " alooe on the
title-jpage. The book being genenJly described as her prodnctioot I have thought it best to place that
lady^ name against ib
B
I
50
SIXTEENTH CEl^TURY—contittua.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*TuB Colloquies op
Edwa&o Osborns
*The Tower of Lon-
IX)N
*Tue Royal Sisters
I "^ A Queen of Nine
Days
,'f
Lest We Forget
I Crown Thee King
*The Mischief of a
Glove
The Story of Fran-
cis Cluddb
*Lysbbth
Jan Van Elselo
The Master Beggars
The Beggars
AUTHOR and publisher.
T
Miss Manning
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S. A.)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
Gibbings& Co. ; and Lip-
pincott & Co., U.S.A.)
Frank Mathew
Q. Long)
Edith C. Kenyon
(Religious Tract Society)
Joseph Hocking
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Advance Publishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Max Pemberton
(Methuen & Co.)
Mrs. Philip C. de Crespigny
(Fisher Unwin)
Stanley Weyman
(Cassell&Co.)
H. Rider Haggard
(Longmans, Green, Sc Ca)
Gilbert and Marian Coleridge
(Macmillan & Co.)
L. Cope Comford
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
lippincott & Co., U.S. A.)
J. B. de Liefde
(Hodder & Stoughton ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S. A.)
subject.
Edward VL— Mary period.
Ditto (Lady Jane Grey).
Ditto (Mary and Elisabeth).
Lady Jane Grey.
Period of Mary.
Wyatt's Attack on
(Sherwood Forest).
London
Adventure in the time of Mary.
England (Mary) and the Nether-
lands.
The Netherlands (Leyden, Haar-
lem, &c., 1554—74).
Ditto (Philip IL of Spain—
Holland, Spain, France,
and England, 1559—73).
Ditto (Alva— Brussels, &c.,
1568—70).
Ditto (Brussels, Sec, i $68— 72 )
51
SIXTEENTH CENTURY-co/i^inK^.
TITLR OP BOOK*
^Bbggass of thb Sba
My Lady of Orangb
*In Tkoublbd Timbs
For Faith and
Fatherland
By Pikb and Dykb
By England's Aid
A Woman and a
Crbbd
*L*ANN^ DBS Mbr-
VBILLBS (lN*T WON-
DBRJABR)
Thb Burgomastbr's
WlFB
Shut In
Thb Spanish Bro-
THBRS
In Fair Granada
*IM THB PaLACB of
THB King
Thb Traitor's Way
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Tom Bevan
(T. Nelson & Sons)
H. C. BaUey
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
A. S. C WaUis (trans.)
(Sonnenschdn & Co.)
M. Bramston
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner^s Sons, U.S.A.)
H. Garton Saiigent
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
Hendrik Conscience
(C Uvy, Paris)
Georg Ebert (trans.)
(Macmillan & Co.; and
Appleton & Co.,U.S. A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
D. Alcock
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Eto Everett Green
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
F. Marion Crawford
(Macmillan & Co.)
S. Levett Yeats
(Longmans, Green, & Ca;
and F. A. Stokes Co.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
The Netherlands (1572 onwards
— Defence of Haarlem).
Ditto (Prince of Orange and
Alva).
Ditto (Brussels, &c, in 1574
and after).
Ditto (later years of Prince of
Orange, 1576— 84)-
Ditto (Siege of Haarlem, Ley-
den, and Antwerp.)
Ditto (Overthrow of Spain-
Surprise of Breda, &C., 1585 —
1604).
Bergen, 1565.
Flemish Struggle with Spain,
1566.
Si^e of Leyden, 1574.
Si^^e of Antwerp, 1585.
Spain — ^the Inquisition (Seville
in I5S9).
Spain— Time of Philip IL
Ditto ditto.
France— Conspiracy of Amboiie.
5a
SIXTEENTH CEHTTJRY-^mitimud.
TITLBOVBOOK.
I
V
>/
/
Ths Two Dianas
Ths Page of ths
DuKx OF Savoy
Thx Brigand
Undbr Calvin's
Spell
Kltoa
'About Catherine
de' Medici
A Cardinal and His
CONSaENCE
*FoR THE Religion
*A Man of His Age
*A Chronicle of the
Rbion of Charles
IX.
^Marguerite db
Valois
*The Housb of the
Wolf
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHER.
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Dumas (trans).
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
G. P. R. James
(Wame & Co.)
D. Alcock
(Religious Tract Society ;
and Revell & Co.,
U.S.A.)
George Taylor (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.;
and W. S. Gottsberger,
U.S.A.)
Balzac (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Graham Hope
(Smith, Elder, & Co.)
/Hamilton Dnimmond
(Smith, Elder, & Co.;
Ward, Lock, & Co.;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S. A.)
Prosper Mdrim^e (trans.)
(J. C. Nimmo, 1890 ; and
Cassell & Co., U.^A.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Stanley Weyman
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
SUBJECT.
Henri IL of Fiance.
Ditto (Netherlands).
Ditto (Diane de PottierSy &c.).
Geneva in Calvin's time.
Germany— Erastus.
Catherine de' Medici and her
Policy.
The Guises and the French
Religious Wars.
Coligny and the Huguenots
(ranee and Florida).
France — St. Bartholomew.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditta
53
SIXTEENTH CEHTXJRY^conHnued.
TITXB OF BOOK.
*CoDNT Hannibal
*THB CHAFX.BT OP
'Crichton
*La Damb db Mon-
SORBAU
•Thb Forty Fivb
\* An Embmy to thb
King
*A Gbntlbman of
France
^ Thb King's Hbnch-
' MAN
f
Undbr thb Spbll of
THB Flbur db Lis
A King's Pawn
Chbvalibr D'Auriac
Thb Helmet of
Navarre
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
Stanley W^man
(Smith, Elder, & Co.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Rotttledge & Sons ;
Gibbings & Co.; and
Lippincott &Co.|U.S.A.)
Dnmas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & (^.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
R. N. Stephens
(Methuen & O.; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
Stanley Weyman
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
W. H. Johnson
(Gay & Bird ; and Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S. A.)
Hamilton Drummond
(W. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Doubleday & Co.,
U.S. A.)
S. Levett Yeate
(Longmans, Green, & C^.)
Bertha Runkle
(Macmillan & Co.; and
Century Co., U.S. A)
8UBJBCT.
France — St. Bartholomew.
Ditto ditto.
««The Admirable Crichton,"
1560—85.
Court of Henry IIL (1578).
Ditto (I585),
Henry of Guise.
Period of the League.
Henry of Navarre.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
54
SIXTEENTH CENTURY-^cotttiftued.
TITLE OP BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
From the Memoirs
OP A Minister op
France
Beatrice Cenci
'The Golden Book
OP Venice
*Thb Terrible Czar
A BoTAR OP the Ter-
rible
Under THE Southern
Cross
Dominique's Ven-
geance
The Flamingo
Feather
The Sword op Jus-
tice
*The Monastery
*The Abbot
*The Queen's Quair
The Queen's Maries
subject.
Stanley Weyroan
(Cassell & Co.; and Long-
mans & Co., U.S A.)
F. D. Gnemtzi (trans.)
(Bosworth & Harrison,
London, 1858)
Mrs. L. Tumbnll
(Century Co., New York)
Count A. K. Tolstoy (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.)
F. Whishaw
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
D. Alcock
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Em Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
K. Monroe
(T. Nelson & Sons; and
Harper & Bros., U.S. A.)
Sheppard Stevens
(C^y & Bird ; and Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A,)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
and Co., U.S.A.)
Maurice Hewlett
(Fan Ma/I Afagaxine from
June, 1903)
G. J. Whyte Melville
( W. Thacker & Co. ; Ward,
Lock, & Co.; and Long-
mans & Co., U.S. A.)
Henry of Navaire.
lUly, late Sixteenth Century
Venice, 1565 onwards (Repub-
lic v. Church-Fra Paolo Swrpi).
Rosna— Ivan IV.
Ditto ditta
Peru, after the Spanish Con-
quest.
France and Florida (early pio-
neers).
Huguenots in Florida.
Struggle between French and
Spaniards for possession of
Florida, 1565.
Melrose and District (1550).
Mary (^een of Scots (Low-
lands, 1567).
Ditto (the six years commenc-
ing 1561).
Ditto (Holyrood — Arabella
Stuart, &c).
55
SIXTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^Unknown to His-
tory
Mart Hamilix>n
Onb Qubsn Trium-
phant
Thk Mastxr of Gray
TOWBR OR THRONB?
*Kbnilwortb
*StR MORTIIIXR
Dorothy Vbrnon of
Haddon Hall
Swrbt «*I>oll* of
Haddon Hall
Thb Black Famiu ars
For God and Gold
Sons of Adybrsity
By Strokb of Sword
*SlR LUDAR
author and fublishbr.
Charlotte M. Yonge
(MacmiUan ft Co.)
Lord Ernest Hamilton
(Methuen & Co.)
Frank Mathew
(John Lane)
H. C. Bailey
(Longmans & Co.)
Harriet T. Comstock
(Little, Brown, & Co.)
Soott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
ft Co., U.S.A.)
Mary Johnston
(Constable ; Houghton,
Mifflin, U.S.A.)
C Major
(MacmiUan ft Co.)
J. E. Mnddock
O.Long)
L. B. Walford
(James Clarke & Co.)
Julian Corbett
(MacmiUan & Co.)
L. Cope Comford
(Methuen ft Co. ; and L. C.
Page ft Co., U.S.A.)
A. Balfour
(Methuen ft Co.; and
Buckles ft Co., U.S.A.)
T. Baines Reed
(Sampson Low ft Co.)
SUBJECT.
Mary Queen of Scots (Captivity
of Mary).
Ditto (Moray, Daniley, ftc).
Ditto (Elizabeth and Mary).
Period of Mary's late captiTity.
(Elizabeth, James VI. , Sidney,
Walsingham, Burleigh, ftc)
Girlhood of Elinbeth.
Elizabeth and Leicester (Ox-
fordshire and Warwickshire,
'575).
En^rlish naval supremacy in the
Elizabethan period.
Time of EUzabeth.
Ditto.
Ditto (Religious intrigties in
early part of reign;.
Ditto (Ombridge and West In-
dies— Drake).
Ditto (England and HoUand,
1574).
Ditto (Fife, Devon, and West
Indies — Drake).
Ditto (England and Ireland —
the Armada).
56
SIXTEENTH CEHTURY—cofitimted.
TITLE OF BOOK.
* Westward Hoi
*Mablcho
Ralph Wynward
GuAVAS THE Tinner
Penshurst Castle
The Golden Galleon
*Mastbr Skylark
The Shrouded Face
•Rosslyn's Raid
The Outlaws op the
Marches
a*WiTH Essex in Ire-
land
The Treasure of
Don Andres
author and publisher.
Charles Kxngsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
EmiW Lawless
(Niethueii & Co.; and Ap-
D.; ana AD-
., U.S. A.)
pleton & Co,
H. Elrington
(T. Nelson & Sons)
S. Baring-Gould
(Methuen & Co.; and Lip-
pincott&Co., U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
R« Leiehton
(Blackie & Son ; and Scrib-
ner's Sons, U.S.A.)
John Bennett
(Macmillan & Co.; and
Century Co., U.S.A.)
Owen Rhoscomyl
(a A. Pearson)
Beatrice H. Barmby
(Duckworth & Co.)
Lord Ernest Hamilton
(Fisher Unwin; andDodd,
Mead, ^ Co., U.S. A.)
Emily Lawless
(Methuen & Co.; and J. W.
Lovell, U.S.A.)
J. T. Haldane Burgess
(MatthewsoD, Lerwick)
subject.
Armada, &c. (Devon and West
Indies).
Irish Rebelliaii, 1579.
Ditto (Sack of Yougfaal).
The Devonshire Tinneries.
Sir Philip Sidney.
Sir Richard Grenville, Raleigh,
&C. (Fight of Tke Revengey,
Shakespeare (Warwickshire and
London).
Wales (Carnarvon) in second
half of i6th oentnry.
Scottish Border in Elizabethan
days.
Liddesdale and Border district
about 1587.
Irehmd (1599)*
Shetland and Spain (time of
the Armada).
a Readers axe recommeoded to read as a ■equel, Slandieh O'Gmdy's " Ulrick the Ready " (Downey
& Ca, i&^). in which volume the Battle of lunsale (160s) is a mam featore. Mr. O'Grady'i other
~ tales " ot tlus period are hist<xicaUy vivid, biu not fiaioo proper.
f4
57
SIXTEENTH CElHTJJRY—eotaimud.
TITZJB OF BOOS.
AUTHOR AMD PUBLISHBR.
SUBJECT.
*A Flamb of Firb
A NOBLB QUBBN
Joseph Hocking
(CasaeU& Co.; and Revell,
U.S.A.)
Meadows Taylor
(KegaD, Paul, & Ca)
Spain (time of the Armada).
India in the last decade of the
i6th Century (Queen Chand
•Beebee).
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
SlGNORS OF THE
Night
*Thb Long Night
*Dmit&i
A Splendid Impostor
AGbntlbman Player
•The Fortunes of
Nigel
author and publisher.
Max Pemberton
(C. A. Pearson; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S. A)
Stanley Weyman
(Longmans & Co., and
McCiure, Phillips, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
F. W. Bain
(Percival & Co.; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A)
F. Whishaw
(Chatto & ^Tmdns)
R. N. Stephens
(Methuen & Co. ; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A)
subject.
Venice about x6oo (Fra Paolo
Sarpi).
Defence of Geneva against the
Savoyards in 1602.
Russia (the "£dse Demetrius")
at commencement of 17th
Century.
Ditto ditto.
Shakespeare in 1601.
Time of James I. (London and
neighbourhood, 1604).
58
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY-«>n^i»«^.
TITLB OF BOOK.
a * Tub Lancashirb
WlTCHKS
Thb Black Tor
Thb Young Qubbn
op Hearts
•In thb Days of Kino
Jambs
Romance of the
Lady Arbell
Judith Shakespeare
Father Darcy
The Lost Treasure
of Trevlyn
Guy Fawkes
^•Standish of Stan-
dish
author and publisher.
HarrisoD Ainsworth
(G«o. Roatledi^ & Sons;
Gibbings & CS>. ; and Lip-
pincott & Co., U.S. A.)
G. Manville Fenn
(W. & R. Chambers ; and
Lippincott & Co. ,U.S.A.)
Emma Manhall
(Seeleyft Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
S. H. Burchell
(Gay & Bird)
Alastor Graeme
(F. V. White)
William Black
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
Hai^per & Bros. , U. S. A. )
Mrs. Anne Marsh
(Chapman & Hall, 1846 ;
and (later) Ward & Lock)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Gea Roatledge & Sons;
Gibbings & Q>.; and Lip-
pincott & Ca, U.S.A.)
J. G. Austin
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Honghton, Mifflin, &
Co., U.S.A.)
subjbct.
Time of James I. (Witchcraft
Trials at Lancaster, i6l3).
Ditto (Peak District).
Ditto (Princess Elisabeth and
Prince Henry).
Ditto (1603—15).
Ditto (Arabella Stoart, 1578—
1615).
Ditto (Stratford-on-Avon)
Time of the Gunpowder Plot.
Ditta
Ditto.
America — Period of the Pilgrim
Fathers.
a Atnsworth's novel. " The Star Chamber,'* alio deals with James I., bat is distinctly inferior in
literary workmanship. Why will bibliographers continue the old nustake of cUsainff ** The Lancaahure
Witches " ander Htttry VI fl, period f The tntroductioo alooe deals with ** The Pilgrimage of Grace *';
the tale itself is oociipisd with long-subsequent personages and erents.
h This b the firtt of a series of talcs dealing with Early American history, by the same author, vis.; —
** Betty Alden** (sequel to above); "A Nameless Nobleman" (half-century later than **• Standtsh of
Standish "), with iu sequd, *' Dr. Le Baron and hb Daughters " (all published by Houghton, Mifflin, A Co.).
59
SEVENTEENTH CEtiTURY^contimted.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*SOU>ISK RiGDALB
Thx Littlx Crisf
LONGFBATHER THB
Pbacsmakbr
•By ORDSR OF THB
Company (To Havb
AND TO Hold)
•Thb Hbad of a Hun-
DRBD
MbrbY'Mount
*MlSTRBSS BBBNT
*SiR Chbistophbb
Antonia
'Thb DUKt'sSBBTANTS
*Undbr Salisbubt
Spirb
Winifrbdb's Journal
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER*
B. M. Dix
(MAcmillan & Co.)
E. F. Pollard
(E.Nister)
Kirk Munroe
(George Newnes ; and Lip-
pinoott & Co.» U.S.A.)
Mary Johnston
(Constable & Co.; and
Houehton, Mifflin, &
Co., U.S.A.)
Maud W. Goodwin
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
J. L. Motlef
(James Munroe 9t Co.,
Boston, 1849)
Lacy M. Thniston
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Maud W. Goodwin
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Jessie Van Zile Belden
(John Murray ; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
S. H. Burcfadl
(Gay ft Bird ; and Little,
Brown, ft (>., n.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley ft Co.; and Dutton
ft do., U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley ft Co.; and Mac-
milUm, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
America — Period of the Pilgrim
Fathers.
Ditto
ditto.
Ditto (Indians).
Old Virginia, 1622.
Ditto.
Plymouth Colony.
Maryland, 1636.
Ditto, 1644.
Dutch Colonists in Hudaoii
River Districts, 1640— 5a
The Duke of Buckingham (1624
— a8).
Geoi^ Herbert, 1613—33.
Bishop Hall (Exeter and Nor-
wich), from 1637 to his death.
6o
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— «w««i^.
TITLE OP BOOK.
In High Places
Whitehall
Anthony Everton
ffTHE MS. IN A Red
Box
The Dogs of War
With the King at
Oxford
Over the Border
author and publisher.
The Siege of York
Miss Braddon
(Hutchinson & Co.)
Emma Robinson
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
J. S. Fletcher
(W. & R. Chambers)
Rev. John A. Hamilton
a. Lane)
E. Pickering
(Wame & Co.)
A. J. Church
(Seeley & Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Robert Barr
(Isbister & Co., and F. A.
Stokes, U.S.A.)
Beatrice Marshall
(Seeley & Co.)
subject.
An Old London Beatrice Marshall
Nosegay
Mistress Spitfire
*The Splendid Spur
^•Captain Fortune
Cromwell's Own
(Seeley & Co.)
J. S. Fletcher
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
McCiurg&Co.,U.S.A.)
"Q"
(Cassell & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
H. B. Marriott-Watson
{T.P.^s Weekly ^ Autumn,
1903)
A. Paterson
(Harper & Brothers)
Earlier yean of Charles L
Ditto.
Ditto (Lord Stisflfoidi 1659).
Draining of the Fens by Cor-
nelius Vermuyden, 1627).
Godmanchester, &&, 1636 on-
wards— Naseby and the
Storming of Bristol.
Civil War (earlier stages)*
Ditto (A Borderer's ride to Ox-
ford with Scotch messafi«
to the King— Strafford^s
daughter).
Ditto (Fair&x, 1642).
Ditto (London and Oxford, 1642
—45a Lady Fanshawe,
Lovelace, &c.).
Ditto (1642—44).
Ditto (West of England, 1642
—3).
Ditto (Cornish Rising, 1643).
Ditto (1640 up to Marston Moor)
a The originally mysterious production of a would-be unknown author 1 The MS. of this norel was
sent to the publisher m a rtd box without anv indication whatever as to its ori|[in. Since the sucoessfut
laundiing « the volume, iu auUior has been identified through a friend's mediation.
h Published in Tolume form by Methuen & Co., 1904.
6;
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY-^confinued.
TITLB OF BOOK,
Co&NBT Strong of
Irston's Horsb
* When Charles I. was
Kino
*HU6H GWTBTH
MiRiAic Cromwell
author and publisher.
St. George and St.
Michael
Stanhope
Life, Treason, and
Death op James
Blount of Breck-
enhow
'Battlement and
Tower
*HoLMBY House
•The Cavaliers
The Children of the
New Forest
Old Blackfriars
Dora McChesney
(John Lane)
J. S. Fletcher
(Gay & Bird ; and McClurg
&Co.,U.S.A.)
B. M. Dix
(Macmillan & Co.)
Dora McCbesney
(W. Blackwood & Sons;
and Way & WiUiams,
U.SJl.)
George Macdonald
(Kegan, Paul, & Co. ; and
George Monro, U.S.A.)
E. L. Haverfield
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Beulah M. Dix
(Macmillan & Co.)
Owen Rhoscomyl
(Longmans &. Co.)
G. J. Whyte Melville
(W. Thacker& Co. ; Ward,
Lock, & Ca; and Long-
mans & Co., U.S.A.)
S. R. Ke^htley
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Harper & Bros,, U.S. A.)
Marryatt
(J. M. Dent & Co., and
others)
Beatrice Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; anol Dutton
& Co., U.S.A)
SUBJECT.
Civil War (Period between
Marston Moor and Fall
of Bristol).
Ditto (Marston Moor and Siege
of Pontefract).
Ditto (EdgehUl, &c.).
Ditto (From Edgehill to Naseby
and Death of Charles I. ).
Ditto (Raglan Castle, Newbury,
&C.).
Ditto (Naseby, &c.).
Ditto (Imaginary papers of a
Yorkshire family illus-
trating the period 1642
--45)-
Ditto (Wales in 1645, ^^ Battle
of Naseby).
Ditto (Newbuiy, Naseby, &c.,
and Cmurles's captivity
and death.)
Ditto (Cromwell and Charles —
Carisbrooke).
Ditto (near Lymington, 1647).
Van Dyck.
6a
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY—cotUinued.
TlTUt OF BOOK.
\
*To Right thb Wrong
*In Spitb of All
Follow thb Glbam
Kino "By the Grace
ov God" {VMGSUgs
GfuteUn)
*Thr Maiden and
Married Life of
Mary Powell
A Haunt of Ancient
Peace
The Draytons and
THE DaVENANTS
On Both Sides of
THE Sea
*John Inglesant
'Memoirs of a Cava-
lier
Silk and Steel
0 a*THE Three Muske-
teers
author and publisher.
Edna Lyall
(Hurst & Blackett; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
Edna Lyall
(Hoist & Blackett; and
Longmans & Co., U. S. A. )
Joseph Hocking
(Hodder & Stoughton)
J. Rodenberg (trans.)
(BenUey, 1871)
Miss Manning
(Gea Routtedge & Sons ;
and C. Scribncr's Sons,
UJ5.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Charles
(T. Nelson & Sons)
J. H. Shorthottse
(Macmillan & Co.)
Defoe
(J. M. Dent & Co.)
H. A. Hinkson
(Chatto & Windus)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown & Co.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Hampden.
Falkland, LandfftCi
Cromwell, Charles L, Straf-
ford, &c, 1640—46 (Maiston
Moor).
Cromwell from the Naseby
period to his death.
John Milton (1643) Oxfordshire
and London*
Nicholas Ferrar.
(i) Civil War generally, 1637—
49; (2) Commonwealth to
Restoration (Bazter, Bunyan,
F0X9&C).
England (Charles L) and Italy
(the Molinists).
Germany and England (Wan).
Ireland (Charles I.), Low Conn*
tries, and France (Richelieu).
Fiance— Richelieu, &c. (162^—
a8).
« The AnaaiDafcioii of the Duke of Budung^um (zSeS). and Um ExecudoQ of C'lrltt I., ara anply
iUustrated ia Tk€ Tkrt€ AftuktUert and Twenty Ygmn ^^V^respcctiTcly.
63
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— «)»rf»»««i.
TITUC OF BOOK.
|V His Uiart's Dksirb
t»
* UND£R tbb Rbd Robb
>i
The Man in Black
|\| *RlCHBLIEU
*CiMQ Maes
The Plowshare and
the swoed
A Daughter op
France
'The Lady of Fort
St. John
tf*THE Betrothed
Lovers
Rupert by the
Grace of God
Stray Pearls
A Brave Resolve
author and publisher.
Katharine S. Macquoid
(Hodder and Stoughton)
Stanley Weyman
(Methuen & Co. ; and
Longmans & Co.»U.S.A.)
Stanley Weyman
(Cassell&Co.)
G. P. R. James
(G. P. Putnam's Sons, &c.)
A. de Vigny (trans.)
(Geo. Routledge & Sons,
1877; and Little, Brown,
& Co., U.S.A.)
Ernest George Henham
(Cassell&Co.)
Eliza Pollard
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Mrs. Catherwood
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Manzoni (trans.)
(Ward. Lock, & Co., 1889;
and Macmillan, U.S. A.)
Dora McChesney
(Macmillan & Co.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
J. B. de Liefde
(Hodder & Stoughton ;
and Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
The earlier stages in Riche-
lieu's career.
Time of Richelieu.
Ditta
Ditto (Cinq Mars).
Dittos
Quebec, New England, and
Acadie, 1637 — ^47; English,
French, and Dutch.
France and Acadie.
Acadie (French Colony).
Italy — the Plague in Milan,
1630.
Prince Rupert's time.
Ditto.
WallensteiOi
a Also imbHshad hy Geom Bdl ft Sons (Bohn's Series) under the dde, ** The Betnxhed." 1 adopt
the fuUer title, 10 prercnt contusioo with Scott's romance.
'
64
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— «Mi«iii«i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thx Lion of
North
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHSR.
Red Axe
a Baron and Squire
*Dbr Deutsche Kribo
(CoUective Title of
Series)
*Haus Eckbero
*JuRO Jbnatsch
My Lady Rotha
Philip Rollo
^*Thb King's Ring
(Times of Gustav
Adolf)
Karl of Breach
Beleaguered
Won by the Sword
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
Wilhelm Noeldechen (trans.)
(J. Nisbet & Co.)
Heinrich Laabe
(Haessel, Leipsic)
Sophie Jongbans
(Hirzel, Leipsic)
C F. Meyer
(Haesselt Leipsic)
Stanley Weyman
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Longmans&Co.,U.S.A.)
James Grant
(Geo. Roatledge & Sons)
Zacharias Topelius (trans.)
(Jarrold & Sons ; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
H. C. Bailey
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Herman T. Koerner
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
subject.
Scotsmen in Army of Gnstamu
Adolphos.
Thirty Years War.
Ditto (Tilly, Richeliea, &c.,
firom 1619).
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto (the GrisoDS district).
Ditto (Nuremberg, &c.}.
Ditto (Scotch soldier of fortune
— TiUy, &c.).
Ditto (Gustavtts Adolphus).
Ditto (Turenne).
Ditto (Villingen, 1633—34).
Ditto (Turenne, Mazarin, &c)
a This book was tnuulaUd by Saxah M. S. Clarke ; in the latest EngUsh edition her name oolj is
giren.
6 The fint of a series covering the zTth and x8th centuries. Under the general title of "The
Surgeon's Stories,** the remaining ▼oitimes are published by Messrs. A. C. McQoig & Cow, U.S.A. : one
of these appears in my list later on.
65
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— <»«««««?.
TITLX or BOOK.
t
Twenty Years After
* Marie de ^Cancini
*The Silver Cross
Flore
(In « In Kings' By-
ways ")
•The Grey Cloak
^Henry Masterton
Pretty Michal
•With Fire and
Sword
*Tbb Deluge
•Pan Michael
For His People
•John Splendid
•The Legend op Mon-
trose
AUTHOR and publisher.
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Madame Sophie Gay (trans.)
(Lawrence & BuUen)
S. R. Keightley
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Dodd, Mead, and Co.,
U.S.A.)
Stanley Weyman
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Longmans & Co.,U.S. A.)
Harold MacGrath
(Bobbs-Merriil(>.,U.S.A.)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Wame & Co.)
M. J6kai (trans.)
(Jarrold & Sons ; and L. C
Page & Ca, U.S.A.)
H. Sienldewicz (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Visconnt Hayashi
(Harper & Bros.)
Neil Munro
( Wm. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
France — ^Time of Mazarin, &c
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Mazarin's first establishment to
power, 1643.
\
Paris under Mazarin ; and Ca-
nada.
England (Civil War) and France
(the Fronde).
Hungary, middle Seventeenth
Coitury.
Poland and Russia, from middle
of the Seventeenth Century.
Japan in first half of the Seven-
teenth Century.
Scotland during period of Mon-
trose and the Covenant.
Ditto
ditto (1645).
66
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— cofMnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Journal of the Lady
Beatrix Graham
^Thb Angel of the
Covenant
'Kathleen Clare
Dauntless
John Ma&maduke
*Castle Ombragh
In the King's Ser-
vice
^Ethnb
Harry Ogilvie
The White King's
Daughter
In Colston's Days
The King's Pistols
Wanderer and King
Patricia at the Inn
AUTHOR and publisher.
Mrs. Fowler Smith
(Geo. Bell & Sons)
J. Maclaren Cobban
(Methnen & Co.; and R. F.
Fenno & Co., U.S.A.)
Dora McChesney
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
Ewan Martin
(C. A. Pearson ; and L. C.
Page, U.S.A.)
S. H. Chardi
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Constable & Co. ; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A.)
F. S. Brereton
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner*s Sons, U.S. A.)
Mrs. Field
(Wells, Gardner, & Co.)
James Grant
(Geo. RouUedge & Sons)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Mac-
milkn, U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
C. P. Plant
(Sonnenschein & Co.)
O. V. Caine
(J. Nisbet & Co.)
J. C. Snaith
(Arrowsmith)
SUBJECT.
Scotland during period of Mon^
trose and the Covenant.
Ditto
ditto.
Ireland, 1637—41.
England and Ireland in Charles
I. — Cromwell period (Earl of
Ormond, &c).
Ireland — Oomwdlian wan.
Ditto
Ditto
Ditto
ditto.
ditto.
ditto.
Scotland — CromweUian wars.
The Princess Elisabeth (Carls-
brooke).
Bristol, i636-*i72a
Cromwell, 1649 — 51 (Kent,
London, and West of England).
Wanderings of Charles II. after
Battle of Worcester.
Ditto ditta
67
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— cofOinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
After Woecestbe
OviNGDBAN Grange
author and publisher.
subject.
♦w,
Woodstock
«Nbssa
»Captain Jacobus
♦A Little Captive
Lad
•Penruddock of the
White LiAUBS
*The Making of
Christopher Fee-
RINGHAM
The Wooing of Ju-
dith
The Lord Protector
The Lion's Whelp
Adam Hepburn's Vow
£• Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Rontledge & Sons;
Giblnngi & Co.; and
Lippinootty U.S. A.)
Scott
(A. & C Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
L. McManus
(Sealy, Bryers, and Wal-
ker)
L. Cope Comford
(Methnen & Ca; and
Stone» U.S.A)
B. M. Dix
(Macmillan & Co.)
S. H. Chnrch
(F. Stokes* U.S.A.)
B. M. Dix
(Macmillan & Co.)
Sara B. Kennedy
(Hodder & Stouekton;
and DouUeday & Ca,
U.S.A.)
S. Levett Yeats
((>88ell&Co.; and Long-
mans & Co.| U.S.A.)
Amelia E. Barr
(Fisher Unwin; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S. A)
Annie S. Swan
(Cassell & Co.)
Wanderings of Charles II. after
Battle of Worcester.
Ditto (Sonth Downs, ending
with the escape to France).
Commonwealth period (Oxford-
shire and Windsor, 1652).
Ditto (Ireland in 1654— The
Cromwellian Settlement).
Ditto (Cavalier Highwajrman,
1655. Salisbury, &c,
and Holland).
Ditto (Holland and England).
Ditto (Holland, England, and
America).
Ditto (New England).
Ditto (Cavaliers in Virginia).
Oliver Cromwell's later years.
Ditto (Death Scene).
Scotland— Kirk and Covenant.
F — 2
63
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY^caniiiwed.
TITLB OP BOOK*
*FuBND Olivia
The Shadow of a
Ckime
A Gallant Quaker
The Golden Arrow
•King Noanett
*Thb Romance of
DOLLARD
^Tara
The Lastof the Clif-
fords
Brambletye House
God Save the King
*My Lord Winchen-
DBN
London Pride
I Lived as I Listed
AUTHOR and publisher.
SUBJECT.
Ameiia E. Barr
(James Clarke 8c Co. ; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S.A-)
HallCaine
(Chatto & Windus; and
L. C. Page&Co., U.S. A.)
Mrs. M. H. Roberton
(Methoen & Co.)
Rnth Hall
(Houghton, Mifflin, & Co.)
F. J. Stimson
(John Lane ; and C. Scrib-
ner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Catherwood
(Fisher Unwin ; and Cen-
tury Co., U.S.A.)
Meadows Taylor
(Kegan, Paul, & Co.; andC.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Eliza F. Pollard
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Horace Smith
(John Dicks)
Ronald Macdonald
(John Murray; and Cen-
tury Co., U.S.A.)
Graham Hope
(Smith, Elder, & Co.)
Miss Braddon
(Simpkin 8c Co. ; and R. F.
Fenno & Ca, U.S.A.)
Arthur L. Maitland
(Wells, Gardner, & Co.)
George Fox, the Quaker.
Quakers at the Restoration.
Gtotgt Fox and William Penn.
Anne Hutchinson and the In-
dians (America).
Virginia and Massachusetts Bay
(Coounonwealth period and
later).
French in Canada.
India, 1657. (Rise of the Mah-
rattas.)
Elizabeth of Bohemia and offer
of Crown to Charles.
Commonwealth — Charles IL
Ditto ditto.
Early Restoration Days in Lon»
don and Chelsea. (Isaac
Newton).
Time of Charles II. (1649^
78. Plague, Lady Cos-
tlemaine, &&)
Ditto (Highwayman).
69
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY-^eottHnued.
TITLE OP BOOK.
Silas Vbknby
•llis Gracb o' the
GUNNB
Tub Pueitan's Wife
•jouenal of tub
Plaguk
CUBEEY AMD ViOLBT
•Old St. Paul's
The Daggee and the
Ceoss
•WlItTEFEIAES
Danibl Hbeeick
•Simon Dalb
Nell Gwynn, Come-
dian
SiE Ralph Eshee
AUTHOR and publisher.
E. Pickering
(Blackie & Son)
I. Hooper
(A. & C Black ; and Mac-
millan^ U.S.A.}
Max PembertoQ
(Cassell & Co. ; and Dodd»
Mead, &Co.» U.S.A.)
Defoe
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
CentaiyCa* U.S.A.)
Miss Manning
(Geo. Routiedge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sods,
U.S.A.)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. RottUedge & Sons ;
Gibbings&CoL; and Lip-
pincott & Ca, U.S.A.)
J. Hatton
(Hutchinson & Ca; and
R. F. Fenno & Co.
U.S. A.)
SU^BCT.
Time of Charles IL (London
and Holland).
Ditto (London, 5>omerBet, and
Devon, 1664—65).
Ditto (Adventure in Plague
period).
Ditto.
Ditto (Plague and Fire).
Ditto ditta
Ditto (Italy and Plague at
Eyam).
Emma Robinson ' Ditto (Great Fire and after —
(Geo. Routiedge & Sons) { Claude Duval, Blood,
&c.)
S. H. Burchell
(Gay & Bird)
Anthony Hope
(Methuens Co. ; and F. A.
Stokes Co., U.S.A.)
Frankfort Moore
(C. A. Pearson ; and Bren-
tano's, U.S. A.)
Leigh Hunt
(Henry Colbum, 1832)
IMtto (Lady Castlemaine, the
Catholics, &c.)
Ditto (NellGwynne).
Ditto.
Ditto (Court life).
SEVENTEENTH CEilTlJRY ^continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*P£VSBJL OF THE PEAK
Tkaitor or Patriot?
•In the Golden Days
Mary Hollis
*Old Mortality
*Thb Men of the
Moss Hags
*JOHN Burnet of
Barns
a*DEBORAH's Diary
author and publisher.
SUBJECr.
•Winchester Meads
In the East Coun-
try with Sir
Thomas Browne
In the Service of
Kachel, Lady Rus-
sell
In Westminster
Choir
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Mary C. Rowsell
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner*s Sons, U.S.A.)
Edna Lyall
(Hurst & Blackett; and
Appleton & Co. , U. S. A. )
H. J. Schimmel (trans.)
(John Camden Hotten)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and
Estes & Co., U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Isbister & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
J. Buchan
(John Lane)
Miss Manning
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Dutton
& Co., U.S. A)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Ca ; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.)
Time of Charles II. (Derbyshire,
Isie of Man, and London,
1678).
Ditto (Rye House Plot).
Ditto (Algernon Sidney — Suf-
folk).
k).
Ditto (1670—88. WilUam of
Orange).
Bothwell Bridge, 1679.
Ditto.
Scotland and the Low Countries
(1678—88).
Milton and his daughters, 1665.
(Plague period).
Bishop Ken.
Author of " Religio Medici.'*
Lord Russell (Rye House Plot),
Tillotson, Burnet, &c.— Can-
terbury and London.
Purcell the Composer.
« Sequel to " The Maiden and Married Life of Mary Powell."
71
SEVENTEENTH CEHTJJRY—eontimud.
\
^
\
1
TITXB OF BOOK.
ThbCa&vxd Ca&toon
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
*Barnabt Lbb
'Spikoza
*ThbMakbrof Lbnsbs
ga " Dreamers of the
hetto ")
•'Midst thb Wild
Carpathians
*Thb Slaves of the
Padishah
Thb Wizard Kinq
*Thb Blaoc Tulip
Captain Satan (Ad-
ventures OF Cy-
rano DB Bergerac)
a*THB VlCOlCTE DB
Bragblonnb
Atatin Clare
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
John Bennett
(F. Wame & Co.$ and
Century Ca, U.S. A.)
Berthold Aoerbach (trans.)
Sampson Low & Co. ;
and Heniy Holt & Co.,
U.S. A.)
I. 2^angwill
(W. fieinemann ; and Har-
per & Bros., U.S.A.)
M. J6kai (trans.)
. Qarrold &Sons ; and !#. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
D. Ker
(W. & K. Chambers; and
lippincotti U.S.A^)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Louis (wallet (trans.)
(Jarrold & Sons ; and R. F.
Fenno & Co., U.S.A.)
Dumas (txans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
8UBJBCT.
Giiinling Gibbons.
Founding of New York, and
Idaryland, 1664.
A romance of Spinoza the
Philosopher.
Short Story of ditto.
Transylvania, 1666, to last years
of Turkish rule about 16S0
The Carpathian District (John
Sobieski and the Turks).
William of Orange and the
Brothers De Witt in 1672.
Adventure in early Louis XIV.
period.
France— Louis XIV. (1660—
72).
a Aa imporlaDt pqpdiologicd nim^FrmegugdgCAv€ghrComtem» de fat Fayette (fint published ia
1676), deals nominellif with the Couxt of Henri II. ; certain cnaracters in the book, however, are really
weO-kaown men and women of the L^$ut XIV, firiod vnder other names. Osgood A Co. published a
translation ia 189a.
72
SEVENTEENTH CENTVRY—contimtd.
'
TITLB or BOOK.
.^
Ths Goldkn Flbkb
•In the Day op Ad-
VBRSITY
The Frown of Ma-
jesty
*Thb Repdgbbs
\
v
%
%■
The Black Wolf's
Breed
Margot; The Court
Shoemaker
The King's Signet
The Marchioness of
Brinvillibrs
author and publisher.
'0 His Counterpart
The Clash of Arms
Uncrowning a King
Am^^ Achard (trans.)
(J. Macqueen ; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Methuen & Co.; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S. A;
Albert Lee
(Hutchinson & Co.)
Conan Doyle
{ho'AgokZDs, Green, & Co.;
fjid Harper & Bros.,
U.S. A.)
H. Dickson
(Methuen & Co. ; and Bowen-
MerriU Co., U.S.A.)
Millicent E. Mann
(A. C. McClurg & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Elica Pollaid
(Blackie & Son ; and C
Scribner's Sons,U.S.A.)
Albert Smith
(Bentley, new edition, 1886)
Russell M. Gamier
(Harper & Bros.)
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Methuen & Co.; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A}
E. S. Ellis
(Cassell & Co.; and New
Amsterdam Book Co.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
France— Lcrais XIV. (Tuikish
Wars).
Ditto (1687— towards end of
the Loufois Ministfy).
Ditto (Madame de Maintenoo,
Racinci &c.)
Louis XIV.— Old and New
World.
Ditto ditto.
IKtto ditto.
Madame de Mainteooo, &e.
Marquise de Brinvilliera, the
poisoner.
Wars of Tureane Qohn
C:hurchiU).
Ditto ditto.
America— King Philip's War.
73
SEVENTEENTH CE^TURY-^coniimud.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thb Old Dominion
(Prisoners of Hope)
Vivian op Virginia
*WaiTB Aprons
Whsn the Land was
Young
A Reputed Change
ling
aTHE Baton Sinister
*The Rebel
•The Lover Fugitives
•LORNA DOOKE
*FoR Faith and Free*
DOM
•MiCAH Clarke
author and publisher.
Mary Johnston
(Constable & Co.; and
Houghton, Mifflin, &
Co., U.S.A.)
Hulbert Fuller
(Jarrold & Sons ; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
Maud W. Goodwin
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Blown, & Ca,
U.S.A.)
Miss L. McLaws
(Constable & Co.; and
Lothrop Publishing Co.,
U.&A.)
Charlotte M. Yonfp
(Macmillan & 0)»)
G.GUbert
a. Long)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(W. Heinemann; and Har-
per & Bros., U.S.A.)
J. Finnemore
(C. A. Pearson ; and Lip-
pincott & Co., U.S.A.)
R. D. Blackmore
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
G. P. Putnam's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windtts ; and
Harper & Bra6.,U.S. A.)
Conan Doyle
(Longmans, Green, & Co.;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Virginia, late Seventeenth Cen-
tury,
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto (1676).
Florida Border (Time of James
n.).
Period of Charles IL— WiUtam
IIL
Duke of Monmouth, 1674 — 8d.
Rising at Taunton, 1684.
Days following Monmonth's
Invasion (Hampshire).
Monmouth Rebellion (Exmoor).
Ditto (Barbadoes).
Ditto (Sedgmoor).
« D^ictt the Dakt of Moomouth in a disdncdy fiftvoniaUe light.
74
SEVENTEENTH CEHTTJRY—amliimtd.
AVTKGti ABD FITBELISHXK.
TTTLB OW BOOK.
TkB Blus Flag
Max Hillaiy
(Waid, Jjodk, & Co.)
setahire;.
1m Tauatom Town
(T. Ndaon & Sons)
Dittaw
•Umth
S. Bimae.<;oa]d
(Methacn & Co^; md
Ditto (Dartmoor).
Dbb Clavkl
DUXB OP MONMOtJTB
Babhaia Wm slow :
•THK COUKTSHtP OP
Mouucs Buckler
Tbx Standard
*Trx Swokd of the
King
The Outlaw
The LfFEGUAEDSMAN
In Jaoobitb Days
*Ths Scottish Cava-
LIEE
^RXNGAN GiLBAIZB
M. £. Pklgnve
(Rdigkm Tiact Society)
Gccald Griffin
(SL Bentler» 1S56)
Beth Ellis
(W. Blackwood & Som)
A. E. W. Mason
(Macmillan & Co^)
S. R. Crockett
(Metfanen & Ca; and Ap-
l^eton & Ca, U.S.A.)
Ronald Bfacdonald
(JoIi» Mnriaj ; and Cen-
tary Co., U.S. A)
Mis. Han
(R. Bentley, 1S47)
H. J. SchimmH (trans.)
( A & C Black)
Mis. Henry Oarke
(T. Nelson & Sons)
James Grant i Battle of KiDiearankie.
(Geo. Rontledge ft Sons)
Ditto (Dofsctshiie).
Ditta
The days after SedgmoorQa^
Jefieys)*
London, BristoL and Abroad
(Tyrol, ftc), 1685— «7.
The Covenanters (James II. to
William III).
William of Oiange.
Revolution period (16SS).
Ditto.
Devonshire^ firom the landng of
WiOiaa to the Bomiiy of
1
J.Gak
(Greening ft Co.)
Dtthx
73
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITXI OF BOOK.
'LOCEIMVAB.
MisTRBss Dorothy
Martin
^By Dulvkrcombb
Watbr
^Blux Paviuons
Kensington Palace
*Thx Kino's Agent
Mt Lady of the Bass
My Mistress the
Queen
By the North Sea
* A Man's Foes
The Crimson Sign
True to the Watch-
word
The Boyne Water
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
S. R. Crockett
(Methuen & Co. ; and Har-
per & Bros., U.S. A.)
J. C Snaxth
(Ward, Lock, & Co. ; and
Appleton & Co., U.S.A.)
ILVaUiDgs
(Macmillan & Co.)
itqn
(Casaell & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
mUlan, U.S.A.)
A. Paterson
(W. Heinemann ; and A
pleton & Co,
S. H. Borchell
(Gay & Bird)
in; anoAp-
., U.S.A.)
M. A. PkuU
(Bladde & Son)
Emma Marshall
(JaiTold & Sons; and
Tho8.Whittaker,U.S.A.)
E. H. Strain
(Ward, Lock, & Co. ; and
New Amsterdam Book
Ca, U.S.A.)
S. R. Kdghtley
(Hutchinson & Co. ; and
Harper & Bros. , U.S. A.)
E. Pickering
(Wame & Co.)
J. Banim
(James Duffy, Dublin)
SUBJECT.
Battle of KilUecrankie.
Period of Judge Jeffrevs, &c.
(Devon and London).
Ditto (Exmoor, 1685— S9).
William HI. (Harwich, Franoe*
The Hague, &c.).
Ditto.
Ditto (Lord lilarlborough).
Ditto (Defence of the "Bass"
by Jacobites).
Marriage of Mazy to William.
(Charles IL— William HI.)
Cromwell's Granddaughter.
Siegeof Derry (1689).
Ditto.
Ditto.
Battle of the Boyne (1690).
76
SEVENTEENTH CEVtTVRY^eontinHed.
TITLB OP BOOK.
The MacMahon
Thb Wagbr
*lN THE Wake of
King Jambs
tfTHB Jagobitb
A Woman's Courier
*On thb Red Stair-
case
The Lion Cub
The Rebellion op
THE Princess
The Road to Fron-
TENAC
•The Trail op the
Sword
A Daughter op New
France
The Voung Pionbsrs
•With Sword and
Crucifix
author and publisher.
Owen Bla3me7
(ConsUble & Co.)
L. McMantu
(F. M. Backles & Co.,
U.S. A.)
SUndish O'Gmdy
(J. M. Dent He Co,; and
lippincott, U.S.A.)
Harnr Lindsay
(Chatto & Windos)
W. J. Yeoman
(Cassell & Co.; and Stone,
U.S.A.)
M. Imlay Taylor
(Gay & Bird; and Mc
Cluig & Ca, U.S.A.)
F. Whishaw
(Griffith, Farran, & Co.)
M. Imlay Taylor
(McClure & Co., U.S.A.)
S. Merwin
(John Murray ; and Doa-
bleday & U>., U.S. A)
Gilbert Parker
(Methaen & Co. ; and
Appleton & Co.,U.S. A)
Mary C. Crowley
(Little, Brown, & Ca)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
E. S. Von Ztle
(Harper & Bros.)
subjbct.
Battle of the Boyae (1690).
Siege of Limerick.
Connaught Rapparees in the
last decade ot Uie sefcnteenth
century.
Conspiracy of 1696 against
WUliam IIL
Ditto ditto.
Russia in the youthful days ol
Peter the Great.
Ditto ditto.
Moscow (Overtnmingof Govern*
ment, and Election of Peter).
French Occupation of Canada*
Ditto.
Ditto.
Period of La Salle, the Ex-
plorer.
Ditto ditto.
a My original eatdnsioB of Weyman's " Shrewsbury" (Longmans) and Bdna Lyall't " Hopa tha
Hermit (Longmans) may have been somewhat arbitnuy | I thorabre allude lo these nofveb as ilnstra-
ting facaoitg tntrigut* ik tkg Hmt ^ WUUmm i/l.^ though I must adhere to the remarit made upon
them in my Introducdon.
77
SEVENTEENTH CEHTV RY—eoniiimd.
TITLB QW BOOK*
*Tkb Story or Tonty
A RosB of Norm ahdy
The Begum's Daugh-
ter
The Coast of Free-
dom
The Black Shilling
*IN Furthest Ind
Daribn
The Singer of Marly
Mazbppa
author and publisher.
Mn. Catherwood
(Grant Richards ; and
A. C. McCliiig»,U.S.A.)
Wm. R. A. Wilson
(Little, Brown, & 0>.,
U.S.A.)
E. L. Bjnner
(Hongbton, Mifflin, & Co.)
Marie AdMe Shaw
(Hodder & Stonghton ;
and Donbleday & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Amelia E. Barr
(Fisher Unwin ; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Sydney C. Grier
(W. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Page & Co., U.S.A.)
Eliot Warburton
(Colbum, 1852)
I. Hooper
(Methuen & Co.)
F. Whishaw
(Chatto & Windus)
SUBJBCT.
Period of La Salle, the Ex-
plorer.
Ditto (Henii de Tonti).
New York (Jacob Leisler).
Boston (Time of Cotton Mather
and the Witchcraft Mania).
Boston (England) 169 1, and
Boston (America) — Cotton
Mather.
East India Company, 1697.
William Paterson and the Da-
rien Scheme (1698}.
Ireland, Brittany, Paris f Louis
XIV.), and Martinique (Slave
Market)— -1697 to 1699.
Mozeppa and the Cossacks,
17th — i8th century (Pol-
tawaV
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
*Lallt of the Bri-
gade
L. McManus
(Fisher Unwin; and L.
C. Page, U.S.A.)
War of Spanish Succession —
Prince Eugene in Italy (Sur-
prise of Cremona, 1702).
73
EIGHTEENTH CB^TURY-^contimud.
TITLE OP BOOK.
Thb Scourge of God
Flower o* thr Corn
The Siege of Lady
Resolute
^Esmond
author and pubushbr.
*In King's Houses
St. James's
The Baronet in Cor-
duroy
•The Old Chelsea
Bun House
Tom Tufton's
Travels
Tom Tufton's Toll
^Across the Salt Seas
Fallen Fortunes
J. Blonndelle Burton
(James Clarke & Co. ; and
Appleton& Ca,U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
Qames Clarke & Co.)
H. Dickson
(Harper & Brothers)
Thackeray
(Smith, Elder & Co. ; and
Estes & Co., U.S.A.)
Jnlia C. R. Dorr
(Duckworth & Co. ; and
L. C. Page & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Harrison Ainsworth
(GeoT?e Routledge& Sons ;
Gibbings & Co., and
Lippinoott & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Albert Lee
(Grant Richards ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
Miss Manning
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C. Scriraer's Sons,
U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
J. Blonndelle Burton
(Methuen and Co. ; and
H. S. Stone, U.S.A.)
£• Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
SUBJECT,
JeanCav«lier(C6veiuies Reioll}.
Ditto ditto.
France and Louisiana (Biadame
de Maintenon).
William IH. to Anne (mainly
the latter). Reflects the Poli-
tical, Social, and Literary
forces of the period.
\rmdsor (William III.— Anne).
Time of Anne (Conzt and Marl-
boro').
Ditto (London and Conntiy
Life).
Ditto.
Ditto (Highwayman).
Ditto (Battle of Blenheim).
Ditto (B«ttfe of RamUlies).
79
EIGHTEENTH CEtiTVRY— continued.
TITLB OP BOOK.
Thb Bravbst of THB
Bravb
Thb Gornbt of
HOBSB
A Lady's Honour
In thb Ikish Brigade
Thb Qubbn's Serf
Dbvbrbux
Under the Dome of
St. Paul's
'Esther Vanhomrigh
A Kent Squirb
GWYNNBTT of THORN-
HAUOH
A Fair Jacobite
Thb House on the
Wall (in "In King's
Byways ")
*An Impbrial Lover
author and publisher.
G. A Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A)
G. A. Henty
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Bass Blake
(Fisher Unwin ; and Ap-
pleton, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U . S. A. )
Elsa d'Esterre Keeling
(Fisher Unwin)
Lytton
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, &Co.,
U,S.A)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley& C^o.; and Mac-
miilan, U.S.A.)
Margaret L. Woods
Qohn Munray ; and Hoven-
den Co., U.SA.}
1
F. W. Hayes
(Hutchinson & Co.)
Miss H. M. Poynter
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Stanley Weyman
(Smith, Elder, & 0>. ; and
Longmans & (>o.,U.S A.)
M. Imlay Tavlor
(Gay& Bird; and McClurg
& Co., U.S.A.)
ZmjECT,
Time of Anne (Peterborough).
Ditto (Duke of Marlborough).
Ditto ditta
Ditto (Foreign Wars).
Ditto (Kent and Spanish Ame-
rica, 1709—13)-
BoUngbroke, &c. (England and
Abroad).
Sir Christopher Wren's later
years (1709—23).
Dean Swift
England (Taoobites and Marl-
^ongh), and France (last
days of Louis XIV.).
The Stuarts in Exile^St. G^r<
mains, 1708 — 12.
Spanish Flanders, 1706.
Russia— Peter the Great.
8o
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— «wrf««iirf.
TITLE OP BOOd
AUTHOR AND PUBLI8HSR.
SUBJECT.
She who Hesitates
Boris the Bear-
Hunter
A Lost Arut
*Near THE Tsar, near
Death
•The Triumph of
Count Ostermann
In Clarissa's Day
«*The Mohock
The Heritage of
Langdale
Balmoral
The Intriguers* Way
♦Parson Kelly
DUANCE Pen DRAY
♦Monsieur Beaucairb
Hftziis Dickson
(Bobbs-MeriiUCo.,U.S.A.)
F. Whishaw
(T. Ndsoa & Sods)
'F. Whishaw
(Chatto & Windus)
Graham Hope
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Holt & Co., U.S.A.)
Sarah Tytler
(Chatto & Windas)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(Methuen & Co.)
Mrs. Alexander
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Henry Holt & Co.,
U.S. A.)
A Allardvce
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
J. Blotindelle Barton
(Religious Tract Society)
A. £. W. Mason and A. lAng
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
G. Norway
(Jarrold & Sons)
Booth Tarkington
(John Murray; and Mc*
Clure & Co., U.S.A)
Russift-Peter the Great (Alexis).
Ditto (from late Seventeenth
Century).
Peter the Great and his son
Alexis.
Last days of Peter the Great.
Time of George I. (Oxford and
London).
Ditto (Lost Jacobite Papers —
London district).
Ditto (London and South of
England— Jacobites).
Ditto (Accession np to Der-
wentwater Rebellion^Ja-
cobites in London and
Highlands).
Ditto (Paris and London, 17 14-
15. Jacobites and Hano-
verians).
Ditto (London, Paris, &c., from
1719. — Jacobite atmo-
sphere).
Ditto (Cornish Jacobites).
Bath-early Eighteenth Century.
a In the Tolume " Alanuns and Excttrtions."
8i
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY-rontfwiftfi.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*Thb Raidbxs
•The Dark o' the
Moon
*RoB Roy
*DOKOTHT FOftSTEB
A Loyal Little
Haid
To Arms t
0*CLBUENTINA
A Jacobite Exile
'Monsieur Martin
* For the White Rose
*TiMES OF Charles
XIL
3 A KiNO AND His
Campaigners
* Lb Chevalier D'Har-
menthal
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHER.
SUBJECT.
I
S. R. Crockett
(Fisher Unwtn ; Maonil-
lan & Co.; and Haiper
& Bros., U.S^)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S. A.)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus ; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S.A)
Sarah Tytler
(Blackie & Son)
A. Balfoor
(Methuen & Ca ; and L. C
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
A. E. W. Mason
(Methnen & Co.; and F. A
Stokes Co., U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A)
\ Wymond Carey
I (W. Blackwood & Sons;
I and G. P. Putnam's
' Sons, U.S.A)
Z. Topelios (trsns.)
(A C McQurg & Co.,
Chicago)
W. von Heidenstam (trans.)
(Duckworth & Co.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Galloway — early Ei^teenth
Century.
The Jacobites. (Northumber'
land, Glasgow, &&)
Ditto (Lord Derwentwater and
the Northumbrian rising).
Ditto (Mar's Rebellion).
Ditto (Edinbni^h, Battle oC
Sheriffmntr, &c.).
The Old Pretender and Princess
Clementina Sobieski.
Charles XII. of Sweden.
Ditto (Sweden, England, and
France, 1699— 1719).
Ditto.
Ditto (Poltawa, &c, 1697^
1718).
France — the Regency (1718).
a Decidedly mperior to the same anthoc's ** Lawreooe Clavering " (alio Jaoobite period).
i Short stories from the author's '* Karolinema " series.
82
EIGHTEENTH CEl^TVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
^Thb Rb6bmt*s Daugh-
ter
From Behind the
Areas
Servants of Sin
*The Mississippi Bub-
ble
Cerise
*The Yemassbb
*Free to Serve
Framcbzka
Halil the Pedlar
King for a Summer
Mohawks
author and publisher.
Dnmas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Mrs. Philip C. de Crespigny
(Fisher (Jnwin)
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Methuen&Co.)
Emerson Hough
(Methnen & Co.; and
Bowen - Merrill Co.,
U.S. A.)
G. J. Whyte Melville
(Thacker & Co.; Ward,
Lock, & Co.; and Long-
mans & Co., U.S.A.)
W. G. Simms
(J, W. Lovell, New York)
E. Rayner
(G. P. Putnam's Sons ; and
Small & Co., U.S.A.)
M. E. Seawell
(Grant Richards ; and
Bowen - Merrill Co.,
U.S.A.)
M. T6kai (trans.)
(Jarrold&Sons)
E. Pickering
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Lee & Shepard, U.S. A.)
Miss Braddon
(J. & R. Maxwell; and
I larper & Bros. , U. S. A. )
SUBJECT.
France— the Regency (1719).
Ditto (about 1720).
Ditto (Plague at Maneilles).
Ditto (John Law)
Fnmce (Duke of Orleans and
Mississippi Bubble period),
West Indies, and England
(Jacobite intrigues).
South Csrolina, 17 15.
Colonial New Yoric
Continental Europe, 1726—41
(Voltaire, &&)•
Stambul, 173a
Corsica (Rebellion of 1735).
London in davs of Bolingbroke
and Walpoie. Begins 1709,
but mamly 1720 onwards
(George I. — H.).
83
EIGHTEENTH CB^TVRY—coniimed.
TITLB OF BOOK*
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJECT.
Thb Miser's Daugh-
ter
The World Went
Very Well Then
^Hkart of Mid-
lothian
Willowdenb Will
Nbd Lbgeb
Roderick Random
Treasure Trove
Where Honour
Leads
*Thb House Divided
'Hetty Wesley
Lady Grizbl
Thvra Varrick
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. RoaUedge & Sons;
GibbingB & Co.; and
Lippincottft Co.,U.S.A.)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus; and
Harper& Bros.,U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
h Co., U.S.A.)
HalliweU Sntcliffe
(C A. Pearson)
G. Manville Fenn
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S. A.)
Smollett
(Constable & Co.; and
Macmillan, U.S. A.)
S. Lover
(Constable ft Co. ; and
Little, Brown, ft Co.,
U.S.A.)
Marian Francis
(Hutchinson ft Co.)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(Harper & Bros.)
A. T. Quiller*Couch
(Harper ft Bros. ; and Mac-
millan, U.SA.)
Lewis Wingfidd
(Bentley, 1877)
Amelia E. Barr
(Fisher Unwin : and J. F.
Taylor Co., U.S. A.)
Time of Geoige II. (London
and JaoHntism, 1744).
Ditto (Deptfordj
Ditto (Porteous Riots).
Ditto (Jacobite Highwayman,
1745 — CnmbCTland and
London).
Ditto (England and Spain).
Ditto (Carthagena).
Ditto (Fontenoy).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto (Social life).
Lincolnshire home life of the
Wedeys, from 1723,
Bath, ftc 1747—65 (Time of
Earl Chatham).
Scottish life in the '45 Rebellion
period.
84
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— «>ii«iiii«i
TITLE OF BOOK.
For the White Rose
OF Aemo
•Waverley
Mistress Nancy
molsswortb
TooR Sons of a Day
The Fortunes of
Claude
A Hero of the
Highlands
A Lost Lady of Old
Years
^RlCROFT OF WiTHENS
Denounced
AUTHOR and publisher.
Spanish John
*The Master of Bal-
LANTRAE
*An Exiled Scot
Sir Sergeant
Owen Rhoscomrl
(Longiiuuis, Green» &Co.)
Scott
(A.&C. Black ; andEstes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Joseph Hocking
(J. Bowden ; and Double-
day & Co^ U.SJV.)
Allan McAulay
(J. Nisbet & Co.)
Edgar Pickering
(Wame & Ca)
K Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
J. Buchan
(John Lane)
HalUweli Sutcliffe
(Fisher Unwin; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A.)
J. Blonndelle Burton
(Methuen & Ca; and Ap*
pleton & Co., U.S. A.)
William McLennan
(Harper ft Bros.)
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell ft Co.; and C
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
H. A. Bryden
(ChaUo ft Windos; and
New Amsterdam Book
Co., U.S.A.)
W. L. Watson
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
SUBJECT.
The Jacobites (Wynnstay, &c
Welsh connection with
the Derby march).
Ditto (Stirling, Edinburgh, Lon-
don, ftc).
Ditto (Cornwall).
Ditto (Hip;hland plots and cam-
paign).
Ditto (Derby, Culloden, &c.).
Ditto (Culloden).
Ditto (Highlands and Edin-
bn^).
Ditto (Yorkshire Moors).
Ditto (England and France,
1746).
Ditto (Mission from Abroad to
Charles Edward— after
(^nlloden).
Ditto (Adventure in the years
after the '45).
Ditto (The Cape).
Ditto (The year after the '45).
85
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY-^n^fiwwi.
TITLK OP BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
8UBJBCT.
^Kidnapped
^Catriona
Tux Shoes of For-
TUNX
Thb Birthright
*Thr Chaplain of
THB FlBBT
^MOONFLBBT
Thb IdASTBR OF THB
Musicians
*PEG WOFFINOTON
*Thb Jbssamy Bride
^Mrmoirs OF Barry
Lyndon
'Thb Bath Cohbdy
Thb Dutchman's
Fireside
R. L. SteTenaoB
(Cassell & Co.; And C
Scribner's Sods, U.S. A.)
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassdl & Co. ; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.)
Neil Monro
(Isbister & Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Joseph Hocking
(J. Bowden; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
W. Besant and J. Rice
(Chatto & Windus; and
Harper &BnMw, U.S.A.)
J. Meade Falkner
(E. Arnold)
EmmaMaishall
(Seeley h Co. ; and Mac-
milian, U.S. A.)
Chaiies Reade
(Chatto & Windus; and
Dodd, Mead, & Ca,
U.S. A.)
F. Fruikfort Moore
(Hutchinson & Co. ; and
H. S. Stone ft Co.,
U.S.A.)
Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, ft Co. ; and
Estes ft Co., U.S.A.)
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Macmillan ft 0>. ; and
F.A. Stokes Co.,U.S.A.)
J. K. Panlding
(CScribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Scotland, 1751.
Scotland, 1751 (and Holland,
ftc.)
Jacobites, 1755. (Scotland
and France).
Time of John Wesley (Corn-
waU).
London and Epsom, mid
Eighteenth Century.
Smoggleis, 1757 (Dorsetshire).
Handel, 1742*59.
The Stage, middle of Eifi^-
eenth Coitnry.
Goldsmith, Garrick, ftc.
Ireland, England, and Abroad
(George II.— IIL).
Bath, middle of E^hteenth
Coitury.
New York, nuddle of Eight-
eenth Century.
86
EIGHTEENTH CE^TU RY^-coniimed.
TITLE OP BOOK.
In Old Nbw York
Thb Bow of Orange
Ribbon
*Agnb8 Surriagb
a Boys op 1745
Fife and Drum at
louisbourg
Fairfax
With Cliye in India
*Ralph Darnell
*LiKB Another
Helen
Outside and Over-
*Frxb Soil, Free Soul
AUTHOR and PUBLISHBR.
Wilson Barrett and E. Barron
(J. Macqaeen ; and L. C.
Page 6c Co., U.S.A.)
Amelia £. Barr
(James Clarke & Co. ; and
Dodd, Mead» & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Edwin L. Bynner
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin, &
Ca, U.S.A.)
James Otis
(Estes&Co., U.S.A.)
J. Macdonald Oxley
(little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
J. E. Cooke
(Sampson Low ft Co. ;
ana Dillingham,U. S. A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie ft Son ; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S«A.)
Meadows Taylor
(Kegan, Paul, ft Co. ; and
C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Sydney C. Grier
(W. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Page ft Co., U.S.A.)
G. MakgiU
(Methuen & Co.)
Lucas Qeeve
(Digby, Long, ft Co.)
SUBJBCT.
New Yoik, middle of Eig^-
eenth Century.
Ditto (from 1749 to begimuDg
of War).
Boston, middle of Eighteenth
Century.
The Capture of Loutsbourg.
Ditto.
Valley of the Shenandoah,
1748^1.
India (Beginnings of English
Ditto (Battle of Pkssey).
Ditto (diTe— Old Calcutu).
Early Colonisation of New Zea-
land. (After the '45}.
America (Boston) and England
in time of George II. (ends
with Earthquake oi Lisbon).
« Th« fint of hit " StoriM of Americsa Histocy" wriet (Bites & Co.).
87
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— «»(ift*m««f.
TITLB OF BOOK.
/
Torn from thb Foun-
dations
Ivan db Biron
tTHR King's ''Blub
Boys"
*consuelo
•Thb Countbss of
rudolstadt
^ a*FRBDBRICK THB
<> Grrat and His
Family
iJ Gavin Hamilton
*A Fallbn Star
cC Undbr Which King?
With Frbdbrick thb
Grbat
^With Washington
IN thb Wbbt
A SoLDiBR OF Vir-
ginia
^Amyot Brough
*Thb Sbats of thb
Mighty
author AND PUBLISHBR.
DftTid Ker
(A. Melrose)
Sir Arthur Helps
(Chatto & Wlndos)
Sheik E. Braxne
Qarrold & Sons)
subjbct.
)
Geom Sand (trans.)
(\^ter Scott ; and Dodd,
Mead & Co., U.S.A.)
Louise Mffldbach (trans.)
(D. Appleton & Co.)
M. £. Seawell
(Harper & Bros.)
C. Lowe
(Downey & Co.)
Hubert Rendel
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Bladde & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Edwaxd StiatemeYer
(Lee & Shepard, U.S.A.)
Barton Egbert Stevenson
(Duckworth & Co.; and
Houghton,Mifflin, U.S.A.)
E. Vincent Briton
(Seeley & Co.)
Gilbert Parker
(Methuen & Co. ; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S. A.)
Brazil and Fortogal (Earthquake
of Lisbon).
Russia, middle ^httenth C^-
tnry.
Frederick WUliam L of Prussia
and his Giant
Venice, Bohemia, Vienna, Ber-
lin, &c. (Haydn, Frederick
the Great, &c.).
Frederick the Great.
The Seven Yean War.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Youthful days of George Wash-
ington, leading up to Brad-
d<Kk'8 defeat.
North America (Braddock's De-
feat onwards).
Penrith, Westerham, ftc, and
C^mada (Wolfe).
The Taking of Quebec.
a On* of L. M&hlbach's Mvenl roouaoet dealing with this period.
3 One of «« The Cdbnial Series " (Lee & Shepeid).
88
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— «>fi«ii««f.
TITLE OP BOOK.
*Thb Last of the
Mohicans
•The Story of Old
Fort Loudon
*A Soldier of Man-
hattan
Fortune's My Fob.
*The Virginians
*Thb Golden Dog
{Le Ckim if Or)
*Olympb de Cloves
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Fenimore Cooper
(Mftcmillan & Co.; and
others)
C E. Craddock
(Macmillan & Co.)
Joieph A. Altsheler
(Smithy Elder; and D.
Appleton & Co., U.S. A.)
The House of De
Mailly
The Little Hugue-
not
The Last Recruit
OF Clare's
The Favor of
Princes
•Memoirs of a Phy-
sician
J. BloundeUe Burton
'fethuen&O
pleton & Co.
(MeUmen & Co. ; andAp-
^ ^ ., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Montadm, 1757 (Massacre of
Foct WiUiam Henry).
North America, 1758 (French
War).
Ticonderoga and Qoebec
Cartagena, 1758.
Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Estes & Co., U.S.A.)
WQliam Kirby
(Jarrold & Sons ; and L. C.
Page & Co.. U.S.A.)
Dumas (trans.)
Q. M. Dent h Ca; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Margaret H. Potter
(Harper & Bros.)
Max Pemberton
(Cassell & Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
S. R. Keightley
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Harper & Bros., U.S. A.)
Mark L. Luther
(Macmillan & Co.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
America and England, George
IL—IIL (Wa^ington, &c).
Quebec, in the days of Lonis
XV. (Bigot,
i days
174).
Frwioe, Louis XV. (Cardinal
Fleuiy, &c.)
Ditto (Versailles, Paris, and
Maryland).
Ditto (Fontaineblean).
Marc^nxse de Pompadour, &c
(lush Brigade stories).
Adventure in time of Louis XV.
Louis XV.— XVI. (1770-74)-
89
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY-row/wiwi.
TITLE OP BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
The Quben^ Neck-
lace
In Exrrfy Israel
«TWO QUBSBS
t
•The King with Two
Faces
?
Many Ways of Love
(At the Court of
Catherine)
^ A Forbidden Name
ij The Turkish Auto-
' MAl'ON
*The Valley of De-
cision
Mamzblle Fifine
*Tre Pride of Jen-
NICO
*Rbi>gauntlet
The Castle Inn
Damas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
S. Bariog-Goald
(Macmillan & Co., 1870)
J. G. L. Hesekiel (trans.)
(Sonnenschein & (}o.)
M. E. Coleridge
(£. Arnold; and Lane,
U.S.A.)
F. Whiahaw
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
F. A. Stokes Co.,U.S.A)
F. Whishaw
(Cbatto & Windtts)
Sheila K Braine
(Blackie & Son)
Edith Wharton
Q. Murray ; and C Scrib-
ner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Eleanor Atkinson
(Appleton & Co.)
Agnes and Egeiton Castle
(Macmillan & Co.)
Scott
(A.&C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Stanley Weyman
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
Court of Louis XVI. (1784-
35).
Church and State in France^
1788—89.
Denmark, 1772 (Caroline Ma-
tilda, sister of Geoige III.) ;
and France, 1792 (Marie An-
toinette).
Gustavns III. of Sweden.
Russia, time of Catherine II.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Italian life, 1774-95. (Alfieri,
&C.).
Girlhood of Josephine in Mar-
tinique.
Moravia, 1771.
Earlier period of George III.
(Scotland and Cumber*
land — ^Jacobites).
Ditto (Oxfordshire).
a Based on the Memoin of Baran Ivan M. Simolia.
90
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY -^^coniinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Cap'n Nat's Trka-
SURE
*Thb Orange Girl
The Rock of the
Lion
*6arnaby Rudgb
*Miss Angel
The Fatal Gift
A Nest of Linnets
L'^LftVB DE GaRRICK
At War with Pon-
TIAC
The Heroine of the
Strait
A Spectre of Power
•The Virginia Come-
dians
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Robert Leighton
(S. W. Partridge & Co.)
Walter Besant
(ChAtto & Windus; and
Dodd, Mead, & Ca,
U.S.A.)
M. E. Seawell
(Harper & Brothers)
Dickens
(Chapman & Hall; and
Crowell &. Co.» U.S.A.)
Miss Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Harper& Bros.,U«S»A.)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Hatchinson & Co.; and
Dodd, Mead» & Co.,
U.S.A.)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Hutchinson & 0>. ; and
D. Appleton & Co.,
U.SJL)
Augottin Filon
(Armand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
Kirk Monroe
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Mary C. Crowley
(Little, Brown, & Ca,
U.S. A,)
C E. Craddock
(Houghton, Mifflin, & Ca)
J. E. Cooke
(D. Appleton & Co.
SUBJECT.
Earlier period of Oorge III.
(Liverpool, 1776).
Ditto (London actress).
Ditto (Siege of Gibraltar, 1779
-83).
Ditto (Gordon Riots).
Art (Rejmolds and Angelica
Kanifinan).
The Sisters Gonning.
R. B. Sheridan, Johnson, &c.
(Bath).
Sir Joshua Reynolds, Biliss
Bumey, &c. (Environs of
London, 1780).
Pontiac's War.
Ditto (Detroit).
Stm^les of FKndi and Engllahi
liSz. (Mississippi Valky).
Viiginia, 1763-65.
91
EIGHTEENTH CBNTURY-^contimed.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Alice of Old Yih-
CBNNBS
Barbara Ladd
Thb Grbxn Moun-
tain Boys
*In the Valley
The Colonials
From Kingdom to
Colony
'Cardigan
*Ths Maid at Arms
Brinton Eliot
tf Lionel Lincoln
•THE Spy
•The Pilot
*RiCBARD Carvel
'Hugh Wynne
author and pubusher.
Maurice Thompson
(Cassell & Ca; and Bowen
Merrill Co.» U.S. A)
C. G. D. Roberts
(CcmsUble & Co.; and
Page, U.SA.)
Daniel P. Thompson
(H. M. CaldweU Co.,
U.S.A.)
Harold Frederic
(W. Hexnemann; and C.
Scrifaner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Allen French
(Grant Richards ; and
Doubleday & Co.,
U.S.A)
Mary Devereux
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.SA.)
}
R. W. Chambers
(Constable & Co. ; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
J. £. Farmer
(Macmillan & Co.)
Fenimore Cooper
(Geo. Rontledm & Sons ;
Hoaghton, Mifflin, &
Co., U.S.A.; and
others)
Winston Churchill
(Macmillan & Co.)
S. Weir MitcheU
(Fisher Unwin ; and Cen-
tury Ca, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Fort Vincennes (Clark's Con-
qnest).
Connecticut in 1769, and Newr
York during the Revolution.
American Revolution (Bur-
goyne's Invasion).
Ditto (before and during War
— Hudson Valley).
Ditto (early stage— Boston).
Ditto (New England Life in
the early days of the Re-
volution).
Ditto (before and during War
—New York, &c).
Ditto (America and France).
Ditto.
Ditto (Maryland and the Lon-
don of Horace Walpole).
Ditto (George Washington —
Philadelphia).
a ** Liood liaoofai ** treats of Boston in tho time of Bunker Hill (1773): "The Spy" of Hudson
River district (1780); and *'11m Pilot*' of PiMil Jones (i779X
92
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY-^-ccniinusi.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*A Great Treason
Cadet Days
In Blue and White
The Sun of Saratoga
The Herttagb
At the Siege of
Quebec
Phiup Winwood
Love Like a Gipsy
JoscELYN Cheshire
Doris Kingsley
Janice Meredith
Under Colonial
Colors
A Lieutenant Under
Washington
a Washington's Young
Aids
author and publisher.
Mary A. M. Hoppm
(Macmilkn & Co.)
Genend Charles King
(Harper & Bros.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Lotnrop Pablishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Joseph A. Altsheler
(D. Appleton & Co.)
Burton Egbert Stevenson
(HoQghton, Mifflin* & Ca,
u5.A.:
James Otis
(Penn PublishingCo.,U.S. A)
R. N. Stephens
(Chatto & Windus; and
L. C. Page & Co.,U.S.A.)
Bernard Capes
(Constable & Co.)
Sara B. Kennedy
(Gay & Biid; and Donble-
day & Co., U.S. A.)
Emma Rayner
(G. W. DiUingham Co.,
U.S.A.)
P. L. Ford
(Constable&Co.; andDodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
^ E. T. Tomlinson
(Houghton, Mifflin|& Co.,
U.S.A.)
E. T. Tomlinson
(Wade St Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
American Revolution (Bene*
diet Arnold).
Ditto (West Point, 1780).
Ditto (Geoige Washington, La^
fayette, Arnold, &c.)
Ditto (Burgoyne^s Surrender,
1777).
Ditto (Battle of Yorictown and
later— St Claii^s Expe-
dition).
Ditto (Arnold, Montgomeiy,
&C., in I77S).
Ditto (New York and London,
1763—86).
Ditto (America and England,
1778 onwards).
Ditto (North Carolina).
Ditto (South Carolina about
1776).
Ditto (Washinstoo— New Jer-
sey and New York).
Ditto (Arnold's expedition to
Quebec, 1775; and Wash-
ington in the Brandywine
to Valley Foige period).
Ditto (New Jersey Campaign,
1776-77).
« Chie of the author's '< War of the Revolockn '' Mriet (Wild* ft Co.)
93
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— cofUimed.
TITLS OF BOOK.
Thb Toey Loysr
A Song op a Single
Note
HoESE Shoe Robin-
son
a The Foeayees
EUTAW
OnGuaed! Against
Toey and Taelb-
TON
The Stieeop Cop
The Duke of Stock-
bridge
Calveet of Stea-
THOEB
AUTHOE AND PUBLISHEE.
^^•Ange Pitou
*La Comtbsse de
CUAENY
*Cheyalibe deMaison
Rouge
Sarah Ome Tewett
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Houghton, Mifflin, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Amelia E. Barr
(Dodd, Mead, & Co.)
J. P. Kennedy
(G. P. Putnam's Sens)
SUBJECT.
)
W. G. Simms
J. W. LoTeU, New York)
John P. True
(Little, Brown, & Co.)
J. Audrey Tysoii
(D. Appleton & Co.)
E. Bellamy
(Gay & Bird ; and Silver,
Burdett, & Co., U.S. A)
Carter Goodloe
(C« Scribner's Sons)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
little. Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; aad
Little, Brown, & Ca,
U.S.A)
D nmaa (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co,; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A)
American Revolution (Paul
Jones).
Ditto (New York).
Ditto (South Carolina).
Ditto (War in South).
Ditto (Greene's defeat of Com-
wallis in the Carolinas).
Ponnsylvania and New York,
1777 (Aaron Burr and Theo-
dosia Prevost).
Massachusetts (Shay's Rebel-
lion).
American Embassy at Paris
during the Revolution.
French Revolution (1789 —
Storming of the Ba^tile).
Ditto (1790—91. The arrest
of king and Queen).
Ditto (1793— Execution of Marie
Antoinette).
a The two kut of a aories oofoeiog tho Amcricu RevoUakm period.
94
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY-^cotOiHued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
•
/
/
0*Ths Story of a
Peasant
*The Rsdsofthb Midi
The Terror
The White Terror
•A Tale of two
Cities
•T>Aw ':
VAX '93
1/
/
Foes of the Red
Cockade
My Lady Marcia
•The Atelier du Lys
On the Edge of the
Storm
•Citoyenne Jacque-
line
*Thb Red Cockade
Mademoiselle Ma-
thilde
AUTHOR and publisher.
Erckmann-Chatrian (trans.)
(Waixl, Lock, & Co.)
F^Iiz Gns (trans.)
(W.Heineinann; andAp-
pleton & Co. I U.S. A.)
Dickens
(Chapman & Hall ; and
Crowell&Co., U.S.A.)
Victor Hugo (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A)
F. S. Brereton
(Blackie & Son)
Eliza F. Pollard
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Miss Roberts
(Longmans, Green, & Ca)
Miss Roberts
(Wame & Co.; and Holt,
U.S. A.)
S. Tytler
(Cbatto & Windus)
Stanley Weyman
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Henry Kingsley
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Longmans&Co.,U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
French ReTOlutio&(i789-i8i5).
Ditto (TheMarseillesBattalion;
the Terror; and the Royal-
ists in the South).
Ditto (London and Paris).
Ditto (LaVend^).
Ditto (St Malo, La Vend^,
and Puis)
Ditto (Ezperienoe of English
giri).
Ditto (Art stndentin the Terror).
Ditto (Gascony).
Ditto (Paris, 1793—3. Char-
lotte Corday, the Luxem-
boaig,&c.).
Ditto (Valley of the Rhone,
1789).
Ditto
land and France —
t).
"Year On
"Msdame
95
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— «>»^«««i.
TITLB or BOOK.
v"
1/
*Ths Adybntukss of
Francois Founder
*A ROMANCB OF DUON
*Thb Drvam Char-
LOTTB
*A Storm-Rxnt Sky
The Adventures of
the comtb db la
MUBTTB
Our Lady of Dark-
ness
The Red Shirts
A Girl of the Mul-
titude (EcLte)
The Little Saint of
God
St. Katherine's by
THE Tower
Robert Tournat
•At the Sign of the
Guillotine
author and publisher.
S. Wdr Mitchell
(Maanillan & Co.; and
Centuxy Co.» U.S.A.)
M. Betham Edwards
(A. & C. Black ; and Mac-
millan, U.S. A.)
M. Betham Edwards
(A. & C. Black ; and Mac-
miUan, U.S.A.)
M. Betham Edwards
(Hnrst & Blackett)
Bernard Capes
(W. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Dodd, Mead, &
Co., U.S,A.)
Bernard Capes
(W. Blackwood & Sons;
and Dodd, Mead, &
Ca, U.S.A.)
Paul Ganlot (trans.)
(Chatto & Windus)
W. H. Trowbridge
(Fisher Unwin ; and Wes-
selsCo., U.S.A.)
Lady F. Cunningham
(Hnrst & Bladcett)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus ; and
Harper&Bros., U.S.A.)
William Sage
(Houghton, Mifflin, &Co.)
Harold Spender
(Fisher Unwin)
SUBJECT.
French Revolution (Paris during
the Terror).
Ditto (Early Revolatk>nar7 for-
ces in Provincial France).
Ditto (Normandy — time of
Charlotte Corday).
Ditto (Danton's career).
Ditto (The Terror).
Ditto (En^and— Bury St. Ed-
munds, and France. Pe-
riod generally).
Ditto (The Terror—Bate con-
spiracy).
Ditto (Aristocrats in captivity,
&C., 1793).
Ditto (The Chouans).
Ditto (England, 1793).
General Hoche, Danton» Robes*
pierre, &c. (i 789 to end of the
Terror).
Robespierre, 1794.
96
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLX OF BOOK,
a La Gub&rb dbs Pay-
SANS (DE fiOSRBN-
K&YG)
*Thb Rhymkr
Thb Parson's Daugh-
ter
*A First Fleet
Family
*Ths Mutineer
The Maid of Maiden
Lane
On the Frontier
with St. Clair
^RoPES of Sand
A Business in Great
Waters
The Whites and the
Blues
^HE Mills of God
author and publisher.
Hendrik Conscience
(C. L6ry, Paris)
Allan McAnlay
(Fisher Unwin; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seelgr & Co. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S,A.)
Louis Becke and Walter
Jeifery
(Fisher Unwin ; and
MacmUlan, U.S. A.)
Louis Becke and Walter
Jcffery
(Fisher Unwin; and Lip-
pincott & Co., U.S.A.)
Amelia E. Barr
(Fisher Unwin ; andDodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Charles Wood
(W. A. Wilde Co., U.S.A.)
R. B. Frandllon
(Chatto & Windns)
Julian Corbett
(Methuen & Co.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Ca,
U.S.A.)
Elinor Macartney Lane
(D. Appleton & Co.)
subject.
1
French in Belgium.
Robert Bums, the Poet (1787
onwards).
Geoige Romney, the Painter.
Founding of New South Wales
(1788).
The Mutiny of the ** Bounty
(1789).
New York, 1791.
Ohio district, 1793 (St. Clair's
campaign against the Indians).
North Deron, 1793.
Sussex Smugglers and French
Conspirators.
Rise of Napoleon (1793-99).
Viiginia, England, and Conti-
nental Europe (The Prince
Regent, Sheridan, Napoleon,
Goethe, &c)
a Has been tianslated bto English under the tide of " Veva.**
97
EIGHTEENTH CBJ^TURY-^cofOinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb King's Own
Admiral
•Thk Battlb of the
Stronq
In Prxss-Gang Days
The King's Deputy
A King's Woman
*KlLGORMAN
•RORY 0*MORB
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Kathleen Mavour-
Two Chiefs of Dun-
boy
*The Rebels
*corragben
Marryat
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; Estes
& Co.» U.S.A. ; and
others)
Douglas Sladen
(Hutchinson & Co.)
Gilbert Parker
(Mpthuen & Co. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin &
Co., U.S.A.)
E. Pickering
(Blaclde & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
H. A. Hinkson
(Lawrence & Bullen ; and
McClurg & Co., U.S.A.)
Katherine Tynan
(Hurst & Blackett)
T. Baines Reed
(T. Nelson & Sons)
S. Lover
(Constable & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Randal McDonnell
(Fisher Unwin)
subject.
Mutiny at the Nore, 1797.
J. A. Froude
tgmanj
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
(Longmans, Green, & Co. ;
M. McD. Bodkin
(Ward, Lock, & Co.)
Mrs. Orpen
(Methuen & Co. ; and New
Amsterdam Book Co.,
U.S.A)
Nelson, 179S-99.
Jersey, &c., end of Eighteenth
Century.
Batde of the NUe, &c.
Dublin in time of Grattan.
Time of Lord Edward Fitz-
gerald.
Ditto ditto.
Ireland— the '98 Rebellion.
Ditto (Wolfe Tone).
Ditto.
Ditto (strong «« Rebel" stand-
point).
Ditto (strong "Loyalist "ditto).
H
98
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY -^conHmud.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Up for THB G&KKN
♦Thb Croppy
^Crofpibs, L» Down
Thk Piksmbn
Tub Round Towbr
*Thb Inimitablb Mrs.
Massingham
The Companions of
Jbhu
*The Conqueror
Little Jarvis
The Hungarian
Brothers
*TiPPOO Sultaun
The Duke's Own
A Freb Lance in a
Far Land
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
H. A. Hinkson
(Lawrence & Bnllen)
John md Michael Banim
(HeniT Colbum, 1828;
andDnfiy, Dablin, 1865)
William Bucklev
(Duckworth & Co.)
S. R. Keightley
(Hutchinson & Co. ; and
Brentano% New York)
Florence Scott and Alma
Hodge
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Herbert Compton
(Cbatto & Windus)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Gertrude Atherton
(Macmillan & Co.)
M. E. Seawell
(D. Appleton & Co.)
A. M. Porter
(Wame & Co.)
Meadows Taylor
(Kegan, Paul, & Co.)
J. Perw-Groves
(Grimth & Farran; and
Dtttton, U.S.A.)
Herbert Compton
(Cassell & Ca)
SUBJECT.
Ireland— the '98 Rebellion.
Ditto.
Ditto (CasUereagh).
Ditto (County Down).
Ditto (French Expedition).
Gtetna Green and Botany Bay,
1799-
Napoleon in Egypt (1799—
1800).
America^ Alexander Hamilton.
American quarrel with France
{ComUUaHom cruises, 1798-
1800).
Vieiwa in the lost decade of the
century.
Wars in India (Tippoo Sahib).
Tippoo Sahib, 5798-99 {Sitgs
ot Seringapatam).
Adventure in Hindostan (The
Mahrattas, &c) in the last
decade of the i8th century to
1804.
99
NINETEENTH CENTURY (Early and Mid).
TITLE OF BOOK.
*TUB Chouans
RODNBY StONB
Under Cheddar
Cuffs
My Lords of
Strogue
^The Island of Sor-
row
The Trail of the
Grand Seigneur
Blsnnbrhassett
A Son of the Revo-
lution
In the Eaolb^s
Talon
♦Philip Nolan's
Friends
4i*Ths Crossing
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
At THE Point op
THE Bayonet
Balzac (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown 8c Co.,
U.S. A.)
Conan Doyle
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Appleton& Co.,U.S. A)
Edith Seeley
(Seeley & Co.)
Lewis Wingfield
(Bentley, 1879)
George Gilbert
a- Long)
Olin L. Lyman
(New Amisterdam Book Co.)
C. F. Pidgfai
(C M. Chirk Publishing
Ca, Boston)
Elbridge S. Brooks
O^Ude & Co., Boston)
Sheppard Stevens
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A)
E. Everett Hale
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A)
Wmston Churchill
(MacmiUan & Co.)
G. A. Hentr
(Blackie & Son ; and C
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
subject.
Brittany in i8oa
English Social Life, beginning
of Nineteenth Coitniy (Sus-
sex).
Mendip district in time of Han-
nah More.
Ireland at the Union.
Robert Emmet, the Irish patriot,
1797—1808.
French Refugees on the shores
of Lake &itario, beginning
of Nineteenth Century.
America—tinie of Aaron Burr.
Ditto ditta
America and Paris prior to and
during the Louisianapttrchase.
Time of the Louisiana purchase,
1S03.
Louisiana in the period of the
purdiase, and the moulding
of National sentiment in the
Mississippi region.
Battle of Assaye, &c
a The lecoad. in historical aeqacoce,of xht ttntBm wbSA XicJUtnl Carvei nod TAgCrititaxtfnt
and Ibnth rapeottvely.
H— 2
lOO
NINETEENTH CEliTURY—conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thb Hour and thb
Man
Romance of the
First Consul
General Georoe
*Trb Adventures of
A Goldsmith
*Thb Fortunes of
FlFI
*PlCCIOLA
*Uncle Bbrnac
A Boy OF THE First
Empire
When George III.
WAS Kino
*A Friend of Nelson
^Springhaven
a*TRAFALOAR
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER*
Haniet Martinean
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
Mathilda Mailing (trans.)
(W. Heinemann)
Moreton Hall
(Fisher Unwin)
M. H. Bonrchier
(Elkin Mathews)
M. £. Seawell
(Bobbs-Merrill Co., U.S.A.)
X. 6. Samtine (tnns.)
(Sampson Low & Co.;
and McCluig & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Conan Doyle
(Smith, Elder, & Co.;
and Appleton & Co.;
U.S.A.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(S. W. Partridge & Co.;
and Centuiy Co., U.S.A.)
A. Sagon
(Sands & Co.)
Horace G. Hutchinson
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
R. D. Blackmore
(Sampson, Low, & Co.;
ana Harper & Bros.,
U.S. A.)
B. P^rez Gald6B (trans.)
(Tr&bner & Ca, 1884;
and W. S. Gottsbeiger,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Toussaint L'Ouyertnre (Hayti
and France, 1791 — 1803).
Napoleon, Josephine, &c.
George Cadoudal, the Chouan
Leader.
France — Rovalist Conspiracy
under the (Consulate.
Parisian actress in 1804 (Napo-
leon).
Earlier Napoleonic period.
Ditto (Schemes for Invasion of
England).
Napoleon, Fouch^, &c (1806
—15)-
Time of Nelson (Cornwall).
Ditto (Sussex — Ashdown Forest
district).
Ditto (Trafalgar).
Ditto ditto.
m One of the seriei (90 Tolft.) '* Episodiot Nadonalet,^ dealing with the Spanish War of Indepeodenoa.
ZOI
NINETEENTH CKHTURY-^continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Afloat with Nelson
'The Nameless Castle
Lazarrb
'RUHB 1ST DIB ErSTB
BURGE&PFLICHT
ISEO&IMM
Love and Honour
A Fiddler of Lugau
Rafael
AUTHOR and publisher.
Charles H. Eden
(J. Macqueen)
M. J6kai (trans.)
(Jarrold & Sons ; and
Doubleday&Co.,U.S.A.)
Mrs. Catherwood
(Grant Richards ; and
Bo wen • Merrill Co.,
U.S.A.)
(Wilibald Alexis
(Janke, Berlin)
i
a^Saragossa
The Follies of Cap-
tain Daly
Tom Burke of
"Ours"
The Aide-de-camp
M. E. Carr
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
G. P. Putnam's Sonsy
U.S.A.)
Mamaret Roberts
(Hatchards; andT. Whit-
taker, U.S.A)
Ernest Daudet (trans.)
(Sampson Low & Co.)
B. P6res Gald6s (trans.)
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
F. Norreys Connell
(Grant Richards)
Charles Lever
(Downey & Co.; Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S. A.;
and others)
James Grant
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
SUBJECT.
Time of Nelson (Nile toTra£il-
Daughter of Louis XVI. (Hun-
gary in Napoleonic period).
Son of Louis XVI. (France and
America, 1795— 1815).
Prussia — Invasion of Napoleon,
&C.
Westphalia in time of Jerome
Bonaparte.
Life in Saxony during the Na<
poleonic Wars.
Spain — Charles IV. and Napo-
leon.
Siege of Saragossa, 180S.
Adventure Abroad, 1795 — 1815
(Peninsular War and Water-
loo).
French Wars (Consulate ^ Em-
pire).
Battle of Maida, 1806.
One of the teries (ao vols.) " EiuMdios Nadonales," deaKog with the Spanish War of Independence.
loa
NINETEENTH CENTURY— «»i««w«i.
'
TITLE OF BOOK.
£l Ombu
*Charlss O'MALLBY
•The Romance op
War
With Moore at Co-
RUNNA
Under Welling-
ix)n's Command
*SoNs op the Sword
*A Castle in Spain
♦DofifA YSABEL
The Story of a
Scout
The Bivouac
Alice Lorraine
^Adventures of
Harry Revel
Captain Sword (in
"Alarums and Ex-
cursions")
At Odds
author and fublisheiu
W. H. Hudson
(Duckworth & Co.)
Charles Lever
(Downey & Ca ; Little
Brown, 8c Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
James Grant
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and
C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Margaret L. Woods
( W. Heinemann ; andMc-
Clure, U.S^.)
Bernard Capes
(Smith, Elder, & Co.)
Mathilda Mailing
(Ernst Bejesen)
J. Finnemore
(C Arthur Pearson)
W. H. Maxwell
(Gea Routledge & Sons)
R. D. Blackmore
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
and Harper, U.S.A.)
A. T. Quiller-Couch
(Cassell & Co. ; and C
Saibnet^s Sons, U.S.A.)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(Methuen & (Do.)
Baroness J. von Tautphoeus
(Macmillan & Co.; and
Lippincott, U.S. A).
SUBJECT.
Argentina, 1807 (English In«
vasion).
Peninsular War
Ditto (Highlanders in Spain).
Ditto
Ditto (Sir John Moore).
Ditto (the Dauphin in convent
near Talavera).
Ditto (Ney, Massena, &c.
180S— 10).
Ditto (Vittoria).
Ditto (short stories of Vittoria,
Badajos, &c.).
England (the Downs) and Spain
ill War time*
Plymouth and Spain (Ciudad
Rodrigo).
Military adventure in Peninsu-
lar War (Marshal Marmont).
South Germany — Siege of Ulm,
&c (Hofer).
I03
NINETEENTH CE^TVRY^ comimed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*WlTH THB RBD
Eaglb
*A Rbd Bridal
*War and Psacb
Kenneth
Through Russian
Snows
*Barlasch op the
Guard
The Palace of Spies
*Thb Westcotbs
Crowborough Bea-
con
An Ocean Free
Lance
Lafitte of Louisi-
ana
0BOY Soldiers qf 1812
Love Thrives in
War
author and publisher.
}
W. Westall
(Chatto & Windus)
Tolstoy (trans.)
(Walter Scott ; W. Hcine-
mann ; C Scribner*s
SonSy U.S.A ; and
others)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Q>.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
H. Seton Merriman
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
McClure, PhUlips, &
Ca, U.S.A.)
H. Compton
(Tieheme & O.)
A, T. Quiller-Couch
(Arrowsmith ; and Coatet
& Co., U.S.A.)
Horace G. Hutchinson
(Smith, Elder, & Co.)
Clark Russell
(Sampson Low & Co.)
Mary Devereux
(Little, Brown, & Co.)
E. T. Tomlinson
(Lee & Shepard, U.S.A.)
Mary C Crowley
(Little, Brown, & Co.)
SUBJECT.
The Tyrolese straggle under
Hofer, 1809.
Ansterlitz, Borodino, and Mos-
cow (1805—20).
Napoleon's Russian Campaign.
Ditto.
Ditto (chiefly Dantzic).
Caroline of Brunswick, i8ia
Somersetshire, 1810 (French
prisoners).
Sussex and Tunbridge Wells
during Napoleonic Wars (Re-
vivalism and Smuggling).
Privateering in 1812.
Jean Lafitte and Napoleon
(France and New Orleans).
America v. England — War of
1812.
Ditto ditto.
« Doe of the " War of i8ia " leries (Lee and Shepard).
X04
NINETEENTH CEHTURY-'ConHmed.
TITLE OP BOOK.
*A Herald of the
West
D'ei and I
Will o' the Wasp
Jack and His Island
a The Big Brother
The Errand Boy of
Andrew Jackson
* Smith Brunt
*Vor dem Sturm
*In the Year '13
^Regina {KattMsie^
^Angelot
Lb Capitaine Sans-
FA90N
author and publisher.
Joseph A. Altsheler
(D. Appleton&Co.)
Irving Bacheller
(Grant Richards ; and Lo-
throp Publishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Robert C. Rogers
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Lucv M. Thniston
(Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
G. C. Eggleston
(G. PTPutnam's Sons)
W. O. Stoddard
(Lothrop Publishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Waldron R. Post
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Theodor Fontane
(W. Hertz, Berlin)
Fritz Reuter (trans.)
(Sampson low & Co. ; and
Munro, U.S. A.)
H. Sudermann (trans.)
(J. Lane)
Eleanor C. Price
(George Newnes ; and
Crowell&Co.,U.S.A.)
G. Augustin-Tbierry
(Armand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
8UBJWJT.
America v, England — ^War of
1812
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditta
British attack on Baltimore.
Indian War in America, 1813.
General Jackson in 1814—
Mobile and New Orleans.
America and England (1806—
15), naval engagements.
Prussia, 1812—13.
French occupation of Mecklen-
burg.
Polish Prussia in Napoleonic
period.
Provincial France fAnjou) under
First Empire, 181 1.
France — Vendeans in 1S13.
m. Two other Jnvcoile tales by the game author, viz., ** Signal Boyt'* and *' Captain Sam" (both
published by G. P. Putnam's Sons), deal vrith the x8ia->i4 period.
I05
NINETEENTH CENTVRY—cofainued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
•EXFLOITS OF BrIGA-
DIBR GbRA&D
The Adventures of
Gerard
*Ths Shadow op the
Sword
Grantlby Fenton
Vengeance is Mine
Face to Face With
Napoleon
In the Year of
. Waterloo
One of the 28th
The Blockade
<i*The Conscript
* Waterloo
'Stories of Waterloo
^*The Great Shadow
author and publisher.
Oman Doyle
(George Newnes ; and Ap-
pleton & Co., U.S.A.;
and McCIure, Phillips,
& Co., U.S.A.)
R> Buchanan
(Chatto & VTindus; and
Appleton & Co., U.S.A.)
M. M. Blake
(Jarrold&Sons)
A. Balfour
(Methuen & Co. ; and New
Amsterdam Book Co.,
U.S.A.)
O. V. Cainc
(J. Nisbet & Co.; and A. I.
Bradley & Co., U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.)
Erckmann-Chatrian (trans)
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and C
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Erckmann-Chatrian (trans.)
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
W. H. MaxweU
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
Conan Doyle
(J. W. Arrowsmith; and
Harper & Bro6., U.S.A.)
subject.
Napoleon and his time. (Short
tales illustrating the Na-
poleonic Wars generally).
Ditto (Elba period).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto (Waterloo).
Ditto ditto.
Ditto ditto.
Ditto
Ditto
ditto,
ditto.
a These two booki depict the period September, iSia — July, 18x5.
^ One of tlie talcs in " Adventures of Gerard" (see above) deals nith Waterioo.
io6
NINETEENTH CEHTVRY ^eontinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
•St. Ivbs
•The Bonnet Con
spiratoes
Cheap Jack Zita
{ •Lbs Mis£rables
\ •The Manchester
*^^ Man
•Vanity Fair
^
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Mis'ess Joy
3 •Yeoman Fleetwood
•A Lady of the Re-
gency
a* The Queen can do
No WRONG
^ Taken from the
Enemy
R. L. StereDson
(W. Heinemaan; and C.
Scriboer'sSoDS, U.S.A.)
Violet A. Simpson
(Smith, Elder, & Co.)
S. Baring-Goald
(Methuen&Co.; and Tail
& Sods, U.S.A.)
Victor Hugo (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Mrs. G. L. Banks
(Abel Heywood ; and Geo.
Newnes)
Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Estes & Co., U.S.A.)
John Le Breton
(J. Macqueen)
M. E. Francis (Mrs. Blundell)
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Mrs. Stepney Rawson
(Hutchinson & Ca; and
Harper& Bros., U.S.A.)
Herbert Compton
(Chatto & Windus)
Henry Newbolt
(Chatto Sc Windus; and
Rand, McNally, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
subject.
French ptiaoner in England,
1813— 14.
French and Enelish on Sussex
Coast, 1815 (Napoleon hiding
on French shore).
The Fen Riots.
France, 181 5.
Manchester, earW Nineteenth
Century (Peterfoo).
<<
High Life," George IIL
IV. (Waterloo, &c.)
Last Years of the Regency.
Ditto (Lancashire and Brighton).
Time of George IV. (Queen
Caroline— last few years
of her life).
Ditto (Queen Caroline, Prin-
cess Charlotte, Brougham,
&c).
Ditto (Plot to rescue Napoleon,
1821).
a This book is divided into three parts. Part I. covers 1796—^806 ; Pul II., 1814 ; and Part III.,
i The last story in Conan Doyle's '* Adventures of Gerard " has a similar background— Napoleon's
death.
I07
NINETEENTH CENTURY— contimsd.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Royal Gborgib
*Thb Lion of Janina
> The Vintage
Capsina
♦At the Point of the
Sword
{;} *Thb Green Book
-7
Thaddeus of War-
saw
The Fiery Dawn
The She Wolves of
Machecoul
The Firebrand
In Kedar's Tents
For the Right
Under the Men dips
AUTHOR and PUBUSHER.
S. Baring-Gould
(MethucQ&Co.)
SUBJECT.
M. T6kai (trans.)
(J arrold & Sons ; and Har-
per, U.S. A.)
E. F. Benson
(Methuen & Co.; and Har-
per & Bros., U.S. A)
1
H. Havens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
M. Tokai (trans.)
(J airold & Sons ; and Har-
per & Bros., U.S. A)
Jane Porter
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and McClurg & Co.,
U.S.A.)
M. E. Coleridge
(E. Arnold ; and Long-
mans & Co., U.S.A.)
Dumas (trans.)
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Macmillan & Co. ; and
McClure&Co., U.S.A.)
H. S. Merriman
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Karl Emil Francos (trans.)
(James Clarke & Co. ; and
Harper & Bros., U.S A)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dut-
ton&Co., U.S.A.)
Time of George IV. (Dartmoor).
All Pasha of Janina, from 1819
to his death.
Greek War of Independence,
1821.
War for liberation of Peru (Bo-
livar).
Russia, 1825 (Alexander I.).
Poland, about 1830.
Duchesse de Bern (1831—32).
Ditto.
Spain — Queen Cristina and the
Carlists.
The Orlists.
Carpathian district, 1835.
Time of William IV. (Bristol
Riots).
io8
NINETEENTH CE^^TURY—cofOinucd.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Trbwbrn
Vive L'Empbrsue
Swallow
The War of the Axe
Sword and Assegai
*JOKN Charity
*Thb Romance of
Gilbert Holmes
With Crockett and
Bowie
To Herat and Cabul
Throuch Swamp and
Glade
In the War with
Mexico
MONONIA
author AND publisher.
Ishmael
R. M. Thomas
(Fisher Unwin)
Mary R. S. Andrews
(C. Scribner's Sons)
H. Rider Haggard
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
J. Perqr-Grovcs
(Blackie & Son)
Anna Howarth
(Smith, Elder, &Co.)
H. A. Vachell
(John Mnrray ; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S. A.)
M. M. Kirkman
(Simpkin&Co; and World
Railway Publishing Co.,
U.S. A.)
Kirk Munroe
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Kirk Munroe
(Blackie & Son ; and C
Scribner*s Sons, U.S.A.)
Cyrus T. Brady
(C. Scribner'8Sons,U.S.A.)
Justin McCarthy
(Chatto & Windos; and
Small, Maynard, & Ca,
U.S.A.)
Miss Braddon
(J. & R. Maxwell; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
subject.
Time of William IV. (Wales).
Ireland, 1832 (Legendary daugh-
ter of Napoleon).
South Africa— The Great Trek,
1836.
South Africa in the Forties.
South Africa — ^Ka£Eir risings of
1846 and 185 1.
First years of Qaeen Victoria's
reign (Hants and California).
Far West in the Thirties (Lin-
coln and Jefferson Davis).
Texas (Rebellion against the
Mexicans).
First A^han War.
Florida — Second War with the
Seminoies.
The Mexican War, 1846—7.
Ireland, 1848.
France (Louis Philippe— Napo-
leon IIL).
log
NINETEENTH CE^TXJRY'-'Continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^JOUKNSTMAN LiOVB
*A Romance op the
tuilb&ibs
'Mademoiselle Mori
J a*DiL Antonio
^ *VlTTOElA
J •For Freedom
j^ Out With Garibaldi
The Baron's Sons
* Manasseh
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
MiTO Yashiki
*RaVEN3H0E
Mrs. Stepney Rawson
(Uutchinson & Co.)
F. Gribble
(Chapman & Hall)
Miss Roberts
(Longmans, Green, & Co. ;
and Munro, U.S.A.)
G. D. Ruffini
(Thos. Constable & Co.,
EdinbaTgh, 1855 ; and
DiUingham, U.S.A.)
Geoige Meredith
(Constable & Co.; and C
Scribner*s Sons, U.S.A)
Tighe Hopkins
(Chatto & Windus)
G. A Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.)
M. Jokai (trans.)
(J. Macqueen ; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
M.J6kai (trans.)
(J. Macqueen; and L. C.
Page h. Co., U.S.A)
A. C. Maday
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Henry Kingsley
(Ward, Lock, and Co.;
and Longmans & Co.,
U.S.A)
SUBJECT.
France (Period of the '4S Revo-
lution).
Ditto ditto.
Italian Revolution, 1S4S.
Ditto.
Ditto.
War of Italian Liberation, 1S59.
Ditto ditta
Hungarian Revolution, 1848.
Italy and Transylvania, 1848
—59.
Japan in the Fifties.
Period of Crimean War (mostly
England).
a A remarlrmble ezanmle of a foragner's mastery of oar language. Ruffini, the illostriout Italian
patriot, wrote this novel aner a iojoom of some years in Englami. A neat edition was published by
Darid Stott in 1S91.
no
NINETEENTH CBNTURY^^-caniifmed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
a*SBVASTOFOL
The Interpreter
A Gallant Grena-
dier
Seeta
The Dilemma
*0n the Face of the
Waters
Flotsam
For the Old Flag
•Eight Days
author and publisher.
Jbnbtha's Venture
'•The Peril of the
Sword
Tolstoy (trans.)
(Grant Richards ; and Cro-
well & Co., U.S.A.)
G. J. Whyte MelvUlc
(W. Thacker&Co.; Ward,
Lock, & Co.; and Long-
mans 8c Ca, U.S. A.)
Captain Brereton
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribnei^s Sons, U.S.A.)
Meadows Taylor
(Kegan, raul, & Co. ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S. A.)
Sir George Chesney
(W. Blackwood & Sons;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S. A.)
Mrs. F. a. Steel
( W. Heinemann ; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
H. Seton Merriman
( Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Clive Robert Fenn
(Sampson Low & Co.)
R. E. Forrest
(Smith, Elder, & Co. ; and
U. S. Book Co., Lo-
veil's series)
Colonel Harcourt
(Cassell & Co.)
Colonel Harcourt
(Skeffington & Son)
SUBJECT.
Period of Crimean War.
Ditto (Crimea, Hangjsiy, &c).
Ditto (Sebastopol and Bala-
clava).
Ladian Mutiny.
Ditto.
Ditto (Siege of Delhi).
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto (Nicholson).
Ditto (Siege of Delhi).
Ditto (Siege and Relief of
Lucknow)
A This powerful sketch can banUy be described as '* romance,** bat I felt that my
trottld be bcomplete without it.
Ill
NINETEENTH CEiiTVRY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
The Disputed V.C.
Web of the Spider
War to the Knife
Time and Chance
*The Battle Ground
author and publisher.
'The Little Shep-
herd OF Kingdom
Come
Aladdin O'Brien
The Southerners
«CuDjo's Cave
*The Crisis
•The Washinoto-
NIANS
*The Red Badge of
Courage
Frederick P. Gibbon
(Blackie & Son)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(Hutchinson & Ca)
Rolf Boldrewood
(Macmillan & Co.)
Elbert Hubbard
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Ellen Glasgow
(Constable & Co. ; and
Doubleday & Co.,
U.S.A.)
John Fox
(Constable & Co. ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Gonverneur Morris
(Cassell & Co. ; and The
Century Co., U.S.A.)
Cyrus T. Brady
(C. Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
J. T. Trowbridge
(Lee & Shepard, U.S.A.)
Winston Churchill
(Macmillan & Co.)
Pauline B. Mackie (Mrs.
Hopkins)
(George Bell & Sons;
and Page, U.S.A.)
Stephen Crone
(W. Heineraann ; and Ap-
pleton & C>o., U.S. A.)
subject.
Indian Mutiny (Delhi and Luck-
now).
New Zealand War
Ditto.
America, early to mid Nine-
teenth Century (John Brown).
Virginia, before and during
CivU War.
Kentucky. Ditto.
Before (New England) and
during (the South) the Ameri-
can Civil War.
Mobile in Civil War time.
Tennessee in the Early Sixties
CWar Time).
American Civil War period (Lin-
coln, Sherman, Grant,
&c.)
Ditto (The Candidature for the
Presidency — ^Lincoln and
his opponents).
DiUo (Battle of Chancellors-
vUle).
a One of Mvcnd Juvenile books by the same author, dealing with the Civil War period.
112
NINETEENTH CENTURY— cofdinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
With Lbb in Virginia
The Iron Brioadb
author and pubusher.
•The Captain
The Deserter, and
A Day in the Wil-
derness (In "The
Deserter and other
Stories")
The Ck)PPERHEAD and
other Tales
Bayard's Courier
•Who Goes There?
•Friend with the
Countersign
The Cavauer
The Vagabond
•Henry Bourland
The Claybornes
♦Before the Dawn
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.]
Charles King
(G. W. Dillingham Co..
U.S. A.)
Churchill Williams
(Lothrop Publidiing Co.)
Harold Frederic
(Lothrop Pnblishing Co.)
SUBJECT.
American Ciiil War period.
Ditto (Army of the Potomac —
LincoiD, Grant, &&).
Harold Frederic
(W. Heinemann; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.)
B. K. Benson
(Macmillan & Co.)
B. K. Benson
(Macmillan & Co.)
B. K. Benson
(Macmillan &(>>.)
Georee W. Cable
(John Murray ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
F. Palmer
(Harper & Bros.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Albert Elmer Hancock
(Macmillan & Co.)
William Sage
(Houghton, Mifflin, & Co. )
J. A. Altsheler
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Doubleday, Page, &. Co. ,
U.S. A.)
Ditto (Grant).
Ditto (Adirondacks).
Ditto (Stories of the North).
Ditto (Early Campaigns).
Ditto (BttllRantoGettysberg).
Ditto (after Gettysbeig),
Ditto (Mississippi).
Ditto (Virginia).
Ditto (Virginia during and after
War).
Ditto (Grant — ^Vicksburg and
Richmond).
Ditto (Fall of Richmond; Jef-
ferson Davis, &C.).
"3
NINETEENTH CENTURY— oj»rf»n««rf.
TITLE OF BOOK.
-7
a*R]u> Rock
An Emperor's Doom
^ *Lay Down Your
\ Arms
1
i»
Tor ScspnuB and
Crown
Maid, Wifb, or
Widow?
\\ *John of Gbrisau
^ The Member for
I V** Paris
\ }? •The Daysprino
*Lb Jardin du Rox
The Isle of Unrest
AUTHOR and publisher.
«/•
Lorraine
Story of the PiA-
BisaTE (The PlS-
BI8CITS)
T. Nelson Page
(W. Heinemann; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Baroness von Suttner (trans.)
(Longmans, Green, & Co.;
and McOuig & Co.,
U.S.A.)
G. Samarow (trans.)
(H. S. King & Co., 1875)
Mrs. Alexander
(Chatto & Windus ; and
J. S. Ogilvie Publishing
Co., U.S.A.)
J. Oxenham
(Hurst & Blackett)
E. C. Grenville l^urray
(Smith, Elder, & Co., 1871)
Dr. Wm. Bany
(Fisher Unwin)
Paul et Victor Margueritte
(PloQ et Qe, Pans)
H. Seton Merriman
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Dodd, Mead, & Ca,
U.S.A.)
Robert W. Chambers
(G. P. Putnam's Sons;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S.A.)
Erckmami-Chatrian (trans.)
(Smith, Elder, & Co. ; and
C. Scribner's Sons,U.S. A.)
subject.
American Civil War period (Re-
construction period m Southern
States).
Mexican War of Independence.
Foreign Wars, 1864— 7a
Prussia v. Austria, 1866.
Ditto.
Ditto (and Franco-CTerman War,
1870).
France — Napoleon IIL
France — Late Napoleon III. to
the Paris Commune.
Sodety at Versailles under last
Empire.
Corsica in time of Franco-Ger-
man War.
Franco-German War.
Ditto (Standpoint of the ceded
Provinces).
a In oomocdoii with this period, Mr. Pase has also written a short storjr— *' The Burial of the
Own " (Wild, Lock, ft Co.), and two popular Juvenile books- ** Among the Camps," and " Two Little
Confedorates ** (both published by Scribner).
I
"4
NINETEENTH CENTURY— <»ii««ii«r.
TITLE OP BOOK.
V
I
Thb Cumson Wing
Valentin
Castlb of the White
Flag
The Garden of
Swords
S Ashes of Empire
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
The Maids of Para-
dise
The Downfall
1
a^UNB £P0QUB
Undbrthe Iron Flail
(Flowers of thb
Dust)
The Parisians
*Thb Red Republic
H. C Chatfidd Taylor
(Giant Richards ; and
Stone & Co.» U.S.A.)
Henry Kingsley
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Longmans& Co.,U.S.A.)
£. Eyerett Green
(T. Nelfon & Sons)
Max Pemberton
(Cassell & Co. ; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Robert W. Chambers
(MacmiUan & Co. ; and
F. A. Stokes Co., U.S.A).
Robert W. Chambers
(Constable & Co. ; and
Harper ft Bros., U.S.A.)
E. Zola (trans.)
(Chatto ft Windas; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Paul et Victor Maivueritte
(Flon-Nounit et Cie, Paris)
J. Oxenham
(Cassell ft Co.; and Wes*
sels, U.S.A.)
Lytton
(Geo. Rontledge ft Sons ;
and Little, Biown, ft
Co., U.S.A.)
Robert W. Chambers
(G. P. Patnam's Sons)
subject.
Franoo^German War (Crown
Prince of Germany, &c.)
Ditto (Sedan).
Ditto(Alsace— BatUeofWorth).
Ditto (Worth and Strasburg).
Ditto (Paris^Escape of the
Lmpress).
Ditto (Alsaoe and Brittany).
Ditto (Sedan and Paris).
Dittou
Ditto (Mete, Siege of Paris,
ftc).
Paris Commune.
Ditto.
lation of *' Le D^sastre," and of *' La Commime.'
"5
NINETEENTH CENTURY— «»i«m«rf.
it
TXTLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
A Window in Paris
•The Vblvbt Glove
Marianne Famin^am
(James Clarke & Co.)
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Paris Commune.
Spain, 1870— The Carlists.
Note.— I have seen it niged that occnrrences of a year or two ago should be reckoned
as " History." Surely we see events nunv iruly, in one sense, after the lapse of years,
even though exact details tend to fade away ? Many of us, while we regard the Franco-
German "War as History proper, feel that the men and deeds of the Eighties and Nineties
are, as it were, a part of our own environment ; the stage of impartial judgment (or, at
least, approximation to sudi) has not been reached. Accordingly I am content to end,
as b^re, with the early Seventies.
SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF
NOTABLE NOVELS.
(S EMI- H ISTORICAL. )
** Any narrative which presents feithfully a day and a genera
tion is, of necessity, historical.''
OwiH WisUr^ in ^ The Virgiman.
n
tf SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF NOTABLE NOVELS
JVhichy whiie not strictly ^* Historical^* in some way npresorU bygone periods.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^Uthbr and Igrainb
A Man's Fbar
Thb Forbst Lovers
The Castlb of Twi«
LIGHT
Countess Tekla
(Tekla)
The Strong Arm
Little Novels of
Italy
A Lord of the Soil
Desiderio
The Cloistering of
Ursula
*TuE God Seeker
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Warwick Deeping
(Grant Richar£ ; and the
Outlook Co., U.S.A.)
Hamilton Dnimmond
(Ward, Lock, & Co.)
Maurice Hewlett
(Macmillan & Co.)
Margaret H. Potter
(A. C. McQurg & Co.,
U.S.A.)
} Robert Barr
(Methnen & Co. ; and F. A.
Stokes Co., U.S.A.)
Maurice Hewlett
(Macmillan & Co.)
Hamilton Drummond
(Ward, Lock, & Co.)
Edmund G. Gardner
(J. M. Dent & Co.)
Clinton Sa^lard
(Cassell & Co.; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S.A.)
P. Ros^sier (trans.)
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
SUBJECT.
Britain in time of early Saxon
Conquests {circa 490 A. D.)—
Winchester, Wales, and Tla-
tagel.
The Vikings.
Mediaeval Life (England).
Women under Feudalism (Brit-
tany, 1380).
Germany, mid to late Thirteenth
Century.
ItalianManners,early Fourteenth
to late Fifteenth Century.
French Life in early Fifteenth
Century.
The Italian Renaissance.
Italian Adventure (Renaissance
period).
The Styrian Alps, 1493.
a Nothiag lake cxhausdveness is claimed for this " Supplementary List"; the method of study
therdn indicated might be indefinitely extended, hot the works given form an almost necessary startiog-
pdnt. A 1ms restricted list would, or ooutm, include the Semi-Historic examjdes of such foreign authors
as Madame de StaSI, Balsac, SpteUiagen, ftc. The purport of this book being primarily in the direction
of Historical Romance ^rofer, I have confined my attention here to a comparatively few works 00 the
boiderland of my Introductory definition*
I20
SUPPLEMENTARY 'LlST-^coutinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Taras Bulba
•Captain Fracassb
Heralds of Empire
The Heart's High-
way
*Thb Scarlet Letter
•Young Goodman
Brown (in ** Mosses
from an Old Manse")
•The Bride of Lam-
MERMOOR
A Lady of Quality
His Grace of Os-
monds
•The Pirate
The Black Dwarf
Captain Singleton
AUTHOR and publisher.
Nicolai V. Gogol
(T. Y. Crowell & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Th^ophile Gantier (trans.)
(Duckworth & Co.; J.
Macqueen; and L. C.
Page & Co., U.S. A.)
Agnes C. Laut
(D. Appleton & Co.)
Mary £. Wilkins
Qohn Murray ; and Double-
day & Co., U.S.A.)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
(Walter Soott ; Houghton,
Mifflin, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
(W. Scott; Houghton,
Mifflin, & Co., U.SA.;
and others)
Scott
(A. & C Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
I
F. Hodgson Burnett
(Wame & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons,U. S. A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Block; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Defoe
(J. M. Dent& Co.; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
The Zaporogian Cossacks (Six-
teenth Century).
Strolling Players in time of
Louis XHL (Fiance).
Adventure in Canadian Wilder-
ness, mid Seventeenth Cen-
tury.
Virginia, end of Seventeenth
Ctntuiy,
Massachusetts, end of Seven-
teenth Century.
Ditta
East Lothian, end of Seven-
teenth Century.
English Social Life, end of
Seventeenth Century.
Shetland and Orkney Islands,
I7cx>.
Lowlands of Scotland, 1706
(Jacobites).
Adventure in time of George L
121
SUPPLEMENTARY l^lST^amtintted.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
^Audrey
*ROGER Malvin's
Burial (in " Mewses
fromanOldManae")
*Trbasurb Island
•Tom Jones
•Clarissa Harlowe
Humphrey Cunkbr
•The Vicar of Wake-
field
The Forge in the
Forest
A Sister to Evan-
obunb
•Annals of the
Parish
•John Maxwbll*s
Marriage
•Castle Rackrent
Mary Johnston
(Constable & Co.; and
Houghton, MiiHin, & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
(W. Scott; Houghton,
Mifflin, & Co.» U.S. A;
and others)
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Fielding
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Macmillan, U.S. A.)
Richardson
(Chapman & Hall; and Li
ui; ana lad-
,f U.S.A)
pincott & Co,
Smollett
(Constable & Co.; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Goldsmith
(Macmillan & Co.)
C. D. G. Roberto
(Kegan, Paul, & Co.; and
Silver & Co., U.S. A.)
C. D. G. Roberts
0ohn Lane ; and Silver &
Co., U.S.A)
John Gait
(W. Blackwood & Sons;
and Macmillan & Co.)
Stephen Gw3mn
(Macmillan Sc Co.)
Maria Edgeworth
(Macmillan & Co.)
Virginia in Geoige L
period.
New England, 1725.
— n.
Adventure, mid Eighteenth
Century,
English Life and Manners, mid
Eighteenth Century.
Ditto ditto.
Satire on the Methodisto, ftc.,
mid Eighteenth Century.
English Rural Life in Eight-
eenth Century.
Nova Scotia in mid Eighteenth
Century.
Ditto.
Scotch Village Life, 1760^
1 810.
Donegal, 1761—79. (Sodal
Life).
Irish Character, late Eighteenth
Century.
122
SUPPLEMENTARY I^IST^cantinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*EVBLINA
*GUY Mannxrino
Katxefxlto
Thx Maid of Sxjul
Ths Surgkom's
Daughtjul
*Lbgxnds of thx Pro-
viNcx House
^Arthur Mxrvyn
*Thx Choir Invisiblx
*Thx Antiquary
Thx Beau's Cokxdy
^ThxMinistxr's Woo-
ing
*SwAtL0w Barn
author and pubushxr*
Frances Burney
(J. M. Dent & Co. ; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. &C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
G. T. Whyte MdvUle
(W.Thacker& Co.; Waid,
Lock, & Co. ; and Long-
mans & Co., U.S. A.)
R. D. Blackmore
(W. Blmckwood & Sons ;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S.A.)
Scott
(A.& C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
(W. Scott; Houghton,
Mifflin, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
Charles Brocden Brown
(McKay, Philadelphia)
James Lane Allen
(Macmillan & Co.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
B. M. Dix and C. A. Harper
(Harper & Bros.)
SUBJXCT.
Mn. Beecher Stowe
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin, &
Co., U.S.A.)
J. P. Kennedy
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Fashionable Manners, end of
Eighteenth Century.
Manners in early years of
George UL
Exmoor district, ditto.
Devonshire Life, late Eighteenth
Century.
Fifeshire, Isle of Wight, and
India, 1780.
Boston (America), late Eight-
eenth Century.
Philadelphia, 1793 (Yellow
Fever year).
Kentucky, 1795.
Scotch Manners last decade of
Eighteenth Century.
Deals mainly with the ei^ri-
ences of a young English
"beau" in a small Tillage
on the Connecticut River
(America).
American Manners, late Eight-
eenth to early Nineteenth
Century.
Virginian Life, beginning of
Nineteenth Century.
123
SUPPLEMENTARY LlST^-continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*Maroarbt
*Paidband Vrsjvdice
*Adam Bbdb
John Halifax, Gbn-
TLBICAN
DisTunr
TeAITS AND STORIBS
OF THB Irish Pba-
SANTRY
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
O^DONNBL
*Lavbngro
Round Anvil Rock
*Thb Grandissimbs
Thb Shadow of Vic-
tory
'Astoria
*Advbnturbs of Cap«
tain Bonnbvillb
*Shirlry
Sylvester Judd
(Roberts Bros., Boston)
Jane Austen
(MacmilUn & Co.)
George Eliot
(W. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Ciowell & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Dinah Mulock (Mrs. Craik)
(Hurst & Blackett; lip-
pinoott ; and others)
Snsan E. Ferrier
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Macmillan, U.S. A.)
William C^irleton
(J. M. Dent & Co ; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Lady Morgan
(Downey & Co.)
George Borrow
{JoDXk Lane ; and others)
Nancy H. Banks
(Macmillan & Co.)
C. W. Cable
(Hodder & Stonghton ; and
C Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.)
Myrtle Reed
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Washington Irvine
(G. P. Putnam^ Sons)
Charlotte BrontS
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Macmillan, U.S. A.)
8UBJBCT.
New England Life and Charac*
ter 100 years ago.
Everyday Society, beginning of
Nineteenth Caitury.
English Rural Life, beginning
of Nineteenth Century.
Tewkesbury, beginning of Nine-
teenth Century.
Scotch Character, beginning of
Nineteenth Century.
Irish Peasant Life, beginning of
Nineteenth Century.
Irish Character, beginning of
Nineteenth Century.
Semi-romance of Gipsy life, &c.,
in early Nineteenth Century.
Kentucky in the time of Peter
Cartwright, the Methodist
Preacher.
New Orleans, early Nineteenth
Century (Creole life).
American War of 1812 period
(Massacre of Fort Dearborn)*
Adventure in Western North
America (U.S.), iSoo— 25.
<< Luddite '' times (Yorkshire).
124
SUPPLEMENTARY lAST-^continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Forest Folk
St. Ronan's Well
Lords of the North
Mervyn Clitheroe
author and publisher.
•The Revolution in
Tanner's Lane
Black Prophet
The Whiteboy
A Hungarian Nabob
Mistress Barbara
CuNLiFFB (Mistress
Barbara)
•MiDDLEMARCH
Felix Holt
James Prior
(W. Heinemann ; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Agnes C. Lant
(W. Heinemann; and J. F.
Taylor, U.S.A.)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Rontledge & Sons ;
Gibbings & Co.; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
Mark Rutherford
(Fisher Unwin ; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
W. Carleton
(Lawrence & Bullen ; and
Sadlier, U.S.A.)
Mrs. S. C. Hall
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S.A)
M. J6kai (trans.)
(Jarrold & Sons; and
Donbleday& 0).,U.S.A.)
HaUiwell SutcUffe
(Fisher Unwin ; and Cro-
well & Co., U.S.A.)
George Eliot
(\Y. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Crowell & Ca,
U.S.A.)
(George Eliot
(W. Blackwood & Sons;
and Crowell & Co.,
U.S.A)
SUBJECT.
(C
Luddite '* times (Nottingham).
Near Firth of Forth, i8e2.
Canada, early Nineteenth Cen-
tury (Hudson Bay Co. verms
North-West Co.).
Manchester, about 182a
Nonconformity in London, early
Nineteenth Century.
Ireland in 182a.
Ditto.
Hungary, iSaa,
Yorkshire Wool Combers in
183a
;England in the Reform Period
(William IV.).
Ditto ditto.
125
SUPPLEMENTARY L^lST-^continued.
TITLE OP BOOK.
*psndbnnis
*Ths Nrwcombs
^Cranford
Pbrlycross
For thb Term op
His Natural Lipe
When Valmond
Came to Pontiac
Alton Locke
Sybil
Tub Hoosibr School-
master
*The Blithedalb
Romance
Castle Richmond
Castle Daly
*Debit and Credit
The Shebpstbalbrs
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
} Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Estes & Co., U.S.A.)
Mrs. Gaskdl
(Macmillan & Co.)
R. D. Blackmore
(Sampson Low & Co.; and
Harper & Bros., U.S. A.)
Marcos Clarke
(Macmillan & Co.; and
Monro, U.S. A)
Gilbert Parker
(Methoen & Co. ; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Charles Kingsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
Disraeli
(Longmans, Green, & Co.)
Edward Eggleston
(Orange Jndd Co., New
York)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
(Walter Scott ; and Hoogh-
ton, Mifflin, & Co.,U.S.A.)
Anthony Trollope
(Chapman & Hall)
Miss Keary
(MacmiUan & Co.)
Freytag (transj
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
Violet Jacob
(W. Heixiemann; and G. P.
Potnam's Sons, U.S.A.)
subject.
Late Geoif[ian — Early Victorian
manners.
English Provincial Life in the
second quarter of the Nine-
teenth Centnxy.
Ditto ditto.
Tasmanian Convict Life in the
second qoarter of the Nine*
teenth Century.
Canada in the second quarter
of the Nineteenth (jentury
(Traditional son of Napoleon).
Chartist period.
Ditto.
Indiana in the early Thirties.
Margaret Fuller and the ''Brook
Farm" group, under fictitious
names.
Irish Famine.
Ditto.
Business development, &c., in
Silesia, about 1848.
Breoonshire doring the toll-gate
riots, mid Nineteenth Century.
126
SUPPLEMENTARY L.IST^ conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Uncle Tom's Cabin
A Kentucky Car-
dinal
Aftermath
*Oldfibld
*Barchbster Towers
^SUNKINGWELL
^Bbauchamp^s Career
*Mary Barton
*It is Never Too
Late to Mend
^Geoffrey Hamlyn
•The Squatter's
Dream
Denis Dent
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Mrs. H. Beecher-Stowe
(Routledge; Cassell; Hough-
ton, Mifflin, &Ca,U.S.A;
and others)
1
James Lane Allen
(Macmillan & Co.)
Nancy H. Banks
(Macmillan Sc Co.)
Anthony Tlrollcpe
(Chapman & Hall; Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others.)
F. Warre Cornish
(Constable & Co.; and
Dntton& Co., U.S.A.)
George Meredith
(Constable & Co.; and
C Scribnei's Sons,
U.S. A.)
Mrs. Gaskdl
(Smith, Elder, & Co.;
and C Scribner*s Sons,
U.S.A.)
Charles Reade
(Chatto & Windns ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.SJL)
Heniy Kingsley
(V/ard, Lock, & Co.; and
Longmans & Co., U .S. A)
Rolf Boldrewood
(Macmillan & Co.)
E. W. Homnng
(Islnster & Ca)
SUBJECT.
Shivery in America, mid Nine-
teenth Century.
American Blanners, 1850.
Kentucky Small-town Life, mid
Nineteenth Century.
Life in an English Cathedral
City, middle of Nineteenth
Century.
<«
High Church " and " Broad
Church," middle of Nine-
teenth Century.
English Politics, middle of
Nineteenth Century.
Manchester, middle of Nme-
teenth Coitury.
Convict Ltfe(New Sooth Wales),
middle of Nineteenth Century.
Australian Bush Life^ middle of
Nhieteenth Centoiy*
DittOb
Ballaiat Goldfields about 1853,
the Battle of Inkerman, and
England.
127
SUPPLEMENTARY -LIST— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
By Celia's Akbour
Katrina : A Talb of
THE Karoo
*Thb Tragic Come-
dians
*Sa!d, the Fisherman
The Fortunes op
Oliver Horn
^Ebbn Holden
Dorothy South
The Master of War-
lock
The Girl at the
Halfway House
The Voice of the
People
author and publisher.
W. Besant and J. Rice
(Chatto & Wiadus; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Anna Howarth
(Smith, Elder, &Co.)
George Meredith
(Constable & Co.; and C.
Soribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Marmadnke Picktball
(Methnen & Co. ; and
Donbleday, U.S.A.)
F. Hopkinson Smith
(George Newnes ; and C.
Soribner's Sons, U. S.A.)
Irving Bacheller
(Fisher Unwin; and Lo-
throp Publi^ng Co.,
U.S. A.)
G. Carr Eggleston
(Lothrop F
U.S. A.)
(Lothrop Publishing Co.,
G. Caiy Eggleston
(Lothrop Publishing Co.,
U.S. A.)
E. Hough
(W. lleinemann ; and Ai
m ; and Ap-
., U.S.A.)
pleton & Co
Ellen Glasgow
( W.Heinemann; and Double-
day & Co., U.S. A.)
subject.
Portsmouth, in time of Crimean
War, &C.
South Africa— time of the great
smallpox epidemic, 1859.
Ferdinand Lassalle (fictitious
name).
Muslim Life and Character (Da-
mascus in i860, &C.).
New York Artistic Life before
and during the Civil War.
New York Journalism in Civil
War period (Horace Greeley).
Vimoia, just before the Civil
irguua.
War.
Virgmia, in early days of the
CivU War.
Reconstruction Period in the
Western Plains, U.S.A.
Reconstruction Period in Vir-
ginia.
FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE HISTORICAL
NOVELS.
** I love historical novels composed by a master hand.** —
LorJ Goschen,
" What we object to is the notion that historic fidelity is the
important ingredient of an historical novel. Enough there must
be ; but there must be much more than a dramatisation of history,
more than the recapture of the past; these are but objective
triumphs. There must be in the historical novel what we demand
in all novels — ^truth to the permanent qualities of human nature,
and an appeal to the reader as a living man, who reads what con-
cerns him* There must be the charm of charm." —
TMe Accutemy (February i6th, 1901).
•FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE HISTORICAL
NOVELS.
C<
. • Those who are in the habit of reading the literary
weeklies may have noticed how, in certain critical quarters,
a growing hatred (I can give no milder term) of historical
romance has been evinced. Doubtless, after the large num-
ber of mere * Cloak and Steel ' novels which the last decade
has seen on both sides of the Atlantic, one can hardly
wonder at this condemnation of the * Historical Novel,'
when such effusions are taken to represent it But, it must
be asked, what right has the critic to condemn an entire
class of fiction on the basis of its worst modem examples ?
And even if this be not done, it is hardly fair to prejudge
the question of romance-writing possibilities by setting
forth (as some critics do) all the theoretical objections which
can be urged against the blending of history with the narra-
tions of fancy. As to the arguments pro and con^ I have
attempted to deal with these elsewhere, and I will do no
more here than name a few leading critics who have
expressed themselves, more or less openly, for or against
historical romance.
* Through the kindness of the Editor pf the Literaty Worlds I am
enabled to give an extract from a letter which I recently (February, 1903)
sent to that paper. As the list appearing therein seems to have met with
some approval, I venture to insert it here. Moreover, it may serve to
show the absurdity of random statements about Historical Romance. I
recently came across the following sentence in a well-known American
ma^adne : — ** Anybody can write an historical rufvil^* ; if this very confident
critic were to glance down the names here given, he might be disposed to
modify his easy assurance, and to admit that the term '* historical novel"
stands for supreme achievement as well as for pitiable fiulure !
13a
Turning, first, to the * Ayes,* Professor Saintsbury and
Mr. Andrew Lang are indubitably favourable, while Dr.
Richard Garnett and Mr. Swinburne may, I think, be
claimed as decided, if less demonstrative, adherents.* The
' Noes ' are represented pre-eminently by Sir Leslie Stephen
and Mr. Edmund Gosse ; in lesser degree, by Professor
Brander Matthews and a ' certain writer ' in The Academy.
Two other champions may be summoned to this literary
tournament, viz., Mr. W. D. Howells (against) and Mr.
A. T. Quiller-Couch (for). Mr. Howells, whose recent
work on fiction * Heroines * would seem to show that his
literary judgments are not infallible, has just been com-
menting adversely on historical novels (except in the case
of * a very, very few '), and against his pronouncements I
think we may safely set those of our own able novelist and
critic, * Q.'t
The above remarks have been made with a view to leading
up to the main object of my letter. While the opinions of
learned critics (such as those just mentioned) are of very
great value, may not the novelists themselves be brought
forward to speak on their own behalf ? As likely to help
the intelligent adult reader to form his own judgment on
this question of historical romance, I have made out (after
much careful thought and study) the following List of Fifty
Representative Historical Novels. I use the word * represen-
tative ' rather than * best,' because I am aware that in any
* Since these words were written, a distinguished critic, Mr. Frederic
Harrison, has come forward in the new rdle of Historical NevelisU
t Vide Daily Nevos^ of June 2nd and June 9th, X902, for interesting
remarks "On Historical Novels,*' by Mr. Quiller-Coach ; see also the
incidental plea of another able exponent of Fiction, Mr. H. B. Marriott-
Watson, in his article — "The Old Controversy ** (f.^., between Realism and
Romance)— in Tht Monthly Review, for October, 1903
133
such list the line cannot be drawn with exactitude between
the last ten (say) of the novels chosen and the first ten of
those excluded. To show that my line of exclusion had
to be somewhat arbitrary, I have only to mention such
examples as P6rez Galdds's * Episodios Nacionales,' Vik-
tor Rydberg's ' Last Athenian,* Felix Dahn's * Struggle for
Rome,' Weyman's * A Gentleman of France,' Conan Doyle's
* The Refugees,' Mason's * Courtship of Morrice Buckler,'
Edith Wharton's recently published * Valley of Decision,'
&c., &c. At the same time, I would suggest that, as con*
taining historical novels of almost ivery type^ the list given
will be found a really satisfactory one ; and, were it desired
to test any thoughtful man's partiality for this kind of
fiction, I venture to think that one could not do much
better than give him this list from which to choose. If,
after fairly trying the quality of these fifty novels, or, at
least, some portion of them, a reader remain unmoved, one
may safely infer that historical romance is not for him ; to
hurl the dicta of eminent critics at such a one would be
mere waste of time. D$ gustibus non disputandum. The man
to whom *The Three Musketeers' is foolishness may
revel in • Marius the Epicurean ' or * War and Peace,' but
he who cannot find pleasure in any of the books named
(representing, as they do, such a variety of widely-difiering
types) is * past praying for ' I The temptation was great to
insert George Meredith's * Vittoria,' if only to have that
powerful writer represented, but the work in question has
little of the veritable * historical ' romance about it ; on the
other hand, M6rejkowski's much-discussed * Death of the
Gods' — lacking the creativeness of fiction — is chiefly re-
markable for its series of brilliant historical sketches (I think
the same remark might be applied to Zola's <LaD6b&cle').
134
Another omission that may be noted is Beyle's * La Char*
treuse de Parme ' ; this essentially psychological novel» with
its slight historical allusiveness, would, I venture to suggest,
be somewhat out of place in the list which follows. In
regard to early Christian illustration, I scarcely anticipate
serious blame for preferring ^ Philochristus ' (Dr. Abbott's
scholarly and exquisitely conceived semi-romance) to ' Quo
Vadis ? ' and other * popular ' tales."
FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE HISTORICAL NOVELS.
TITLE OV BOOK.
An Eotftian Prin-
SALAMMBd
Pbilocheistus
The Last Days op
Pompeii
Marius the Epicu-
rean
Callista
Hypatta
Ekkbharo
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Harold
The Talisman
IVANHOB
G. Ebers
(Sampson Low & Co.;
ana Appleton & Co.,
U.S.A.)
GustaveJlaubert
(Grant Richards ; and G.
P. Putnam's Sons)
Edwin A. Abbott
(MacmiUan&Co.)
Lytton
(Geo. Rontledge & Sons ;
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.; and others)
W. Pater
(Macniillan & Co.)
J. H. Newman
(Longmans & Co.)
Charles Kingsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
J. V. Scheflel
(Sampson Low & Co. ;
and Crowell & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Lytton
(Geo. Rontledge & Sons ;
Little, Brown & Co.,
U.S.A. ; and others)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
&Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Egypt, Sixth Century, B.C.
(Carthage and her Mercenaries.
A Disciple of Christ
Time of Vespasian.
Time of Marcus Anrelius.
North Africa Persecutions.
Alexandria in Fifth Century.
Gennany (the Huns) in Tenth
Century.
Norman Conquest
Richard L (Crusades).
Richard I. (England).
136
FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE NOVELS— co»«ifwi.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Maid Marian
"
Thb Last op the
Barons
Quentin Durward
Rouola
NOTRB DaMB
Thb Cloistbr and
THB HBARTH
NiCOOLd db' Lapi
(The Maid of
Florbnce)
Chronique DU RftONE
de Charles IX.
The Abbot
Kenilworth
Westward Ho I
The Fortunes of
NiOBL
Thomas Love Peacock
(Macmillan&Co.)
Lytton
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
Little, Brown* & Co.,
U.S.A. ; and othe»)
Scott
(A.&CBlack; andEstes
& Co., U.S.A.)
George Eliot
(Blackwood & Sons ; and
Crowell&Co.,U.S.A.)
Victor Hugo
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
LttUe, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Charles Reade
(Chatto & Windus; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
M. D*AzegUo
(R. Bentley, 1853)
Prosper Merimee
(Trans. — Nimmo, I S90 ;
and CasseU, U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
and Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A.&CBlack; andEstes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Charles Kingsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
Soott
(A.&C. Black; andEstes
& Ca, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Richard L (Robin Hood).
Wars of the Roses.
France, Louis XI.
Florence, Savonarola.
Paris, late Fifteenth Century.
Eve of the Reformation (Parents
of Erasmus).
Florence, 1529— 3a
Massacre of St. Bartholomew.
Mary, Queen of Scots.
Elizabeth.
Elizabeth.
James L
137
FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE HOYEl^S-^tainHed.
TITLB or BOO|^.
John Inglbsant
Maidbn and Mar-
ried Life of Mary
Powell
The Three Muske-
teers
Cinq Mars
The Betrothed (I
Promessi Sposi)
Twenty Years After
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
With Fire and
Sword (ist of Tri-
The Legend of Mon*
trosb
Woodstock
Old Mortality
The Vicoute de
Bragelonne
J. H. Shorthonse
(Macmillan & Co.)
Aime Maiming
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Dumas
(J. M. Dent & Ca ; Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
A. de Vigny
(Routledge, 1877; and Little,
Brown, & Ca, U.S.A.)
Manzoni
(Geo. Bell & Sons; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Dumas
(J. M. Dent & Co.; Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S. A.;
and others)
H« Sienkiewics
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A.&C. Black; andEstes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A.&C. Black; andEstes
& Ca, U.S.A.)
Dumas
(J. M. Dent& Co.; Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
subject.
England (Charles L), and Italy
(the MoUnists).
John Milton.
Thne of Richelieu.
Time of Richelieu.
Plague in Milan, 163a
Time of Masarin.
Poland, mid Seventeenth Cen-
tury.
Montrose and the Covenant
Commonwealth period.
Bothwell Bridge, 1679.
Time of Louis XIV.
138
FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE NOVELS-«?ii«iiiMi.
TITLB OP BOOK.
LORMA DOONB
Esmond
Rob Rot
Dorothy Forstbr
IIbart of Midlo-
thian
Wavbrley
author and publishsr.
Kidnappbd
Rbdgauntlet
Barnaby Rudgb
A Talb of Two Citibs
War and Peacr
R. D. Blackmore
(Sampson Low& Co.; and
G. P. Putnam's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, & Co. ; and
Estes and Co^ U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Wtndus; and
Dodd, Mead, & Ca,
U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. &C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell & 0>.; and C.
Scribner's Sons)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A)
Dickens
(Chapman & Hall; and
Crowell & Ca, U.S.A.)
Dickens
(Chapman & Hall; and
Crowell & Co., U.S.A.)
Tolstoy
(W. Scott; W. Heine-
mann ; C. Scribner's
Sons, U.S.A. ; and
others)
SUBJECT.
Monmonth Rebellion.
Tune of William III.— Aiiae.
The Jacobites, 17 15.
The Jacobites, I7I5«
The Porteoiis Riots.
The Jacobites, I745*
Scotland, 1751.
Jacobites (George III.).
Gordon Riots (George III.).
French Revolution.
Napoleon's Rnsrian Ounpaign.
139
FIFTY REPRESENTATIVE NOVELS— ftwrfjiwwi.
TITLE OF BOOK.
ThB COM8CKIPT
Waterloo
The Green Book
{Imxaci in J)at§)
The Forest Lovers
Tbe Scarlet Letter
author and publisher.
Erckmann-Chatrian
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Erckmann-Chatrian
(Waid, Lock, & Co.; and
C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
SUI^ECT.
Late Napdleoiitc period*
Ditto.
M. Jdkai i RqmU, 1825.
(Jarrold & Sons; and
Harper, U.S./L)
Maurice Hewlett
(Macmillan & Co.)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
(W. Scott ; Hons^ton,
Mifflin, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
MediicTal Life.
Massachusetts in the
teenth Century.
I would add one word. It may be asked in regard to the above list — ^Why FSfiy f
To this I reply that, having made many trial Usts, I Tonnd that my final evolution levlted
in somethhig almost identical with that figure; a smaller sdectioa would certainly eacdude
important representative novels, a hunger might possibly include examples unworthy df
sndi supremdy high company*
\
SUGGESTED COURSES OF READING.
(Juvenile).
*^ It is no ^visdom to make boys prodigies of information,
but it is our wisdom and our duty to cmtivate their fiiculties each
in its season, first the memory and imagination, and then the
judgment, to furnish them with the means, and U exdte the desire
of improving themselves/* — Dr, Arnold^ quoted in Sir Joshua
Fitdvs " Thomas and Matthew Arnold,**
SUGGESTED COURSES OF READING.
(Juvenile.)
As likely to assist Parents and Teachers, I propose to give
a list (covering English History from the Norman Conquest)
for Juvenile Readers ; but a passing allusion may, first of
ally be made to tales dealing with more ancient periods.
For the illustration of Greek and Roman History, those
books of Professor A. J. Church which are entered in my
Pre-Christian section may be safely recommended; while
the pictures of First Century life given in Wallace's << Ben
Hur," Lytton's "Last Days of Pompeii," and Whyte
Melville's "The Gladiators," are, perhaps, as likely to
interest an intelligent boy or girl in the " teen " stage as
any similar productions that could be mentioned. Turning
to the Early History of our own isle, I would specially
mention Mr. Henty*s "Beric the Briton"; the "iEscen-
dune" series of tales ("Edwy the Fair," "Alfgar the
Dane," and " The Rival Heirs ") by the late Rev. A. D.
Crake ; Mr. C. W. Whistler's " Havelok the Dane," " A
Thane of Wessex,** &c. ; and the various books chosen to
represent Alfred and his times.
In preparing the following list, I have had in view, for
the most part, the average Juvenile taste; doubtless many
of the more advanced works might be offered in special
caseSi but in regard to that, the Parent or Teacher can
alone judge. A reference to the General List will, in most
144
cases, reveal a more exact specification; for the sake of
convenience, the tales are here grouped according to R^gns
only.
Of the romances dealing with American and Foreign
History to be found in the foregoing pages, many are suit-
able for young readers ; but the sequence not being very
close (for any lengthy period at least), separate lists would
appear superfluous. Such writers (to mention only a few)
as Fenimore Cooper, Mrs. J. G. Austin, G. C. Eggleston,
Kirk Munroe, and Elbridge S. Brooks, may be particularly
recommended for American History ; while Scott, Dumas,
Charlotte M. Yonge, Miss Roberts (author of ** Made-
moiselle Mori ")» and G. A. Henty have all illustrated — in
more or less adequate fashion — ^the course of events in
Foreign Countries. The novels of Dumas are not infre-
quently considered somewhat ** strong meat," but his** She-
Wolves of Machecoul " and •* Black Tulip " may be safely
placed in any hands.
Note. — In the oric^nal edition of this work two separate lists were
frurnished for Boys and Girls respectively. It has been suggested, in more
than one qoarter, that an amalgamated Hst would be better in many ways ;
not a few girls have a taste tor those books of adventure which are sni>-
posed to appeal primarily to their brothers and boy contemporaries, and it
IS impossible to draw the line exactly in that class of fiction. Accordingly,
I now offer a single list, merely indicating by a letter {B for Bc^rs, and G
for Girls) diose tales in which tendencies are somewhat pronounced.
ENGLISH HISTORY SINCE THE CONQUEST (Jovbnilb).
TTTLB OF BOOK.
i
I •
Harold
WuLF THE Saxon
Thb Camp of Rkfugx
*Hbrbward thb
Wakb
Thb Rival Hbiks
V, Thb Sibgb of Nor-
wicH Castlb
^ In thb Days of St.
^ Ansblm (G)
Count Robbrt of
Paris
tfPABO thb Pribst
A Lbgbnd of Rbad-
INO Abbby
author and publishbr.
Lytton
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, &
Co., U.S.A.) .
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
C. Macfarlane
(Constable & Co. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
Charles Kingsley
(Macmillan & Co.)
A. D. Crake
(Longmans, Green, ft Co.,
and £. ft J. B. Young,
U.S. A.)
M. M. Blake
(Sedey ft Co. ; and Mac-
millan» U.S. A.)
G. Hollis
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Yonng, U.S. A.)
Scott
(A.& C. Black ; andEstes
ft Ca, U.S.A.)
S. Baring-Gould
(Methuen ft Co. ; and F.
A. Stokes Co., U.S.A.)
C Macfarlane
(Consuble ft Co. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
PBRIOD.
Norman Conquest, Harold-
William L
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
William IL
Ditto.
Henry L
Stephi
a Thit, the only mbttantial tmle dealins <£rectly with tba reigo of Hcbtf I.i it baldly mttable for
very youBg foUc, bat it will iatanit thoM with older tastes.
146
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— awitfwftfrf.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb Knight op thb
GoLDSN Chain {B)
For Kino or Em-
press?
*Thr Brtrothbd
FoRBST Outlaws
*Thb Talisman
IVANHOB
In Lincoln Grbbn
Wolf's Head
runnymbdb and
Lincoln Fair
Spurs and Bridb
•Philip Augustus
A Stout English
Bowman
Thb Robbbp Baron
of Bedford Castle
author and publisher.
R. D. Chetwode
(C. A. Pearson ; and Ap-
pleton&Co., U.S. A.)
C W. WhisUer
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
&Co., U.SJL)
E. Gilliat
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dutton
leeiey&i^o.; and
& Co., U.S.A.)
period.
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S. A.)
E. Gilliat
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
E. Gilliat
(Seeley & 0>. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
J. G. Edgar
(Ward, Lock, & Co ; and
Harper, U.S. A.)
Gertrude Hollis
(Society for Promoting
Christian Knowledge)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Wame & Co.)
E. Pickering
(Blackie & Son)
A. J. Foster and E. C. Cuthell
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Stephen.
Ditto.
Heniy IL
Ditto.
Richard I.
Ditto.
Ditto.
John.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Henry IH.
Ditto.
147
ENGLISH HISTORY {JvvENiLE)-<onHnued.
TITLX OF BOOK.
•FowssT Days
How I Won My
Spurs
'A Clerk of Oxford
*Thb Princb and the
Pagb
*Thb King's Rbbvb
Thb Lord of Dynb-
OYER
My Lady Joanna {G)
Thb Scottish Chiefs
In Freedom's Cause
W
The Cheyalier of
THE Splendid
Crest [B)
'Thb Days of Bruce
{G)
*The White Company
*Thb Lances of Lyn-
wood
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Koutledge & Sons ;
and Wame & Co.)
J. G. Edgar
(Ward, Lock, ft Ca; and
Harper, U.S. A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
£.Gimat
(Seeley & Co.; and Dutton
& do., U.S.A)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
E. Everett Green
(J. NUbet & Co.)
Jane Porter
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
Appleton & Co., U.S. A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Sir Herbert Maxwell
(W. Blackwood & Sons)
Grace Agnilar
(Wame & Co.; Appleton
& Co., U.S. A.; and
others)
Conan Doyle
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
PERIOD.
Henry IIL
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Edward L
Ditto.
Ditto.
Wallace and Brace, Edward I.
— Edward IL
Ditta
Ditta
Ditto.
Edward HI.
Ditto.
1
148
ENGLISH HISTORY Quvbnile)— «Mi««ii«i.
TITLB OF BOOK.
j God, thb King, My
Brother
^ Crioy and Poictikrs
St. Grorgb for Eng-
land
*Eric thb Archer
In thb Days of
Chivalry {G)
John Standisb
A March on London
{B)
*The Banner of St.
George (G)
Both Sides of the
Border
Cambria's Chieftain
*Thb Fair Maid of
Perth
In thb Days of
Prince Hal
*The Caged Lion (G)
♦Every Inch a King
author and publisher.
Mary F. Nixon Roolet
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
LwCPage&Co.,U.S.A.)
J. G. Edgar
(Ward, Lock, & Ca; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner'sSons, U.S.A.)
Maurice H. Hervey
(Edward Arnold)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
E. Gilliat
(Seeley & (}o.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Soibner's Sons, U.S. A.)
M. Bramston
(Macmillan & Ca)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Sciibner's Sons, U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S. A.)
H. Ebington
(Blackie & Son)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
Josephine C. Sawyer
(Dodd, Mead, & Co.)
PERIOD.
Edward IIL
DittOb
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Richard II.
Ditta
Ditto.
Henry IV,
Ditto.
Ditto.
Henry V.
Ditto.
Ditto.
149
ENGLISH HISTORY Qvvma.u)— continued.
y
r
TITLB OF BOOK.
author and publisher.
period.
A Champion of thb
Faith
J. M. CaUweU
(Blackie & Son ; md C
Soribner's Sods, U.S.A.)
Henry V.
At Aginoourt {B)
G. A. Heiity
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner*8 Sons, U.S.A.)
Ditto.
Aginoourt
G. P. R. Tames
(Geo. Routledge ft Sods ;
and Warne & Co.)
Ditto.
•When Spurs Wbrb
Gold
Rnssell Gamier
(Geoxge AUen)
Ditto.
Two Pbnnilbss Prin*
CBSSBS {G)
Charlotte M. Yonge
Henry VI.
*Tiu Last of thb
Barons
Lytton
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Little, Brown, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Wars of the Rotes, Henry VL^
Edward IV.
Grislby Grissbll {G)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan ft Co.)
Ditto.
*Thb Black Arrow
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell ft Ca; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Ditto.
For thb Rbd Rosb
Eliza F. Pollard
(Blackie ft Son)
Ditto.
Thb Chantry Fribst
of Barnbt
A. J. Church
(Seeleyft Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, ft Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
In thb Wars of thb
ROSBS
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Ditto.
*How Dickon Came
BY His Namb {B)
*Whbrb Avon into
Severn Flows (B)
Harold Frederic
' (Lothrop Publishing Co.)
Ditto.
White Wyvill and
Red Rutbven
E. Everett Gi^en
(E. Nister)
Ditta
ISO
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— coii««jwi.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Red Rose and White
The Woodman
^Thb Heir of Has-
coMBE Hall {G)
The Captain of the
Wight
♦The Yellow Frigate
♦Windsor Castle (ff)
♦The Household of
Sir Thomas More
Robert Aske
Like a Rassn
Fiddler
The Armourer's
'Prentices (G)
My Friend Anne (6)
^Darnlby
♦The Prince and the
Pauper
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
A. Armitage
(J. Macqneen)
G. P. R. Tames
(Geo. Koatledge & Sons;
andWame&Co.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
F. Cowper
(Seeley & Co.; and E. &
J. B. Young, U.S.A.)
James Grant
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
Gibbings& Q>.; and Lip-
pincott & Co., U.S.A.)
Anne Manning
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Eliza F. Pollard
(S. W. Partridge & Co.)
Manr E. Shipley
(Society tor Promoting
Christian Knowledge ;
and Young, U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
Jessie Armstrong
(Wame & Co!)
G. P. R. Tames
(Geo. Kontledge & Sons;
and Waxne £ Co.)
Mark Twain
(Chatto & Windus ; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
PERIOD.
Richard III
Ditto.
Henry VII.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Heniy VIII.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
(Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Edward VL
151
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— «?i»««iwrf.
TITLE OP BOOK.
Mary OF Lorraine {B)
The Colloquies of
Edward Osborne
The Maid of London
Bridge {G)
A Queen of Nine
Days {G)
•The Tower of Lon-
don (B)
I Crown Thee Kino
Sbetrino Days
The Story of Fran<
CIS Cludde
The Abbot
•Unknown to His-
tory (60
The Queen's Maries
•Kenilworth
For God andGold {B)
author and publisher.
James Grant
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
A. Manning
(Geo. Routledge ft Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
S. Gibney
(JaiTold ft Sons)
Edith C. Kenyon
(Religious Tract Society)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Roatledge ft Sons ;
Gibbings & Co.; and Lip-
pincott & Co., U.S.A. j
Max Pemberton
(Methuen & Co.)
Caroline C. Holroyd
(A. D. Innes ft Co.)
Stanley Weyman
(Cassdl & Co.)
Scott
(A. ft C. Black ; and Estes
& Ca, U.S. A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Co.)
G. J. Whyte Melville
(W. Thackerft Co. ; Ward,
Lock, ft Co.; and Long-
mans, U.S. A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black; and Estes
ft Co., U.S.A.)
Julian Corbett
(Macmillan ft Co.)
PERIOD.
Edward VI.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Mary.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Elizabeth.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
152
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— «?««»i«si.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*SlR LUDAR {£)
♦Westward Ho I
♦Master Skylark
Pbnshurst Castle
The Golden Gal-
leon
Ralph Wynward
I *The Fortunes op
Nigel
The Young Queen
OP Hearts {G)
The Lost Treasure
OP Trevlyn (Cr)
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Guy Fawkes (B)
f\
The Black Tor {£)
Old Blackfriars
The Dogs of War {£)
T. Baines Reed
(Sampson Low & Co.)
Charles Kiogslej
(MacmiUan & Co.)
J. Bennett
(Macmillan & Co.; and
Century Co.» U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S. A.)
R. Leighton
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U. S. A.)
H. Elrington
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac*
millan, U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Routledge & Sons;
Gibbings & Co.; and
Lippincott& Co.,U.S.A.)
G. Manville Fenn
(W. & R. Chambers ; and
Lippincott&Co.,U.S.A.)
Beatrice Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
£. Pickering
(Wame & Co.)
period.
Elizabeth.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
James L
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditta
Charles L
Ditto.
153
ENGLISH HISTORY Quvenile)— «w«ffii^.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Anthony Evsrton
*Undbr Salisbury
Spirb (G)
Winifredb's Jour-
nal (O)
A Haunt of Ancient
Peace (CO
^HB Maiden and
Married Life of
Mary Powell (G)
An Old London
Nosegay
*) *HoLicBY House
author and pubushbr.
6
n
Miriam Cromwell
Stanhope
f
*Battlbment and
Tower {B)
*Tbe Splendid Spur
With the King at
Oxford
The Draytons and
THE DaVBNANTS
J. S. Fletcher
(W. & K. Chamben)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dntton
& Co., U.S.A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S. A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S. A.)
Anne Mannings
(Geo. Routledge Sc Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
Beatrice MarshaU
(Seeley & Co.)
Whyte MdviUe
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
Longmans, UJS.A.)
Dora McChesney
(W. Blackwood & Sons ;
and Way & Williams,
U.S. A.)
E. L. Haverfield
(T. Nelson & Sods)
Owen Rhoscomyl
(Longmans & Co.)
«Q»»
(Cassell & Co.)
A. J. Church
(Seeley & Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Mrs. Charles
(T. Nelson & Sons)
period.
Charles L
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditta
154
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— «Mrfi*w«i.
TITLK or BOOK.
^
The Siege of York
*Whbn Charles I.
WAS King
\
^ ♦To Right the Wrong
*In Spite of All
*HnGR GWYETH
*The Legend of Mon-
trose
*Henry Masterton
The Children of the
New Forest
Dauntless
^\ John Marmaduke
V ^ T^^ King's Sbr-
\ VICE (B)
*Ethne (G)
•Woodstock
author and pubusher.
Beatrice Marshall
(Seeley & Co.)
J. S. Fletcher
(Gay&Biid; andMcClnrg
& Co., U.S.A.)
Edna Lyall
(Hurit & Blockett; and
Harper & Broa., U.S.A.)
Edna Lyall
(Hoist & Blackett ; and
Longmans, U.S. A.)
B. M. Dix
(Macmillan & Co.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Este3
& Co., U.S.A.)
G. P. R. James
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and Wame & Co.)
Marryat
(J. M. Dent & Co.; and
others)
Ewan Martin
(C. A. Pearson ; and Page,
U.S. A.)
S. H. Church
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
F. S. Brereton
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Field
(Wells, Gardner, & Co.)
Scott
(A. & C Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A,)
period.
Charles L
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Commonwealtfaj
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
155
ENGLISH HISTORY {]vyiLmLE)^conHmed.
TITLE or BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
PERIOD.
IJ
Thb White King's
Daughter {G)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Mac-
milian, U.S.A.)
Commonwealth*
Aftbe Worcester
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Ditto.
Wanderer and King
O. V. Cainc
Q. Nbbet&Co.)
Ditta
•A Little Captive
Lad
B. M. Dix
(Macmillan & Co.)
Ditto.
li
The Lion's Whelp
Amelia E. Barr
(Fisher Unwin ; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
The Lord Protector
S. Lerett YeaU
(Cassell & Co.; and Long-
mans, U.S.A.)
Ditto.
•Captain Jacobus (B)
L. Cope Comford
(Methnen & Co. ; and
Stone, U.S.A.)
Ditto.
i<
On Both Sides of
THE Sea
Mrs. Charles
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Ditto.
The Last of the
Cliffords
Elia F. Pollard
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Ditto.
(I
•Old St. Paul's {£)
Harrison Ainsworth
(Geo. Routledge & Sons;
Gibbmgs & Co. ; and Lip
pincott & Co., U.S.A.)
Charles IL
m.
*Wbitefriars (B)
Emma Robinson
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
DUto.
A
The Puritan's Wife
Max Pemberton
(Cassell & Co.; and Dodd,
Mead, & Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
1^
•Deborah's Diary {G)
Anne Manning
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C Scribner's Sons,
U.S. A.)
Ditto.
156
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvbmilb)— cmfoMtci.
^
>
^»
TITLB OP BOOK.
Chbr&y and Violet
Silas Vbrnsy {S)
Traitor or Patriot?
*In tus Golden Days
*Old Mortality
*WlNCHBSTER MBADS
In the East Country
WITH Sir Thomas
Browne
In the Seryice of
Rachel, Lady Rus-
sell (G)
*LORNA DOONB
*MiCAH Clarke
*FoR Faith and Free-
dom
In Taunton Town {G)
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Anne Manning
(Geo. Roadedge & Sons ;
and C. Scriraer's Sons.
U.S.A.)
Edgar Pickering
(Blackie & Son)
M. C. Rowsell
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
EdnaLyall
(Hurst & Blackett; and
Appieton&Co., U.S. A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.>
Emma Marshall
(Sedey & Co.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dut-
ton & Co., U.S.A.)
Emma, Marshall .
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S. A.)
R. D. Blackmore
(Sampson Low & Co.; and
G. P. Putnam's Sons,
U.S. A.)
Conan Doyle
(Longmans, Green, & Co.;
and Harper & Bros.,
U.S.A.)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus ; and
Harper & Bros., U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
PERIOD.
Charles IL
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
James IL
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
157
ENGLISH HISTORY Quvbnile)— «)«««i«di.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Deb Clavsl ((?)
Y/*The Lover Fugitives
A Rbfuteb Change-
UNG {O)
•The Courtship op
MoRRiCB Buckler
*Blub Paviuons {B)
V
^'/
In Jacobite Days
My Mistress the
Queen (Cr)
Kensington Palace
Hope the Hermit ( G)
^ J Bt the North Sea
The Scottish Cava-
lier {£)
*A Man's Fobs
True to the Watch*
WORD (B)
author and publisher.
M. E. Palgrave
(Religious Tract Society)
J. Flnnemore
(C. A. Pearson ; and Up-
pincott & Co., U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(Macmillan & Ca)
A. £. W. Mason
(Macmillan & Co.)
"Q"
(CaiseU & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.
Mrs. Henry Clarke
(T. Nelson & Sons)
M. A. Pann
(Blackie & Son)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Ca; and Mac-
millan, U.S,A.)
EdnaLyall
(Longmans & Ca)
Emma Marshall
(Jarrold & Sons ; and Thos.
Whittaker, U.S. A.)
James Grant
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
E. H. Strain
(Ward, Lock, & Co.; and
New Amsterdam Book
Co., U.S.A.)
Edgar Pickering
(Wame & Ca)
PERIOD.
James II.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
William IIL
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditta
Ditta
158
ENGLISH HISTORY (JvvEmhE)— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHSR.
PERIOD.
*Thb Old Chelsea
Bun House (Cr)
*AcROSs THE Salt
Seas {B)
Fallen Fortunes {G)
The Cornet of
Horse {£)
The Bravest of the
Brave {B)
Tom Tufton's
Travels
Tom Tufton's Toll
Under the Dome of
St. Paul's {G)
In Clarissa's Day ((?)
The Heritage of
Langdalb
•Rob Roy
•Dorothy Forster
DUANCE Pendray {G)
Anne Manning
(Geo. Routledge & Sons ;
and C. Scribner's Sons,
U.S.A.)
J. Blonndelle Burton
(Methuen & Co.; and H.
S. Stone, U.S. A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Sampson Low & Co. ; and
C.Scribnei's Sons, U .S. A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S.A.)
Sarah Tytler
(Chatto & Windus)
Mrs. Alexander
(Hutchinson & Co.; and
Holt & Co., U.S.A.)
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus; and
Dodd, Mead, & Co.,
U.S. A.)
G. Norway
(Jarrold & Sons)
Anne.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto
Ditto.
Ditto.
George I.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
'59
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— c()ii«if««rf.
TITLE OF BOOK.
author AND PUBLISHER.
PERIOD.
A Loyal Littlb
Maid {G)
Sanh Tytler
(Blackie & Son)
George I.
To Arms ! (B)
A. Balfour
(Methuen & Co.; and L.
C. Page & Co., U.S. A.)
Ditto.
*Clbmbntina
A. E. W. Mason
(Methuen & Co.; and
Stokes, U.S. A.)
Ditto.
The Master op the
Musicians [G)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.; and Mac-
millan, U.S. A.)
Geoige II.
•Heart of Midlo-
thian
Scott
(A. & C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
Ned Lbger (B)
G. Manville Fenn
(Society for Flomoting
Christian Knowledge)
Ditto.
Thyra Varrick {G)
Amelia £. Bair
(Fisher Unwin ; and Tay-
lor, U.S. A,)
Ditto.
For the White Rose
OF Arno {B)
Owen RhoacoinYl
(Longmans, (ireen, & Co. )
Ditta
♦Waverlry
Scott
(A. &C. Black ; and Estes
& Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
A Hero of the
Highlands {G)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Ditto.
The Fortunes of
Claude {B)
E. Pickering
(Wame & Ca)
Ditto.
Mistress Nancy
Molesworth
Joseph Hocking
(J. Bowden ; and Donble-
day & Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
*The Master of Bal-
LANTRAE
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell & Co.; and C
Scribner*sSons, UJ5.A.)
Ditto.
1
i6o
ENGLISH HISTORY (JvvsmLB)—e(mtimed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
PERIOD.
*KlDNAPPBD
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A)
Geoige II
*Cateiona
R. L. Stevenson
(Cassell & Co.; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Ditto.
With Cliyb in India
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
Ditto.
*AlfT0T Brouoh {G)
E. Vincent Briton
(Seeley&Co.)
Ditto.
*Thb Chaplain of thb
Flbbt
W. Besant and J. Rice
(Chatto & Windus; and
Harper, U^.A.)
Ditto.
Cap'n Nat'sT&basukb
{B)
R. Leighton
(S. W. Partridge & Co.)
George HI.
Thb Rock of thb
Lion
M. E. Seaweil
(Harper & Bros.)
Ditto.
*Barnabt Rxtdgb
Charles Dickens
(Chapman & Hall ; and
CroweU&Co.,U.S.A.)
Ditto.
*Miss Angbl {G)
Miss Thackeray
(Smith, Elder, & Co.; and
Harper& Bros., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
•A Tale of Two
Citibs
Charles Dickens
(Chapman & Hall; and
Crowdl & Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
Thb Parson's Daugh-
ter ((?)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co. ; and Dutton
& Co., U.S.A.)
Ditto.
In Press Gang Days
(B)
E. Pickering;
(Blackie & Son; and C
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
Ditto.
A King's Woman {G)
Katharine Tynan
(Hurst & Blackett)
DittOb
z6i
ENGLISH HISTORY (Juvenile)— «w«i«t/iji.
TITLE OF BOOK*
The Round Tower
^KlLGORMAN {B)
The Duke*s Own {B)
At the Point of the
Bayonet
Under Cheddar
Cliffs {G)
When George III.
WAS King
Afloat with Nelson
Tom Burke of
"Ours" {B)
*Charles O'Mallby
{B)
*The Romance of
War (B)
With Moors at
CORUNNA
Under Wellington's
Command
The Story of a
Scout
The Bivouac {B)
An Ocean Free
Lance {B)
author and pubushsr.
F. Scott and A. Hodge
(T. Nelson & Sons)
T. Baines Reed
(T. Nelson & Sons)
J. Percy-Groves
(Griffith & Farran; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S^.)
Edith Seeley
(Seeley & Co.)
A. Sagon
(Sands & Co.)
Charles H. Eden
(J. Macqueen)
Charles Lever
(Downey & Co.; Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S. A.;
and others)
Charles Lever
(Downey & Co.; Little,
Brown, & Co., U.S.A.;
and others)
James Grant
(Gea Routledge & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
J. Finnemore
(C. A. Pearson)
W. H. Maxwell
(Geo. Routledge & Sons)
Oark Russell
(Sampson Low & Co.)
period.
George IIL
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto,
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto,
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditta
M
l62
ENGLISH HISTORY Quvbnile)— wntffiwi.
TITLE OF BOOK.
V
>
Grantlky Fbnton
Face to Face with
Napoleon
In the Yfar of
Waterloo
One op the 28th
Taken from the
Enemy
Under the Mendifs
•Castle Daly {G)
*Mary Barton {G)
To Herat AND Cabul
The War of the Axe
"i *Ravenshoe
A Gallant Grena-
dier {B)
For the Old Flag(^)
author and publisher.
b
The Disputed V.C.
M. M. Blake
(Jarrold & Sons)
O. V. Caine
■ (J. Nisbet & Co. ; and A. I.
Bradley & Co., U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U. S.A. )
H. Newbolt
(Chatto & Windos; and
Rand, McNally & Co.,
U.S. A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley& Co.; and DuttODi
U.S. A.)
Miss Keary
(Macmillan & Co.)
Mrs. Gaskell
(Smith, Elder, & Co. ; and
Ward, Lock, U.S. A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
J. Percy-Groves
(Blackie & Son)
Heniy Kingsley
(Ward, Lock, & Ca; and
Longmans, U.S. A.)
Captain Brereton
(Blackie & Son ; and C.
Scrilmer*8 Sons, U.S.A.)
Clive R. Fenn
(Sampson Low & Co.)
Frederick P. Gibbon
(Blackie & Son)
PERIOD.
George III.
Ditto,
Ditto.
Geoige rv.
William IV.
Victoria (early).
Ditto.
Ditta
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
Ditto.
i63
In connection with this subject of Juvenile Literature,
I would draw attention to Messrs. Constable's ** Library of
Historical Novels and Romances ** so admirably edited by
Mr. G. Laurence Gomme. Readers (old as well as young)
are still further indebted to Mr. Gomme for his well-arranged
series of extracts taken from Romantic Literature in the
four volumes entitled, '* The King's Story Book," « The
Queen's Story Book," "The Prince's Story Book," and
the Princess's Story Book." (Constable & Co.; and
Longmans & Co., U.S.A.)
A little work, likely to prove useful for purposes of
selection and identification^ is Mr. Henry Grey's '' A Key
to the Waverley Novels in Chronological Sequence " (Son-
nenschein & Co.).
In the School World for August, 1903, may be found an
article (" Some Holiday Reading in Fiction ") by Mr. C. S.
Fearenside, mentioning a large number of novels and tales
which cover the period 1763 — 1878 in British Colonial His-
tory. I would bring under notice yet another article by
Mr. Fearenside on " True Story-Books of English History"
in the School World for August, 1902 ; in an interesting
manner the author touches on some representative examples
of a class of literature which, though it is naturally outside
the scope of the present volume, may be alluded to at this
point as coming between Fiction and History proper.
And this leads me to specify another important historical
medium— that of Poetry* Miss C. L. Thomson's " Carmina
Britanniae " (Horace Marshall & Son) contains an excellent
selection of ''poems and ballads illustrative of English
History"; useful aid in the same direction is offered
by Mr. J. A. Nicklin in his " Poems of English History "
(A. & C. Black) — besides giving ballads and shorter pieces,
i64
he has selected illustrative passages from Shakespeare and
the Dramatists. In ** War Songs of Britain " (Constable *
& Co.) Mr. Harold £. Butler has given us a collection of i
Poems and Songs relating to Battles, &c.y in British His- I
tory (Boadicea to Ladysmith). In " Songs of England's
Glory '* (Isbister, 1903), we find yet another anthology of
British Poems and Ballads, selected to illustrate ^* episodes
of our National History." A volume of special interest to
American readers is the very charming ^* New England
History in Ballads," by Edward Everett Hale and his
children, <<with a few additions by other people" (Little,
Brown, & Co., igo^)*
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Although I have adopted the heading ** Bibliography,** it
should be understood that, in offering the subjoined list, I
do not claim for it absolute comprehensiveness. There
are, of course, almost innumerable Biographies, Literary
Studies, Histories of Literature and Fiction, &c., in which
indirect references to our subject may be traced. Moreover,
in preparing this little volume, it has been found necessary
to consult largely ** The Dictionary of National Biography,"
the Encyclopaedias (the Britannica, Chambers', &c.), ** Ap-
pleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography," and other
Standard Works of the Dictionary type. I confine myself
below to noteworthy writings which deal directly with the
subject of Historical Romance.
Article on Historical Romance in 77U Quartirfy Review, VoL XXXV.,
page 518. (March, 1827.)
Article on Historical Romance ("Sir Walter Scotland his Imitators,"}
yuPrasei^sMagasim. Vol. V., pages 6 (Part I.) and 207 (Part II.).
(February and March, 1832.)
Article on '*The Picturesque Style of Historical Romance" in BlackwoocTs
MoiOMme. VoL XXXIII., page 621. (April, 1833.)
Article on '* Historical Romance in Italy," by G. W. Greene, in The
North AmefUttH Review. VoL XLVI., page 325. (AprU, 1838.)
Article on Historical Romance in BUukwootPs Ma^aune. Vol. LVIIL,
page 341. (September, 1845.)
[Afterwards appeared in VoL III. of Sir Archibald Alison's ** Essays.**]
n
i68
Article on Historical Romance, by G. H. Lewes, in The Westminster
Review, VoL XLV., page 34. (March, 1846.)
Article on " History in Fiction,'' in The Dublin Review. VoL XLV^
page 328. (December, 1858.)
Lecture IIL ("Scott and his Influence") in David Masson's ''British
Novelists and their Styles." (Macndllan, 1859.)
Article on " Historical Novels," by H. James, jun., in The Nation, Vol.
v., page 126. (August 15th, 1867.)
Article on Historical Romance in The Argosy, Vol. XVII. , page 364.
(May, 1874.)
The Historical Sections in the Boston Public Library Catalogue of
*< English Prose Fiction." (Boston, 1877.)
[The brief Preface by Justin Winsor has some interesting remarks on
the Historical Novel.]
Chapter X. ("The Waverlcy Novels") in R. H. Hutton's «• Sir Walter
Scott." (MacmiUan's English Men of LeUers Series, 1878.)
The Essay on " The Waverley Novels " in Vol. IL of Walter Bagehof s
" Literary Studies." (Longmans, 1879.)
" A descriptive Catalogue of Historical Novels and Tales. For the use
of School Libraries and Teachers of History. Enlarged from the
List in the 'Journal of Education,' March, 1882." Compiled and
described by H. Courthope Bowen, M.A. (Edward Stanford,
1882 ; and Scribner & Welfoid, U.S.A.» 1884.)
The section on '*The Historical Novel," in Bayard Tuckerman's ** History
of English Prose Fiction." (S. Low & Co.; and G. P. Putnam*s
Sons, U.S.A., 1882.)
The list of Historical Novels given in W. F. Allen's " The Reader's Guide
to English History, With Suppletnent^ extending the plan to other
countries and periods." (Ginn & Co., 1888.)
[A useful, but very unequal list]
The Essay on " Historical FicUon" in W. F. Allen's " Essays and Mono-
graphs." (C>eo. H. Ellis, Boston, 189a)
[An extremely interesting essay by one who was well qualified to treat
of the subject.]
x69
The partially-selective list of Historical Novels in "A Guide Book to
Books," by E. B. Sargant and B. Whishaw. (H. Frowde, 1891 ;
and Macmillan, U.S. A.)
The partially-selective list of Historical Novels given in the '* Subject and
Chronol<^cal Index to Fiction/' compiled by Alfred Cotgreave,
F.R.H.S.— 4)eing a section of the Guille-All^ library "Encyclo-
pedic Catalogue." (Guernsey : Guille-All^ Library ; London and
Manchester : Henry Sotheran & Co., 1891.)
The essay on " Sir Walter Scott," in VoL I. of Leslie Stephen's " Hours
in a Library." (Smith, Elder, & Co., 1892 ; and Putnam, U.S. A.
New edition, with additions.)
[Sir Leslie Stephen is one of the most formidable critics with whom
the lover of Historical Romance has to deal. That which it is possible
to say against such fiction is said more forcibly by him, perhaps, than by
anyone else.]
The series of articles dealing with " History in Fiction," &c., by J. B.
Cariile, in Great Thoughts^ October, 1892, to March, 1894.
Article *' The Historical Novel," by Prof. A. J. Clhurch in Aialanta for
April, 1893.
The useful and partially-selective lists of Historical Tales given in " The
Intermediate Textbook of English History," by C. S. Fearenside
and A. Johnson Evans. (W. B. Clive, University Tutorial Press,
Ltd., 1893, &C.)
The short selective list of Historical Tales given in the appendix to John
Fiske's *< History of the United Sutes for Schools." (James
Clarke & Co., 1894; and Houghton, Mifflin, & Co., U.S.A.)
Article on " The Historical Novel as illustrated by Sir Walter Scott," by
Edwin Lester Arnold, in Atalanta for March, 1894.
The essay on "The Historical Novel" in W. P. James's "Romantic
Professions and other papers." (Elkin Mathews and John Lane,
1894.)
[A reprint, in somewhat revised form, of the suggestive article appearing
in Macmillan^s Magagine^ November, 1S87.]
170
Chapter X. ("Sir Walter Scott") in Prof. Raleigh's «The English
Novel." Qohn Murray, 1S94 ; A^d C. Scribner's Sons, U.S. A.)
The essay on *' Le Roman Historiqne" in *< La Vie et les Livres'' (First
Series) by Gaston Deschamps (Armand Colin et Cie., Paris, 1894).
[A brief snrvey of certain modem French Novelists as represented in
the excellent '* Biblioth^ne de Romans historiqnes " (Armand Colin) ; the
introdnctoiy remarks are soggestive and possess some general interest.]
Chapters X., XL, and XIL in Prof. Saintsbury's "Essays in English
Litemtnre, 1780— i86a Second series." (J. M. Dent & Co.,
1895 ; and C. Scribner's Sons, U.S.A.)
[Originally appeared in MacmUlatis Maganns^ Aogost, September,
and October, 1894. A contribution to the subject of quite exceptional
brilliance and value.]
"A descriptive List of Novels and Tales dealing with the History of
North America," by W. M. Griswold. (Cambridge, U.S.A., 1895.)
The Section headed " Historical Tales " in " (Snide to the Study of
American History," by E. Channing and A. B. Hart (Ginn & Ca,
1896.)
A Letter on '' Historical Novels, Past and Present," by ''Mazarin/' in Tke
Bookman (English), October, 1896.
The various historical sections in " The Comprehensive Subject-Index to
Universal Prose Fiction" compiled and arranged by 2^11a Allen
Dixson, A.M.9 Associate Librarian of the University of Chicago.
(Dodd, Mead, & Co., New York, 1897.)
[Excellent in scope, but not always accurate.]
Article on " The Indian Mutiny in Fiction," in BUukwootTs Maganne^
February, 1897.
Article on " The Importance of Illustrating New England History by a
series of Romances," by Ruins C%oate, in The New England
Maganne, November, 1897.
[Reprint — somewhat abridged— of an Address delivered at Salem in
1833. ^M ^^ ^c volume "Addresses and Orations" (Little, Brown,
& Co., 1878).]
171
Paper read before the College of Preceptors, on *' The Use of Historical
Romances in the Teaching of Histoiy," by R. F. Charles, in TVke
Educational Times, November, 1897.
Article on " The American Historical Novel," by Fkul Leicester Ford, in
Tks Atlantic Monthly, December, 1897.
[In this article a definition of the " Historical Novel " at variance
with my own, has been suggested. In spite of Mr. Ford's argument, I am
stiU of opinion that the line of demarcation between the Historical Novel
proper and the Novel of Character or Adventure can be more clearly
drawn than he allows. I was careful, when dealing with this Question in
my Introduction, to avoid making the test one of actual historical accuraeyt
but there are, I have implied, certain readily-verifiable personages and
events which form a basis amply sufficient for purposes of distinction. The
pirates of " Treasure Island ** are taken (as Mr. Ford sa^s) from actual
figures of the Eighteenth Century, but under my definition Stevenson's
novel is not thereby constituted '* historical " in the strict sense.]
Article on "The Neo Romantic Novel," by G. R. Carpenter, m Tke
Ferum^ March, 1898.
Article on " Historical Novels Past and Present," by Harold Frederic, in
TJu Bookman (American), December, 1898.
[An admirably- written, stimulating article.]
List of Historical Novels, &c., illustrating the Period 1066 to 1815, in the
Yolume '' Work and Play in Girls' Schools," by Dorothea Beale,
Lucy H. M. Soolsby, and Jane Frances Dore (Longmans, 1898.)
Le Roman Historique ^ r£poqne romantiqae," by Louis Maigron
(Hachette et Ge., Paris, 1898.)
[Contains a fine tribute to Scott, and much interesting matter.]
Chapters III. and IV. of " The Development of the English Novel," by
W. L. Cross (Macmillan, 1899).
[A very fall treatment In the Appendix are some useful lists of the
earlier Historical Novels.]
The Historical Sections in «* Descriptive Handbook to the more note-
worthy works of Prose Fiction in the library of the Midland
Railway Institute, Derby," by Ernest A. Baker, M.A. (Midland
RaUway Institute, Derby, 1899.)
174
The lists of Historical Novels and Tales in Mudie's Select Library
Catalogue, published in January each year.
[No indication as to merit, and barely descriptive, but useful more
especially on the Topc^graphical stde,}
NOTE. I
It is interesting to see what Novelists themselves have said on the
subject of Historiou Romance, and in this connection I would specially
refer to the "Dedicatory Episde" in Scott*s **Ivanhoe," the very brief
but exceedingly suggestive opening section in Chapter I. of Readers
*< Cloister and the HMith," and the Preface to Scheffd's ** Ekkehard."
INDEX
OF AUTHORS AND TITLES
INDEX.
N0TB.^The Birth and Death dates of Authors have been jpven where
possible ; the book dates refer to crigituU publication, whether in
England, America, or Foreign parts. (Tnmslaium dates are
ignored).
Abbott, Dr. Edwin A. (Author of " Philochristus "), b. 1838.
Philochristus (1878), 21, 135.
Onesimus (1882), 22.
AcHARD, Aro^^, 1814—75.
The Golden Fleece (1875), 72.
Aguilar, Grace, 1816—47.
*Days of Bruce (1852), 37, 147.
Vale of Cedars (1850), 45.
Ains WORTH, W. Harrison, 1805—82.
Windsor Castle (1843), 48, 150.
The Tower of London (1840), 50, 151.
Crichton (1837), 53.
The Lancashire Witches (1848), 58.
The Star Chamber (1854), 58.
Guy Fawkes (1841), 58, 152.
Ovingdean Granee (i860), 67.
Old St. Paul's (1841), 69, 155.
St. James's (1844), 78.
The Miser's Daughter (1842), 83.
Mervyn Clitheroe {1857—58), 124.
Attkbn, J. R.
The Sins of a Saint (1903), 31.
Alcock, Deborah.
Not for Crown or Sceptre (1902), 46.
The Spanish Brothers (1871), 51.
Under Calvin's Spell (1902), 52.
Under the Southern Cross (1874), 54.
* Both Um nottls given were pabliabed posthnmoculy.
N
■MM
178
fl
Alexander, Mrs." (Mrs. A. Alexander Hector), 1825—1902.
The Heritage of Langdale (1877), 80, 158.
Maid, Wife, or Widow? (1879), 113.
" Alexis, W." (G. Hiring), 1798—1884.
The Burgomaster of Berlin (1840), 44.
Die Hosen des Hemn von Bredow (1846 — 48}, 46.
Ruhe ist der erste Biirgerfiicht (1852}, loi.
Isegrimm (1854), lOi.
Allardyce, Alexander.
Balmoral (1893), 80.
Allen, James Lane, b. 1849.
The Choir Invisible (1897), 122.
A Kentucky Cardinm (1894), 126.
Aftermath (1895), 126
Altshelbr, J. A.
A Soldier of Manhattan (1898), 8S
The Sun of Saratoga (1897), 92.
A Herald of the West (1898}, 104.
Before the Dawn (1903), 112.
Andrews, Mary R. S.
Vive I'Empereur (1903), 108.
Anonymous.
As Others Saw Him (1895), 22.
Otterboume (1832), 40.
Armitage, Alfred.
Red Rose and White (1901), 43, 150.
Armstrong, Jessie.
My Friend Anne (1901), 48, 150.
Arnold, E. Lester.
lyvinda (1903), 22.
The Constable of St. Nicholas (1894), 45.
Astor, William Waldori^ b. 1848.
Valentino (1885), 46.
Atherton, Gertrude.
The Conqueror (1902), 98.
Atkinson, Eleanor.
Mamzelle Fifine (1903), 89.
AUBRBACH, Berthold, 1812—82.
Spinoza (1837), 71.
Austen, Jane, 1775 — 181 7.
Pride and Prejudice (181 3), 123.
Austin, Mrs. J. G., 1831—94.
Standish of Standish (1889), 58.
Betty Alden (1891), 58.
A Nameless Nobleman (l^i)» 5^*
Dr. Le Baron and His Daughters (1890), 58.
179
B
Bachbllbb, Irving, b. 1859.
D'ri and I (1901), X04.
Eben Ilolden (1900), 127.
Bailey, H. C.
My Lady of Orange (1901), 51.
The Master of Gray (1903), 55.
Karl of Erbach (1903), 64.
Bain, F. W.
Dmitri (1890), 57.
Bakei^ J., b. 1847.
The Gleaming Dawn (1894), 41.
The Cardinars Page (1898), 42,
Balfour, Andrew, b. 1873.
By Stroke of Sword (1897), 55.
To Arms (1898), 81, 159.
Vengeance is Mine (1899), 105.
Ballantyne, B. M., 1825—^4.
Erling the Bold (1869), 3a
Balzac, H. de, 1799— 1850.
About Catherine de' Medici (1846), S^
The Chonans (1829), 99.
Banim, J., 1798— 1842.
The Boyne Water (1826), 75.
Banim, J., 1798--1842, and M., 1796—1874.
The Croppy (1828), 98.
Banks, Mrs. G. Linnaeus, 1821—97.
The Manchester Man (1876), 106.
Banks, Nancy H.
Round Anvil Rock (1903), 123.
Oldfield (1902), 126.
Baemby, Beatrice H.
Rosslyn's Raid (1903), 56.
Bare, Amelia E., b. 1831.
The Lion's Whelp (1902), 67, 155.
Friend Olivia (1890), 68.
The Black Shilling (1903), 77.
Thyra Varrick (1903), 83, 159.
The Bow of Orange Ribbon (1886}, 86.
A Song of a Single Note (1903), 93.
The Maid of Maiden Lane (1900)1 96.
Baee, Robert, b. 1850.
A Prince of Good Fellows (1902), 47.
Over the Border (1903), 60.
The Countess Tekla (Tekla), (1899), 1 19.
The Strong Arm (1900), 119.
Baeextt, W., b. 1846, and E. Barron.
In Old New York (1900), 86.
N— 2
i8o
Barry, Dr. William, b. 1849.
The Dayspring (1903), 113.
Bbagonsfibld, Earl oL (See Disraeli).
Bbarnb, Mn. Catherine.
The Cron of Pearls (1903), 38.
Bbckb, Louis, b. 1848, and Walter Jeffery.
A First Fleet Familv (1895), 96.
The Mntineer (1898), 96.
Bbldbn, Jessie Van Zile.
Antonia (1901), 59.
Bbllamt, Edward, 1850—98.
The Dolce of Stockbridge (1900), 93.
Bbnnbtt, John.
Master Skylark (1897), 56, 152.
Bamaby Lee (1903), 71.
Bbnson, B. K.
Bayard's Courier (1903), 112.
Who goes there? (1900), 112.
Friend with the Countersign (1901), 112.
Benson, E. F.» b. 1867.
The Vintage (1898), 107.
Capaina (1899), 107.
Bbsant, Walter, 1836^1901.
For Faith and Freedom (1889), 73» 'S^*
Dorothy Forster (1884), ^h 138, 158.
The World went very well then (1887), 83.
The Orange Girl (1899), 9a
St. Katherine's by the Tower (1891), 95.
Bbsant, Walter, 1836— 1901, and James Rice, 1843— 82,
The Chaplain of the Fleet {1881), 85, i6a
By Celiacs Arbour (1878), 127.
Bbyan, Tom.
A Lion of Wessex (1902), 3a
Beggars of the Sea (1904), 51.
BiDDBR, M.
In the Shadow of the Crown (1899), 38.
Black, William, 1841—98.
Judith Shakespeare (1884), 58.
Blackmorb, R. D., X 825— 190a
Loma Doone (1869), 73, 138, 156.
Springhaven (1887), 100.
Alice JLorraine (1875), 102.
The Maid of Sker (1872), 122.
Perlycross (1894), 125.
Blake, Bass.
A Lady's Honour (1902), 79.
Blake, M. M.
The Siege of Norwich Castle (1893), 33, 145.
i8i
Blakr, M. yi.'^ontinued.
Grantley Fenton (1901), 105, 162.
Blaynby, Owen.
The MacMahon (1898), 76.
BussKTT, Nellie K.
The Most Famous Loba (1901), 3^.
Bodkin, M. McD.
The Rebels (1899), 97.
"BoLDREWOOD, Rolf" (T. A. Browne), b. 1826.
War to the Knife (1899). in.
The Squatter's Dream (1895), 126.
BouLOW, Georgre, 1803—81.
Lavengro (1851), 123.
BOURCHIER, M. H.
The Adventures of a Goldsmith (1898), 100.
Braddon, M. E. (Mrs. MaxweU), b. 1837.
In High Places (1898), 6a
London Pride (1896), 68.
Mohawks (1886), 82.
Ishmael (1884}, 108.
Brady, Cyrus Townsend.
HohenzoUem (1902), 34.
In the War with Mexico (1903), 108,
The Southerners (1903), in.
Brains, Sheila E.
The King's " Blue Boys " (1902), 87.
The Turkish Automaton (18^), 89.
Bramston, M.
Shaven Crown (1895), 28.
The Banner of St. Gcoige (1901), 39, 14S.
For Faith and Fatherland (1876), 51.
Brbrbton, Captain F. S.
In the King's Service (1901), 66, 154.
Foes of the Ked Cockade (1904), 94.
A Gallant Grenadier (1902), no, 162
Brbton, F., 1864— 1902.
God Save England (1899), 39.
True Heart (1898), 46.
Briton, E. Vincent
Amyot Brough (1884), 87, i6a
Brontb, Charlotte, 1816—55.
Shirley (1849), "3.
Brooks, Elbridge S., 1846— 1902.
In Blue and White (1899), 92.
A Son of the Revolution (1898), 99.
A Boy of the First Empire (1894;, 100.
Brown, Charles Brocden. 1771— 1810.
Arthur Mervyn (1799), 122.
l62
Bayosn, H. a., b. 1854-
An Exiled Scot (1899), 84.
BucUAN, Jcrfm, b. I»7S-
John Bumet of Barns (1S9S). 70.
A Lost Lady of Old Years (1899), 84.
BOCHANAN, Robert, 1841— *90i-
The Sbadow of the Sword (1^7^)* '^
BuGJUJ£Y, WilUaiD.
Croppies, Lie I>o«i (i9P3)» ^
Bdkcubll, S. H. „ «> ^
In the Days of Kiing James (1898^, 58.
The Duke's Servanis (1899J, 59.
Daaiel Henick (1900;, 69.
My Lady of the Bass (1903). 75-
Bu&CESS, T- J. Haldaac.
The Ti:«aeurc of Don Audies (1903)4 56.
BURUETT, Fianoes Uodgaon, b. 1849.
A Lady of Quality (1896;, 120.
His Grace of Osmonde (1897), i70.
BuwiBY. Frances (Madame D'Arblayj, 1752- 1S4C.
Evelina (1778), 122.
BUKTON, J. Bloundeik, b. i8sa
In the Day of Adversity (1896), 73-
The Clash of Arms (1897), 72.
The Scomge of God (1898), 78.
AcroM Uie Salt Seas (1898), 78, i^
The Intriguers' Way (1903;. ^
SemmU of Sin (19CI), 82.
Denounced (1896), 84.
Fortune's My Foe (1899), 88.
Bynksr, E. L., b. 1842.
The Begum's Daughter (1890), 77.
Agnes Surriage (1886), 86.
Cable, C. W., b. 1844-
The Cavalier ^1901), 112.
The Grandissimes (1860J, 123.
Cahuk, I-6on.
The Blue Banner (1877). 35-
Caine, HaU, b. 185 J. .
The Shadow of a Crmie (1885), 68.
Caine, O V. ^ ^^
Wanderer and KiM (1903). 66, 155.
Face to Face with Kapoleon I1898), 105, IU2.
In the Year of Waterloo (1899.. *«>S» ^^^
i83
Callwell, J. M.
A Champion of the Faith (1894), 41, 149.
CANT&, Cesare, 1807—95.
Margherita Pusterla (1839)1 38.
Capes, Bemud.
Love like a Gipsy (1901), 92.
Adventures of the Comte de la Muette (1898), 95.
Our Lady of Darkness (1899), 95.
A Castle in Spain (1903), 102.
CAEBYy Wymond.
Monsieur Martin (1902), 81.
For the White Rose (1903), 81.
Carlbton, William, 1794— 1869.
Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry (1830—33), 123.
Black Prophet (1847), 124.
Carpenter, W. Boyd, b. 1841.
Narcissus (1879), 23.
CAUty M. £.
Love and Honour (1901), 10 1.
'* Caskoden, £." (See Major, Charles).
Castle, Agnes, and Egerton, b* 1858.
The Bath Comedy (1900), 85.
The Pride of Jennico (1898), 89.
Catherwood, Mrs. M. H., 1847— 1902.
The Lady of Fort St. John (1892), 63.
The Romance of DoUard (1889), 68.
The Story of Tonty (1889), 77.
Lazarre (1902}, loi.
Chambers, Robert W., b. 1865.
Cardigan (1901), 91.
The Maid at Arms (1902), 91.
Lorraine (1898), 113.
Ashes of Empire (1898}, 114.
The Maids oi Paradise (1903), 114.
The Red Republic (1895), ii4-
Charles, Mrs. (** Author of Ckrofucles of the ScAdnberg CoUa Famify")
1828—96.
Conquering and to Conquer (1S76), 26
Sketches of Christian Life (The Early Dawn), (1864), 29.
Chronicles of the Schonberg CotU Family (1864}, 46.
The Draytons and the Davenants (1867), 62, 153,
On Both Sides of the Sea (1868), 62, 155.
Chbsnby, Sir George, 1830—95.
The Dilemma (1876), no.
Chbtwode, R. D.
The Knight of the Golden Chain (1898), 33, 146.
John of Strathboume (1897), 49.
z84
Church, A. J., b. 1829*
The Fall of Athens (Callias), (1895), 2a
A Young Macedonian (1S90), 20.
Lords ofthe World (1898), 20.
Two Thousand Years Ago (1886), 21.
The Burning of Rome (1892), 22.
To the Lions (1889), 23.
The ChantiT Priest of Bamet (1885), 43> 149-
With the Kjng at Oxford (1886}, 60, 153.
Church, A. J., and Ruth Putnam.
The Count ofthe Saxon Shore (1887), 27.
Church, A. J., and R. Seeley.
The Hammer (1890), 20.
Church, S. H.
John Marmadnke (1897), ^^f ^54-
Penruddock ofthe White Lambs (1903), 67.
Churchill, Winston, b. 187 1.
Richard Carvel (1899), 9h 99-
The Crossing (1903), 99.
The Crisis (1901), 99. lit.
« Clarb, Austin" (Miss W. M. Tames).
The Carved Cartoon (1874;, ?!•
Clark, Alfred.
Woe to the Conquered (1893], 21.
Clarkb, Mrs. Henry.
In Jacobite Days (1904), 74, 157.
Clarkb, Marcus, 1846—81.
For the Term of His Natural Life (1874), 135.
Clarke, Sarah M. S. (Mrs. Pereira).
The Duke's Page (1890), 49.
*' Clbbve, Lucas " (Mrs. Adelina G. I. Kingscote).
Free Soil, Free Soul (1903}, 86.
Cobban, J. Madaren, 1849— 1903.
The Angel of the Covenant (1898), 66.
COLBRIDGB, Gilbert and Marion.
Jan Van Elselo (1902), 50.
COLBRIDGB, M. £.
The King with Two Faces (1897), 89.
The Fiery Dawn (1901}, 107.
Colli NGwooD, W. G.
Thorstein of the Mere (1895), 3'*
Collins, Wilkie, 1824-^.
Antonina (1850), 28.
COMPTON. Herbert, b. 1853.
The Inimitable Mrs. Massingham (1900), 98.
A Free Lance in a Far Land (1895), 98.
The Palace of Spies (1903), 103.
The (Jueen Can Do No Wrong (1903), 106.
i85
CoMSTOCK, Harriet T.
Tower or Throne (1902), 55
CONNBLL, F. Norreys.
The Follies of Captain Daly (1901), loi.
Conscience, Hendrik, 1812—83.
The Lion of Flanders (1848), 37.
L*Ann^ des Menreilles (1837), 51.
La Guerre des Paysans (Veva), (1853), 96.
Converse, Florence.
Long Will (1903), 39.
Cooke, T. E., 1830—86.
Fairfax (1868), 86.
The Virginia Comedians (1854), 9a
Cooper, J. Fenimore, 1789— 185 1.
The Last of the Mohicans (1826), 88.
Lionel Lincoln (1825), 91.
TheSpy(i82i), 91.
The Pilot (1823), 91.
CORBETT^ulian, b. 1854.
The Fall of Asgard (1886), 32.
For God and Gold (1887), 55, 151.
A Business in Great Waters (1895}, 9^
CORNFORD, L. Cope.
The Master Beggars (1897), 50.
Sons of Adversity (1898}, 55.
Captain Jacobus (1897), 67> ^SS-
Cornish, F. Warre, b. 1839.
Sunningwell (1899), 126.
Couch, A. T. QuiUer- (*• Q '»), b. 1863.
The Splendid Spur (1889), 60^ 153.
The Blue Pavilions (1891), 75, 157.
Hetty Wesley (1903), 83.
Adventures of Harry Revel (1903), 102.
The Westcotes (1902), 193.
CowPER, Frank.
Caedwalla (1888), 28.
The Captain of the Wight (1889), 44, 150.
** Cradoock, C £." (Mary Noailles Murfree), b. 185a
The Story of Old Fort London (1899}, SS.
A Spectre of Power (1903), 90.
Craik, Mrs. (See Mulock.)
Crake, A. D.
The Camp on the Severn (1876), 24.
Edwy the Fair (1874), 31.
Alfjg;ar the Dane (1875), 3^-
The Rival Heirs (1882}, 32, 145.
Crane, Stephen, 1870 — 1900.
The Red Badge of Courage (1895), iii.
T
i86
Crawford, F. Marion* b. 1854.
Via Crads (1S99), 34.
Marietta (XQOi). 44*
In the Palace of the King (1900), 51.
Crbspigny, Mrs. Philip C. de.
The Mischief of a Glove (i903)> S^
From Behind the Ams (1902), 82.
Crsswick, Paul, b. 1866.
In iElfred's Days (1900), 30.
Under the Black Raven (1901), 3a
Hasting the Pirate (1902), 30.
Crockbit, S. R., b. i860.
Black Douglas (1899), 42.
Red Axe (1898), 64.
The Men of the Moss Hass (1895), 70*
The Standard Bearer (1898), 74.
Lochinvar (1897), 75.
Flower o' the Corn (1902), 78.
The Raiders (1894), 81.
The Dark o' the Moon (1902), 81.
The Firebrand (1901), 107.
Croly, George, 1780— 1860.
Tany Thou Till I Come (Salathiel, 1855), 21.
Crowley, Mary C.
A Daughter of New France (1901), 76.
The Heroine of the Strait (1903)1 90-
Love Thrives m War (1903), 103.
Cunningham, Lady F.
The Little Saint of God (1901), 95-
CUTTS, E. L.
The Villa of Claudius (1861), 26.
Dahn, Felix, b. 1834.
A Captive of the Roman Eagles (1884), 25.
FeHcitas (1883), 27.
The Scarlet Banner (1885), 27.
A Struggle for Rome (1876), 28.
Dasbnt, G. W., 1820—96.
The Vikings of the Baltic (i875)> 3i-
Daudet, Ernest, b. 1837,
Rafael (1895), xoi.
Davis, W. S., b. 1877-
Belshazzar (1902), 19.
A Friend of Csesar (1900), 21.
God Wills It (1901), 33-
The Saint of the Dragon's Dale ^903). 37-
i87
D*AzBGLio, M., 1798— 1866.
The Challen^ of Barletta (1833), 46.
The Maid of Florence (Nicoolo de' Lapi)j (i 841), 46, 136.
Debping, Warwick.
Uther and Igraine (1903), 119.
Defoe, Daniel, 1660— 1731.
Memoirs of a Cavalier (1724), 62.
Journal of the Plague (1722), 69.
Captain Singleton (1720), 120.
Devereux, Mary
From Kingdom to Colony (1900}, 91.
Lafitte of Louisiana (1902), 103.
Dickens, Charles, 1812—70.
Bamaby Radge (1841), 90, 138, i6a
A Tale of Two Qties (1859), 94, 138, 160.
DiCKBSON, Alfred.
Tychiades (1903), ao.
Dickson, Harris.
The Black Wolfs Breed (1901), 72.
The Siege of Lady Resolute (1902), 78.
She who hesitates (1903), 8a
Disraeli, B., 1804—81.
SybU (1845), 125.
DiXy Bettlah Marie.
Soldier Rigdale (1899). 59.
Hugh Gwyeth (1899), 61, K4.
Life, Treason, and Death of James Blount (1903), 6i.
A Little Captive Lad (1902), 67, 155.
The Making of Christopher Ferringham (1901), 67.
DiXf B. M., and C. A. Harper.
The Beau's Comedy (1902), 122.
D0RR9 Julia C. R.
In Kings' Houses (1899), 78.
Doyle, A. Conan, b. 1859.
The White Company (1891), 39, 147.
The Refugees (1893), 72.
Micah Clarke (1889), 73, 156.
Rodney Stone (1896), 99.
Uncle Bemac (1897), 100.
The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard (1896), 105.
The Adventures of Gerard (1903}, 105, io6.
The Great Shadow (1892), 105.
Drummond, Hamilton, b. 1857.
The Beaufoy Romances (1902), 42.
For the Religion (1898), 52.
A Man of His Age (1899), 52.
A King's Pftwn (1900), 53.
A Man's Fear (1903), 119.
1
i88
Drummond, Hamilton— f«M/tVf«Af.
A Loid of the SoU (1902)1 "9-
DUMASy Alexandre, 1803—70.
Ag^or de Maul^n (1846), 39.
Ascanio (1844), 49.
The Two Dianas (1846—47), 52.
The Page of the Duke of Savoy (i8S5)» S^
Marguerite de Valois (1845), p-
La Dame de Monsoreau (1846), 53.
The Forty Five (1848), 53.
The Three Musketeers (1944)1 62, 137.
Twenty Years After (1845), 62, 65, 137.
The Black Tulip (1850)1 71.
The Vicomte de Bragelonne (1848—50), 71, 137.
Le Chevalier d'Harmenthal (i843)> 81.
The Regent's Daughter (1845), 82.
0]ymi>e de Cl^es (1852), 88.
Memoirs of a Physician (1846 — ^48), 88.
The Queeh*s Necklace (1850), 89.
Angc Pitott (1853), 93- ^
La Comtesse de Chamy (1853— 5O, 93-
Chevalier de Maison Rouge (1846), 93.
The Whites and the Blues (1868), 06.
The Companions of Jehu (1857), 98.
The She Wolves of Machecoul (1859), 107.
£
Ebbrs, Geoig, 1837—98.
Uarda (1877)* I9.
An Egyptian Princess (1864), 19, 135.
The Sisters (1880), 20.
Cleopatra (1894), 21.
llie Emperor (i88x), 23.
Per Aspera (1892), 24.
Homo Sum (1878), 25.
Serapis (1885), 26.
The Bride of The NUe (1897), 28.
In the Blue Pike (1896), 46.
Barbara Blomber? (1897), 49.
The Burgomastei^s Wife (1882), 51.
Eckstein, Ernst, b. 1845.
Prusias (1884), 21.
Nero (1889), 22.
Quintus CUudius (1882), 23.
Edbn, C. H.
Afloat with Nelson (1897), loi, i6i.
i89
EDOARf J. G.
Runnymede and Lincoln Fair (1866), 35, 146.
How I "Won My Spurs (1863), 36, 147.
Cre9y and Poictiers (1865), 38, I4i8.
Edokworth, Maria, 1767—1849.
Castle Rackrent (i8oo)» 121.
Edwards, M. Betham, b. 1836.
A Rofaiance of Dijon (1894), 95.
The Dream Charlotte (1800), 95.
A Stonn-Rent Sky (1898), 95.
Egglbston, Edward, 1837^1902.
The Hoosier Schoolmaster (1872), 125.
Egglbston, G. C, b. 1839.
The Big Brother (1875), 104.
Signal Boys (1877), 104.
Captain Sam (1876), IQ4.
Dorothy South (1902), 127.
The Master of Warlock (1903), 127.
** Eliot, George" (Mary Anne Cross, nA Evans), l8i9~Sa
Romola (186^), 44, 136.
Adam Bede (1859), 123.
Middlemarch (1871 — ^72), 124.
Felix Holt (1866}, 124.
ELLIS9 Beth.
Barbara Winslow : Rebel (1903), 74.
Ellis, E. S., b. 1840.
Uncrowning a King (1899), 72.
EULINGTON, H.
In the Days of Prince Hal (1902), 41, 148.
Ralph Wynward (1903}, 50, 152.
^'Erckmann-Chatrian,'^ (Emile Erckmann, 1822—99, and Alexandre
Chatrian, 1826--90).
The Story of a Peasant (1863) :—
The States-General, 94.
The Country in Danger, 94.
Year One of the Republic, 94*
Citizen Bonaparte, 94.
Madame Th^r^ (XS63), 94.
The Blockade (1867}, 105.
The Conscript (1864)1 105, 139.
Waterloo (1865), 105, 139.
Story of the Plebiscite (1872), 113.
F
" Fairless, Michael."
The Gathering of Brother Hilarins (1901), 39.
Falknbr, J. Meade.
Moonfleet (1898), 85.
1
igo
Farkbr, J. E.
Brinton Eliot (1902), 91.
"Fakmingham, Marianne ' (Mary Anne Heame).
A Window in Paris (1S98}, 115.
Far&ar, Dean, 1831 — 1903.
Darkness and Dawn (1891), 22,
Gathering Clouds (1895), 2^*
Farrington, Margajret Vere.
Fra Lippo Lippi (1890), 42.
Fayette, Comtesse de la, 1634 — 93.
Princesse de Cl^es (1678), 71.
Fbnn, Clive R.
For the Old Flag (1899), "O, 162.
Fenn, G. Manville, h. 1831.
The King's Sons (1901), 29.
The Blade Tor (1896), 58, 152.
Ned Leger (1899), 83, 159.
Ferribr, Susan £., 1782— 1854.
Destiny (1831), 123.
Field, Mrs. E. M.
Ethne(i889), 66, 154.
Fielding, Henry, 1707—54.
Tom Jones (1749;, 121.
FiLON, Aunistin, b. 1841.
LTl^e de Garrick (1891), 90.
FlNNRMORE, J.
The Lover Fugitives (1902), 73, 157.
The Story of a Scout (,1902), 102, 161.
Flaubert, Gustave, 1821 — 88.
Salammbd (1862), 20, 135.
Fletcher, J. S., b. 1863.
Anthony Everton (1903). 60, 153.
Mistress Spitfire (1896), 60.
When Charles I. was King (1892), 61, 154.
FONTANE, Theodor, 1819—98.
Vor dem Sturm (1878), 104.
Ford, P. L., 1865— 1902.
Janice Meredith (1899), 92.
Forrest, R. £.
Eight Days (1891), no.
Forrest, Thorpe.
Builders of the Waste (1899), 27.
Foster, A. J., and E. E. Cuthell.
The Robber Baron of Bedford Castle (1893), 36, 146.
Fox, John.
The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come (1903), in.
Francillon, R. E., b. 1841.
Ropes of Sand (1893), 96.
igi
Francis, Marian.
Where Honour Leads (1902), 83.
Francis, M. £. (Mrs. Blundell).
Yeoman Fleetwood (1900)* 106.
Franzos, Karl Emil, 1848— 1904*
For the Right (1882), 107.
Frederic, Harold, 1856 — 98.
The Deserter, and other Stories (1898) :—
How Dickon Came by his Name, 43, 149.
Where Avon into Severn Flows, 43, 149.
The Deserter, 112.
A Day in the Wilderness, 112.
In the Valley (1890), 91.
The Copperhead, and other Tales (1894), 112.
Frbnch, Allen.
The Colonials (1902), 91.
Freytag, Giistav, 1816-^5.
Our Forefathers (1072, &c.), 25, 29.
Debit and Credit (1855), 125.
Frith, Henry.
Under Bayard's Banner (1886), 48.
Froudb, J. A., 1818—94.
Two Chiefe of Dunboy (1889), 97.
Fuller, Hulbert.
Vivian of Virginia (1897), 73-
Gaines, Charles K.
Gorgo (1903), 20.
Gald6s, B. P^rez, b. 1849.
Episodios Nadonales (1873—91) :—
Trafalgar (1873), loa
Saragossa (i8iS5), loi.
Gallbt, Louis. , « %
Captam Satan (Adventures of Cyrano de Bergerac) {1899), 71.
Galt, John, 1779— 1839.
Ringan Gilhaize (1823), 74.
Annals of the Parish (1821}, 121.
Gardner, Edmund G., b. 1869.
Desiderio (1902), 119.
Garnibr. Russell M., b. 1854.
When Spurs were Gold (1902), 41, 149.
The White Queen (1899), 48.
His Counterpart (1898), 72.
Gaskell, Mrs., 1810 — 65.
Cranford (1853), 125.
Maxy Barton (1848), 126, 162.
i
192
Gaulot, Paut.
The Red Shirts (1893), 95.
Gautibr, Th^phile, 181 1—72.
Captain Fracasse (1863^, 12a
Gat, Madame Sophie, 1776 — 1052.
Marie de Mancini (1839), 65.
Gibbon, Charles, 1848—90.
The Braes of Yarrow (1881), 47.
Gibbon, Frederick P.
The Disputed V.C. (1903), iii, 162.
GiBNBY, S.
The Maid of London Bridge (1892), 49, I5Z«
Gilbert, G.
The B4ton Sinister (1903), 73.
The Island of Sorrow (1903), 99.
Gilkes, a. H.
Kallistratus (1897}, 2a
GiLLiAT, E., b. 1841.
God Save King Alfred (1901), 30.
Forest Outlaws (1887), 34, 146.
In Lincoln Green (1897), 34, 146.
Wolfs Head (1899), 35, 146.
The King's Reeve (1898), 36, 147.
John Standish (1889}, 39, 148.
Glasgow, Ellen.
The Battleground (1902). iii.
The Voice of the People (1900), 127.
Glovatski, Alex.
The Pharaoh and the Priest (1897), 19.
Godwin, W., 1756—18^6.
St. Leon (1799), 49.
Gogol, Nioolai V., 1809— »
Taras Bulba (18x4), 120.
Goldsmith, Oliver, 172^74.
The Vicar of Wakefield (1766}, 121.
GOODLOE, Carter.
Calvert of Strathore (1903), 93.
Goodwin, Mrs. Maud W., b. 1856.
The Head of a Hundred (1895), 59-
Sir Christopher (1901), 59.
White Aprons (1896), 73.
Gould, S. Baring-, b. 1834.
Domitia (1898), 23.
Perpetua (1897), 24.
Pabo the Priest (1899), 33, 145.
No^mi (1895), 42.
Guavas the Tinner (1897}, 56.
Urith (1891), 74.
"93
Gould, S. BariTtg — tentimud.
In ExitQ Israel (1870), S9.
Cheap Jack Zita (1893), 106.
Royal Georeie (1901), 107.
"Gkakue, Al«8tor''^(Mrs. F. T. Marr>'at).
Romance of the Lady Arbell (1900), 58.
GuHAU.Tohn W.
Ne9M(i886), II.
Grant, Junes, 1823— 87.
The Captain of the Guard (i8fi2), 42.
The Yellow Frigate (1855), 44, ijo-
MuT of Loiraire (i860 J, 47, 151.
Philip Rollo (lSj4), 64.
Hanj Ogilvie (1856), 66.
The Scottish Cavalier (1850), 74, IS?.
Th« Aide-de-camp (iM). loi-
The Romance of War (1846—47), loi, 161.
Grant, J. Gr^or.
Rufus; or, the Red King (1838), 33.
Gbas, Ftiix, b. 1846.
The Reds of the Midi (1896), 94.
The Terror (1898), 94.
The White Terior (lif99), 94.
GSEKN, E. Everett, b. 1856.
A Clerk of Oxford (1898), 36. 147.
The Lord of Dyneover (18^), 37, 147.
My Lady Jo«i)na (190a), 37, 147.
In the Dayl of Chivalry (1893), 38, 148.
Cambria's Chieftain (1904), 41, 148.
In the Wars of the Rose* (1899), 43> I49-
While WyviU and Red Ruthven {1903), 43, 149.
TheHdrof Hascombe Hall (1900}, 46, 15a
Shut In (1894), 51.
In Pair Graoatla (1903), <T.
Doroiiiiqne's Vengeance (1897), 54.
The Lost Treanue of Trevlyn (1901}, 58, IS*.
After Worceste
In Taunton To >.
The Young Pio
Tom Tufion's 1 158.
Tom Tnfton'» 1 8.
Fallen Fortune
A Hero of the 84, 159,
Castle of the V 114.
Gribblr, F,
A Romance of the Tnileries (1903), 109.
"GUKK, Sydney "(Hilda Grieg), b. 1868.
In Fnruieit Ind (1894^ 77.
194
like Anotfaer Hden (1899), 86.
GuFRN, G., 1803— 4a
The ImrasioQ (1832), 2a
Dnke of Moomoutb (183O, 74.
GurFiTH, GecM^ee.
The Viigiii of the Son (1898), 47.
GKOSUfT.
Biaico ViMSOOti (1854% 38.
Geovu. (See Percy-Grorei.)
GuERAZZi, F. D. 1804—73-
La Battadia di Bcnevaito (1827), 35.
IsabeUa&iBzii (1844}, 41.
Beatrice CeDci (1854), 54.
Gull, C. Ranger.
The Serf (1902), 33.
GwYNN, Stephen.
John Maxwell's Biarriage (1903), 121.
H.
Haggard, H. Rider, b. 1856.
Pearl Maiden (I903)> 22.
Montezuma's Duighter (1894), 47.
Lysbeth (1901), 5a
SwaUow (1899), 108.
Hale, E. Everett, b. 1822.
In His Name (1873), 34.
Philip Nolan's Friends (1876), 99.
Hales, A. G.
Jair the Apostate (1902), 19.
Hall, Moreton.
General Geoige (1903), loa
Hall, Ruth.
The Golden Arrow (1901), d^^
Hall, Mrs. S. C, 1800—81.
The Outlaw (1831), 74*
The WhitebG^ (1855), 124.
Hamilton, Bernard.
Coronation (1902), 41.
Hamilton, Lord Ernest, b. 1858.
Mary Hamilton (1901), 55*
The Outlaws of the Marches (1897), 56.
Hamilton, Eugene Lee.
The Loxd of the Dark-Red Star (1903)) 35>
Hamilton, Rev. John A.
The MS. in a Red Box (i903)> ^
Hancock, Albert Ehner.
Henry Bourland (1901), 112.
195
Hancock, S.
Tonford Manor (1903), 48.
Harcodrt, Colonel A. F. P.
Tenetha's Venture (1899), "o.
H*»«v |*»^,P«[^^ <^f^e Sword (1903), iia
liAftDYy A. Sherburne, b. 1847.
Passe Rose (1889), 29.
Harrison, Frederic, b. 1831.
Theophano (1903—4), 3 1.
Hatton, Joseph, b. 1840.
The Dagger and the CixMS (1897), 60.
Haupp, W., 1802—27. ^^'' ^
Lichtenstein (1826), 46.
Hausrath. Professor. (See Taylor, Geoige).
havsrfield, £• L,
Stonhope (1903), 61, 153.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 1804—64.
The Scarlet Letter (1850), 120, 139.
Young Goodman Brown (1835), 120.
Roger Malvin's Burial (1832), 121.
Legends of the Province House (1838), 122,
The Blithedale Romance (i8<2). 121;.
Hayashi, Viscount ^
For His People (1903), 65.
Haybns, Herbert, b. 1861.
At the Point of the Swoid (1903), 107.
A Kent Squire (1900}, 79.
Gwynnett of Thomhaugh (1900), 70.
Hbidenstam. Werner von, b. 1859.
« ^,?^?2 ^^ ^^ Campaignew (1897), 8i.
Hslme, Elizabeth, d. 1816.
St. Clair of the Isles (1804), 42.
Hblps, Sir Arthur, 1813 — 75.
Ivan de Biron (1874), 87.
Hbnham, Ernest George.
The Plowshare and the Swoid (1903). 6^
Hrnty, G. a., 1832— 1902. "*' *
Beric the Briton (1893), 22«
The Dragon and the Raven (1886), 30.
Wulfthe Saxon (1895), 32, 145.
In Freedom's Cause (1885), 37, 147.
St George for England (1885), 38, 148.
A March on London (1898), 40, 148.
The Lion of St. Mark (iSS^)7^.
Both Sides of the Border (1899), 41, 148,
At Agincourt (1897), 41, 149.
Z96
Hbnty, G. a. — tonUnued.
By Right of Conquest (1891), 47.
By Pike and Dyke (1890). 51.
By England's Aid (1891), 51.
The Lum of the North (1886), 64.
Won by the Sword (1900), 64.
The Bravest of the Brave (1887), 79, 158.
The Comet of Horse (1881}, 79, 158.
In the Irish Brigade (iQOi), 79.
A Jacobite Exile (1894K 81.
With Qive in India ( 1884), 86, i6a
With Frederick the Great (1898), 87.
At the Point of the Bayonet (1902), 99, t6i.
With Moore at Corunna (1898), loa, 161.
Under Wellin^on's Command (1899), 102, 161.
Through Russian Snows (1896), 103.
One of the 28th (1889), 105, 162.
To Herat and Cabul (1902), 108, 162.
Out with Garibaldi (1901 ), 109.
With Lee in Virginia (1890), 112.
Hbrvby, Maurice H.
Eric the Archer (1895^ 39> 14^*
Hesbkibl, J. G. L.
Two Queens (1869), 89.
Hbwuett, Maurice, b. 186 1.
life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay (1900), 34.
New Canterbury Talcs (1901), 38.
The Queen's Quair (1003—4), 54.
The Forest Lovers (1898), 119, 139.
Little Novels of Italy (1899}, 119.
Hillary, Max.
The Blue Flag (1898), 74.
HiNKSON, H. A.
Silk and Steel (1902), 62.
The King's Deputy (1899), 97.
Up for the Green (1898}, 98.
Hoars, E. N.
A Turbulent Town (1879), 40.
Hocking, Joseph.
Lest We Forget (1901), 50.
A Flame of Fire (1903), 57-
Follow the Gleam (1903), 62.
Mistress Nancy Molesworth, (1899), 84, 1S9»
The Birthright (1897), 85«
Hodgbtts, J. F.
Kormak the Viking (1903), 3a
HOLUS, Gertrude.
The Son of iElla (1900), 28.
197
HOLLis, Gett^ldt-^0H/inu^d.
A Scholar of Lindisfarne (1902), 28.
In the Days of St. Anselm (1901), 33, 145.
Spurs and Bride (1903), 35, 146.
HoLROYD, Caroline C
Seething Days (1894), 49, 151.
Hoofer, L
His Grace o' the Gnnne (1898), 69.
The Singer of Marly (1897), 77.
" Hope, Anthony " (Anthony Hope Hawkins), b. 1863.
Simon Dale (1898), 69.
Hope, Graham.
A Cardinal and His Conscience (1901), 52.
My Lord Winchenden (1902), 68.
The Triumph of Count Ostermanu {1903)9 8a
Hopkins, Mrs. H. M. (See Mackie).
Hopkins, Tighe.
For Freedom (1888), 109.
HOPFUS, Mary A. M.
Masters of the World (1888), 23.
A Great Treason (1883), 92.
H0KNUN6, £. W., b. 1866.
Denis Dent (1903), 126.
Hough, Emerson, b. 1857.
The Mississippi Bubble (1902), 82.
The Girl at the Halfway House (1900), I27«
HOWAETH, Mrs. Anna.
Sword and Assegai (1899), 108.
Katrina (1898), 127.
Hubbard, Elbert.
Time and Chance (1899), ill.
Hudson, H.
Wild Humphry Kynaston (1899), 44*
Hudson, W. H.
£1 Omb6 (1902), 102,
Hugo, Victor, 1802-85.
Notre Dame (1831), 45, 136,
L'An '95 (1874), 04.
Les Miserables (1862), 106.
Hunt, Leigh, 1784—1859.
Sir Ralph Esher (1832), 69.
Hutchinson, Honu:e G.
A Friend of Nelson (1902), loa
Crowborough Beacon (1903), 103.
igS
I
I
L
INOBMANN, B. S., 1789— 1862.
Waldemar (1824), 35.
Irving, Washington, 1783-1859.
Astoria (1836), 123.
Adventures of Captain Bonneville (1837). I2X.
ISHAM, Frederick S. 1 o//» j-
Under the Rose (1903), 49.
J.
Jacob, Violet
The Sheepstealers (1902), 125.
Jambs, G. P. R., i8oi-6a
Attila (1837), 27.
Castle of Ehrenstein (1847), 35.
Philip Augustus (1831), 35, 146.
Forest Days (1843), 36, 147.
The Jacquerie (1841), 39.
Aglncourt (1844), 41, 149.
The Woodman (1842), 44, 150.
Mary of Burgundy (1833), 44,
Damley (1830), ^, 150.
The Brigand (1841), 52.
Richelieu (1829), 63.
Heniy Masterton (1832), 6$, 154.
Jbnsbn, Wilhekn, b. 1837.
Karine (1878) 46.
Jbwbtt, Sarah Ome, b. 1849.
The Tory Lover (1901), 93.
Johnson, W. H.
The King^s Henchman (1897), 53.
Under the Spell of the Fleur-de-lis (1899), 53.
Johnston, Mazy, b. 1870.
Sir Mortimer (1903—4), 55.
By Order of the Company (To Have and to Hold) (1900), 59.
The Old Dominion (Prisoners of Hope) (1898), 73.
Audrey (1902), I2X.
J6KAI, M., b. 1825.
Pretty Michal (1877), 65.
'Midst the Wild Carpathians (1852), 71.
The Slaves of the Padishah (1853), 71.
Halil the Pedlar (1854). 82.
The Nameless Castle (1877), loi.
The Lion of Janina (1852), 107.
The Green Book (1879), 107, 139.
The Baron's Sons (1869), 109.
Manasseh (1877), 109.
A Hungarian Nabob (1853), 124.
199
JdsiXA, Baron Nicolas, 1794— 1865.
'Neath the Hoof of the Tartar (1856), 36.
JUDD, Sylvester, 1813—53.
Margaret (1845), 123.
JUNQHANS, Sophie, b. 1845.
Hans £ckbexg (1878), 64.
K.
Kalbr, Tames Otis, b. 1846.
Boys of 1745 (1898), 86.
At the Siege of Quebec (1897), 92.
KsAKYy Annie, 1825 — 79.
Castle Daly (1875), 125, 162.
Kbblino, Elsa d'Esterre.
The Queen's Serf (1898), 79.
Keiohtlbt, S. R., b. 1859.
The Cftvaliers (1896), 61.
The Silver Cross (1898), 65.
The Crimson Sign (1895), 75-
The Last Recmit of Clare's (1897), 88.
The Pikemen (1903), 98.
KsNNBDY, J. P., 1795 — 187a
Horse-Shoe Robinson (1835), 93.
Swallow Bam (1832), 122.
Kbmnbdy, Sarah B.
The Wooing of Judith (1902), 67.
Joscdyn Cheshire (1901), 92.
Kbnyon, Edith C
A Queen of Nine Days (1903), 50, 151.
Kbnyon, On.
Amor Victor (1902), 23.
Kbk, David.
The Wizard King (1895), 7'-
Tom from the Foundations (1902), 87.
Kino, General Charles, b. 1844.
Cadet Days (1894), 92-
The Iron Brigade (1902}, 112.
KiNOSLBY, Charles, 1819—75.
Hypatia (1853), 27, 135.
Hereward the Wake (1866), 32, 145.
Westward Ho I (1855), S^* I3^» 152.
Alton Locke (1850), 125.
KiNGSLEY, Henry, 1830-— 76.
Old Maigaret (187 1 ), 40.
Mademoiselle Mathilde (1868), 94.
Ravenshoe (1862), 109, 162.
Valentin (1872), Z14.
Geoffirey Hamlyn (1859), 126.
2CX>
KiRBY, William, b. 18x7.
The Golden Dog (Le Chien d'Or) (1877), 88.
KiKKMAN, M. Mm b. 1842.
The Romance of Gilbert Holmes (1902), 108.
KoBKNKR, Herman T.
Beleaguered (1898), 64.
L.
La Faybttb. (See Fayette).
Lanb, Elinor Macartney.
The Mills of God (1901), 96.
Lang, Andrew, b. 1844.
A Monk of Fife (1896), 42.
Laubb, H., 1808—84.
Der Deutsche Krieg (1863), 64.
Laut, a. C.
Heralds of Empire (1902), 12a
Lords of the North (1901), 124.
Lawless, Emily.
Maelcho (1890), 56.
With Essex in Ireland (1894), 56.
Le Breton, John.
Mis'ess Joy (1900), 106.
Lee, Albert.
The Black Disc (1897), 45.
The Inca's Ransom (1898), 47.
The Frown of Majesty (1902), 72.
The Baronet in Corduroy (1903), 78.
Lexghton, Robert, b. 1859.
Olaf the Glorious (X895), 31.
The Thirsty Sword (1893), 36.
The Golden Galleon (X898), 56, 152.
Cap*n Nat's Treasure (1902), 90, 160.
Lever, Charles, x8o6 — 72.
Tom Burke of «*Ours" (1843), ioii 161.
Charles CMalley (1841), 102, i6x.
LlEFDE, J. B. de.
The Beggars (1868), fa
A Brave Resolve (l8§3), 63.
Liljbncrantz, Ottilie A.
The Thrall of Leif the Lucky (1902), 32*
The Ward of King Canute (1903), 32.
"Lindsay, Harry" (Rev. H. L. Hudson).
The Jacobite (X898), 76.
LOCKHART, J, G., X794--I854.
Valerius (1821), 23.
Lover, Samuel, 1797 — 186S.
Treasure Trove (1844), ^3-
201
LovBR, StJxaiti—cofUinued,
Rory O'More (1837), 97.
Lows, Charles.
A Fallen Star (1895). 87.
Ludlow, J. M., b. 1841.
Deborah (1901), 2a
Captain of the Janicaries (1887), 43.
LuTHSR, Mark L.
The Favor of Princes (1899), 88.
"Lyaix, Edna" (Ada E. Bayly), 1856— 1903.
To Right the Wrong (1893), 62, 154.
In Spite of All (1901), 62, 154.
In the Golden Days (1885), 70, 156.
Hope the Hermit (1898), 76, 157.
Lyman, Olin L.
The Trail of the Grand Seigneur (1903), 99.
Lytton, Lord, 1803—73.
The Last Days of Pompeii (1834), 22, 135.
Harold (1848), 32, 135, 145.
Rienad (1835), 38.
The Last of the Barons (1843), 43, 136, 149.
Leila (1838), 45*
Deyereux (1829), 79.
The Parisians (1873), IZ4*
M.
" McAULAY, Allan " (Miss Stewart).
Poor Sons of a Day (1902), 84.
The Rh]^er (1900), 96.
McCarthy, Justin, b. 183a
Mononia (1901), 108.
McCarthy, Justin Huntly, b. i86a
If I were King (1902), 44.
McChbskby, Dora G.
Comet Strong of Ireton's Horse (1903), 61.
Miriam Cromwell (1897), 61, IS3*
Rupert by the Grace of God (1899), 63.
Kathleen Clare (1895), 66.
Macdonald, George, b. 1824.
St. George and St. Michael (1875), 6i«
Macdonald, Ronald.
God Save the King (1901), 68.
The Sword of the King (1900), 74.
McDonnell, Randal.
Kathleen Mavoumeen (1898), 97.
BlACPARLANS, Charles.
The Camp of Refuge (1844), 32, 145.
A Legend of Readmg Abbey (1845), 34, 145.
202
Maogkath, Harold.
The Grey Cloak (i903)» 65.
Mackib, PanHne B. (Mrs. H. M. Hopldns).
The Washingtonians (1902), ill.
McLaws, Afias L.
Jeaebel (19012), 19.
When the Land was Young (1901), 73.
Maclat, Arthnr C
Mito Yashiki (1889), 109.
McLbnnan, William.
Spanish John (1S98), 84.
McManus, L.
Nessa (1902), 67.
The Wager (1902), 76.
Lalhr of the Brigade (1899), 77.
AfACQUOiD, Katharine S., K 1824.
His Heart's Desire (1903), 63.
Maitland, Arthnr X^
I LiTed as I Listed (1899), 68.
Majok, Charles ( *' E. Caskoden " ).
When Knighthood was in Flower (1898), 48.
Dorothj Vernon of Haddon Hall (1902), 55.
Makgill, G.
Ontside and Orerseas (1903), 86.
ICalung, Mathilda.
Romance of the First Consul (1895), loa
Dofia Ysabd (1898), 102.
Mank, Millicent E.
Margot, the Comt Shoemaker (1901), 72.
Manning, Anne ("Author of Mary Pawell^^ 1807-79.
A Noble Purpose Nobly Won (1862), 42.
The Household of Sir Thomas More (185 1 ), 47, 15a
The Colloquies of Edward Osborne (1852), 50* 151.
The Maiden and Married Life of Maiy Powell (1855), 62, 137, 153.
Cherry and Violet (1853), 69, 156.
Deborah's Diary (1858), 70, 155.
The Old Chelsea Bun House (1855), 7^ 'S^
Manzovi, Alessandro, 1785-1873.
The Betrothed Lowers (/ PromesH S^si) (1825), 63, 137.
Maxgukrittb, Paul, b. i860 ; et Victor, b. 1866.
Le Jardin du Roi (1902), 113.
Une Epoque (1898, etc.) :—
Le D^sastre, 114.
Les Trott9ons du Glaive, 114.
Les BrsTes Gens, 114.
La Commune, 114.
Marquis, T. G.
Marguerite de Robenral (1899), 49.
203
Marry AT, Captaiiii 1792— 1848.
The Children of the New Forest (1847), 61, 154.
King's Own (1830), 97.
BCarsb (Marsh-Caldwell), Mrs. Anne, 1791— 1874.
Father Darcy (1846), 58.
liARSHALLy Beatrice.
The Siege of York (1902), 60, 154.
An Old London Nosegay (1903), 60, 153.
Old Blackfiriars (1901), 61, 153.
Marshall, Emma, 1833—99.
Penshurst Castle (1894), 56, 152.
The Yonn|: Qneen of Hearts (1898), 58, 152.
Under Salisbury Spire (1890), 59, 153.
Winiirede's Journal (1892), 59, 153.
A Haunt of Ancient Peace (1897), 62, 153.
The White King's Daughter (1898), 66, 155.
In Colston's Days (1884), 66.
Winchester Meads (1891), 70, 156.
In the East Country with Sir Thomas Browne (1885), 70, 156.
In the Sendee of Rachel, Lady Russell (1893), 70^ 156.
In Westminster Choir (1897), 7a
Kensington Palace (1895), 75, 157.
B9 the North Sea (1896), 75, 157.
Under the Dome of St. Paul's (1898), 79, 158.
The Master of the Musicians (1895), 85, 159.
The Parson's Daughter (1899), 96, x6o.
Under the Mendips (1886), 107, 162.
Martin, Ewan.
Dauntless (1901), 66, 154.
Martinsau, Harriet, 1802—76.
The Hour and the Man (1841), loa
MASON9 A« £. W., b. 1865.
The Courtship of Morrice Buckler (1896), 74, 157.
Qementina (1901), 8z, 159.
Lawrence Clavering (1897), 8i«
MASON9 A. E. W., and Andrew Lang.
Parson Kelly (1900), 8a
Mathbw, Frank, b. 1865.
Defender of the Faith (1899), 48.
The Royal Sisters (1901), 5a
One Queen Triumphant (1899), 55.
Maxwell, Sir Herbert, b. 1845.
A Duke of Britain (1895), ^•
The Chevalier of the Splendid Crest (1900), 37, 147.
Maxwell, W. H., 1792— 185a
The BiTouac (1837), 102, 161.
Stories of Waterloo (1834), 105.
]
204
Mbakin, Nevill liL
. The Assasnns (1902), 34.
MsLViLLB, G. J. Whyte, 1821—78.
Sarchedon (187 1 ), 19.
The Gladiators (1863), 22.
The Queen's Maries (1862), 54, 151.
Holmby House (i860), 6i| 153.
Cerise (1866), 82.
The Interpreter (1858), lia
Katerfelto (1875), 122.
Meredith, George, b. 1828.
Vittoria (1867), 109.
Beauchamp's Career (1876), 126.
The Tragic Comedians (1881), 127.
M£rejkowski, Dmitri.
The Death of the Gods (1899), 26.
The Forerunner (The Romance of Leonardo da Vuxd), (1900)1 45.
M£RiMlis, Prosper, 1803 — 70.
A Chronicle of the Reign of Charles IX. (1832), 52, 136.
''Mbrriman, H. Seton" (Hugh S. Scott)^ 1863—1903.
Barksch of the Guard (1903), 103.
In Kedar's Tents (1897), 107.
Flotsam (1896), zia
The Isle of Unrest (1900), II3«
The Velvet Glove (1901), 115.
Meewin, S.
The Road to Frontenac (1901), 76.
Meyer, Annie N.
Robert Annys, Poor Priest (1901), 39.
Meyer, Conrad Ferdinand, 1825—98.
Der HeDige (1880), 34.
Jttrg Jenatsch (1876), 64.
Miller, Thomas, 1807 — 74.
Royston Gower (1838), 35.
Mitchell, S. Weir, b. 1830.
Hugh Wynne (189*5), 91.
The Adventures of Franfois Founder (189S), 95.
Moore, F. Frankfort, b. 1855.
Castle Omeragh (1903), 66.
Nell Gwynn, Comedian (1900), 69.
The Jessamy Bride (1897), 85.
The Fatal Gift (1898), 90.
A Nest of Linnets (1901), 9a
Moore, Thomas, 1779 — 1852.
The Epicurean (1827), 24.
Morgan, Lady {n^e Owenson), 1780-1859.
O'Donnel (1814), 123.
205
Morris, Gouvcrneur.
Aladdin O'Brien (1902), in.
Motley, J. L., 1814—77-
Merry-Monnt (1849), 59.
MUDDOCK, J. E., b. 1843.
Kate Cameron of Brux (1900), 40.
In the King's Favour (1899), 47-
Sweet " Doll" of Haddon HaU (1903). 55-
" M^HLBACH, L." (Klara M. Mundt), 1814— 73-
Henry VIII. and his Court (1851), 48-
Frederick the Great and his Family (1864), 87.
MULOCK, Dinah (Mrs. Craik), 1826—87.
John Halifax, Gentleman (1857), 123.
MUNRO, Neil, b. 1864.
^hn Splendid (1898), 65.
The Shoes of Fortune (1901), 85.
MuNROS, Kirk, b. i8sa
The Flamingo Feather (1888), 54.
Longfeather, the Peacemaker (1901), 59-
At War with Pontiac (1895), 90*
With Crockett and Bowie (1897), 108.
Thiough Swamp and Glade (1896), 108.
Murray, D. Christie, b. 1847, and Henry Herman.
One Traveller Returns (1877), 24.
Murray, E. C. Grenville, 1819— 81.
The Member for Paris (1871), 113*
MusiCK, John Roy.
Columbia (1892), 45.
N.
Napirr, Sir Ciiarles, 1782—1853.
William the Conqueror (1858), 32.
Nralr, J. M., 1818-66.
Theodora Phranra (1857), 42.
Newbolt, Henry, b. 1862.
Taken from the Enemy (1892), 106, 162.
Nbwman, John Henry, 1801—90.
CaUisU (1856), 24, 135.
NoSLDBCHBN, Wilhelm.
Baron and Squire (c 1890), 64.
Norway, G. ,.00
Duance Pendray (1901), 80, 158.
O.
O^Grady, Standish, b. 1846.
Ulrick, the Ready (1896), 56.
In the Wake of King James (1896), 76.
I
ao6
Okpsn, Mn.
Coraigeen (1898), 97.
OsBORNB, Duffield, b. 1858.
The Lion's Brood (looi), 2a
Otis, James (See Kaler). ^ ^ '' ^
OXSNHAM, J.
John of Gerisan (1902), 113.
Fife and Drum at Loui«bourg (1899), 86.
p
Page, Thomas Nelson, b. 1853.
Red Rock (1898), 113!;
The Burial of the Guns (1894). 11%
Among the Camps (1891) 113.
Paxx.»avI:m''r ' ""^'"^ <'88«). "3.
PALMEK,^'" ^''''' <'^'>' '* '57.
The Vagabond (1903), 112.
Parker, Gilbert, b. 1862.
The TraU of the Sword (1895), 76.
^e Seats of the Mighty (1896), S7.
The Battle of the Strong (1898), 97
PATER, wSS.'itS^^' '" ^"^" ^"'^^' "^•
PATERSoKr^I^^2!^^ ^^^^^' ^ '^^•
Cromwell's Own (1899), 60.
The King's Agent (1902), 75.
Paulding, J. K., 1779-1860:
Paull, jJ^^^"^^^'"*'"'* ^"^eside (1831), 85.
My Mistress the Queen (188O 7< ic7
Peacock, Thomas Love, 1785-1^^^' ^^' '^^•
Maid Marian (1822), 34, 116.
Pemberton, Max, b. 1863.
I Crown Thee King (1902), 50, 151.
Signors of the Night (1899), 57.
T^^fl^/*?;^ Wife (i896);'69: 155.
The Little Huguenot (1895), 88.
The Garden of Swords (1899). 1 14.
Perry, Walter Copknd. ^' ^
Sancta Paula (1902), 26.
Percy-Groves, T.
^u^ ^r^'^r 9'^ ^^^^7), 98, 161.
The War of the Axe (1888), 108, 162.
207
Picketing, Edgar.
A Stout English Bowman (1898), 36, 146.
The Dogs of War (1900), 60, 152.
Silas Veme7(i892), 69, 156.
True to the Watchword (1902), 75, 157.
King for a Sammer (1896), 82.
The Fortunes of Claude (1901), 84, 159.
In Press Gan£ Days (1894), 97, 16a
PiCKTHALL, Marmadmce.
Said, the Fisherman (1903), 127.
Pidgin, C. F.
Blennerhassett (1901), 99.
Plant, C. P,
The King's Pistols (1902), 65.
Pollard, Eliza F.
A Hero King (1898), 3a
For the Red Rose (1903), 43, 149.
Robert Aske (1888), 48, 15a
The Little Chief (1901), 59.
A Daughter of France (1900), 63.
The Last of the Cliffords (1903), 68, 155.
The King's Signet (1900), 72.
My Lady Marcia (1901), 94.
Porter, A. M., 1780— 1832.
The Hungarian Brothers (1807), 98.
Porter, Jane, 1776 — 1845.
The Scottish Chiefs (1810), 37, 147.
Thaddeus of Warsaw (1803), 107.
Post, Waldron K.
Smith Brunt (1899), 104.
Potter, Margaret H.
Uncanonised (1900), 35.
The House of De MaSIy (1901), 88.
The Castle of Twilight (1903), 119.
Poynter, Miss H. M.
A Fair Jacobite (1904), 79.
Price, Eleanor C.
Angelot (1902), IQ4.
Prior, James.
Forest Folk (1901), 124.
Q
" Q." (See Couch, A. T. Quiller-.)
R
Rawson, Mrs. Stepney.
A Lady of the Regency (1900), 106.
Journeyman Love (1902), 109.
2o8
Raynbr, Emma.
Free to Serve (19CX)), 82.
Doris Kingsley (1901), 92.
Rbadb, Charles, 1814— S4.
The Cloister and the Hearth (i86z), 45, 135.
Pep Woffington (1853), 85.
It IS Never too Late to Mend (1856), 136.
Rbed, Myrtle.
The Shadow of Victory (1903), 123.
RsBD, Talbot Baines, 1852—93.
Sir Ludar (1889), 55, 152.
Kilgorman (1895), 97, i6i.
Rbndel, Hubert.
Under Which King? (1904), 87.
RsxTTKR, Fritz, 1810—74.
In the Year '13 (i860), 104.
••Rhoscomyl, Owen."
The Shrouded Face (1898), 56.
Battlement and Tower (1896}, 61, 153.
For the White Rose of Amo (1897), 84, 154.
Rhys, Ernest, b. 1859.
The \^liistling Maid (1900), 38.
Richardson, S., 1689— i 761.
Clarissa Harlowe (1748), 121.
RiCHiNGS, Emily.
In Chaucer's Maytime (1902), 39.
Ridding, Ladv Laura.
By Weeping Cross (1899), 41.
ROBBRTON, Margaret H.
A Gallant Quaker (1901), 68.
Roberts, C. G. D., b. i86a
Barbara Ladd (1902), 91.
The Forge in the Forest (1897), 121.
A Sister to Evangeline (1898), 121.
Roberts, Margaret (" Author of Afademoisei/i Afori"), b. 1833.
In the Olden Time (1882), 47.
Atelier du Lys (1876), 94.
On the Edge of the Storm (1869), 94.
A Fiddler of Lugau (1887), loi.
Mademoiselle Mori (i860}, 109.
Robinson, Emma (** Author of Whitefriars^*),
Westminster Abbey (1859), 48.
Whitehall (1844), 60.
Whitefriars (1845), 69, 155.
Rodbnbero, Julius.
King " By the Grace of God " (1870), 62.
Rogers, Robert C.
WiU o' the Wasp (1896), 104.
209
ROSBGGBR, P., b. 1843.
The God Seeker (1883)9 119.
ROULBT, Mary F. Nixon.
God, the King, my Brother (1901), 39, 148.
RowssLL, Mary C.
Traitor or Patriot ? (1885), 70, 156.
Rdffini, G. D., 1807—81.
Dr. Antonio (1855), 109.
RUMKLB, Bertha.
The Helmet of Navarre (1901), 53.
Russell, W. Clark, b. 1844.
An Ocean Free Lance (1881), 103, 161.
"Rutherford, Mark" (W. Hale White), b. 183a
The Revolution in Tanner's Lane (1887}, 124.
Rydbbrg, v., i828-~95.
The Last Athenian (1859), 25.
Sags, William.
Robert Toumay (1900), 95.
The Claybomes (1902), 112.
" Sagon, a."
When George III. was King {1899), I00i i^i-
Saintins, X. B., 1798—1865.
Picdola (1837), loo-
" Samarow, G." (O. Meding).
For Sceptre and Crown (1873—4), 113.
" Sand, George" (Baronne Dudevant, nie Dupin), 1804— 76w
The Master Mosaic Workers (1838), 49.
Consuelo (1842), 87.
The Countess of Rudolstadt (1843), 87.
Sargent, H. Garton.
A Woman and a Creed (1902), 51.
Sawyer, Josephine C.
Every Inch a King (1901), 41, 148.
ScHBFFEL, J. v., 1826—86.
Ekkehard (1857), 31, 135.
ScHUiMEL, H. J., b. 1825.
Maiy Hollis (i860), 7a
The Lifegoardsman (1888), 74.
Scollard, Clinton, b. i860.
A Man-at-arms (1898), 40.
The Cloistering of Ursula (1902), 119,
Soorr, Florence, and Alma Hodge.
The Round Tower (1904), 98, 161.
2IO
Scott, Sir Walter, 1771— 1832.
Count Robert of Pahs (1832), 33, I4S*
The Betrothed (1825), 34, 146.
The Talisman (1825), 34, 135, 146.
Ivanhoe (1819), 34, 135, 14O.
Castle Dangerous (1832), 37.
The Fair Maid of Perth (1828), 40, 148.
Quentin Durward (1823), 44, 136.
Anne of Geierstein (1829), 44.
The Monastery (1820), 54.
The Abbot (1820), 54, 136, 151.
Kenilworth (1821), 55, 136, 151.
The Fortunes of Nigel (1822), 57, 136, 152.
The Legend of Montrose (1819), 65, 137, 154*
Woodstock (1826), 67, 137, 154.
Peveril of the Peak (1822), 70.
Old Mortality (1816), 70, 137, 156.
Rob Roy (1818), 81, 138, 158.
Heart of Midlothian (1818), 83, 138, 159.
Waverley (1814), 84, 138, 159.
RedgannUet (1824), 89, 138.
The Bride of Lammermoor (1819), 120.
The Pirate (1821), 120.
The Black Dwarf (1816), 12a
Guy Mannering (1815), 122.
The Suigeon's Daughter (1827), 122.
The Antiquary (1816), 122.
St. Ronan's Well (1824), 124.
Sbawbll, M. £., b. i860.
Francezka (1902), 82.
Gavin Hamilton (1898), 87.
The Rock of the Lion (1899), 90, 160.
Little Jarvis(i89i), 98.
The Fortunes of Fi£ (1903), 100.
Sbblby, Edith.
Under Cheddar Clifi (1903), 99, i6i.
Shaw, Marie AdMe.
The Coast of Freedom (1902), 77.
Sbbllby, Mary {fUe Godwin), 1797— 1851.
Valperga (1823), 38.
Perkin Warbeck (1830), 44.
Shiplby, Mary E.
Like a Rasen Fiddler (1900), 48, 15a
Shorthousb, T. H., 1834 — 1903.
John Inglesant (1881), 62, 137.
SlENKIEWICZ, H., b. 1846.
Qu6Vadis?(i895), 22.
211
SiBNKiBwicz, 'Bi.—cofttinued,
Knights of the Cross (1900), 4a
With Fire and Sword (1884), 65, 137.
The Deluge (1886), 65.
Pan Michael (1888), 65.
SIMMS, W. G., 1806— 7a
The Yemassee (1835), 82.
The Foravers (1855), 93.
Eutaw (1656), 93.
Simpson, Violet A.
The Bonnet Conspirators (1903), lofi,
SiZBK, Kate T.
The Wooing of Osyth (1893), 29*
Sladsn, Douglas, b. 1856.
Admiral (1898), 97.
Smith, Albert, 1816—60.
The Marchioness of Brinvilliers (1846), 72.
Smith, Mrs. Fowler.
Journal of the Lady Beatrix Graham (187c}, 66b
Smith, F. Hopkinson. b. 1838.
The Fortunes of Oliver Horn (1902), 127.
Smith, Horace, 1779—1849.
Brambletye House (1826), 68.
Smollbit, T., 1721— 71.
Roderick Random (1748), 83.
Humphrey Clinker (1771), 121.
Snaith, J. C.
Patricia at the Inn (1901), 66.
Mistress Dorothy Marviti (1895), 75.
Spender, Harold, b. 1864.
At the Sign of the Guillotine (1895), 95-
Stablbs, Gordon, b. 1840.
Westward with Columbus (1894), 45.
Steel, Mrs. F. A., b. 1847.
On the Face of the Waters (1896), iia
Stephens, R. N.
An Enemy to the King (1897), 53.
A Gentleman Player (1899), 57.
Philip Winwood (1900), 92.
Stevens, Sheppard.
The Sword of Justice (1899), 54,
In the Eagle's Talon (1902), 99.
Stevenson, Burton Egbert
A Soldier of Virginia (1901), 87.
The Heritage (1903), 92.
Stevenson, R. L., 1850—94.
The Black Arrow (1888), 43, 149.
I
212
Stbvsnson, R. h.'—contittueei.
The Master of Ballantrae (1889), S4, 159.
Kidnapped (1886), 85, 138^ l6a
Catriona (1893), 85. 160.
St. Ives (1897), 106.
Treasure Island (1883), I2I.
Stimson, F. J.
King Noonett (1896), 68.
Stoddard, W. O.
The Errand Boy of Andrew Jackson (1902), 104.
Stowb, Mrs. H. Beecher, 181 1 — 96.
The Minister's Wooing (1859), 122.
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852), 126.
Strain, Mrs. E. H.
A Man's Foes (1895), 75, 157.
Strat£MRYER, Edward.
With Washington in the West (1901), 87.
Strauss, F., 1808—74,
Helon's Pilgrimage to Jerusalem (1824), 2a
SUDERMANN, Hermann, b. 1857.
Regina (Katzensteg) (1889)) 104.
Suttner, Baroness Von, b. 1843.
Lay Down your Arms (1889), 113.
SUTCUFFE, Halliwell, b. 187a
Willowdene Will (190X), 83.
Ricroft of Withens (1898), 84.
Mistress Barbara Cunhffe (Mistress Barbara) (1902), 124.
Swan, Annie S. (Mrs. Burnett Smith).
Adam Hepburn's Vow (1885), 67.
Tarkington, Booth, b. 1869.
Monsieur Beaucaire (1901), 80.
Tautphceus, Baroness T. Von («A Montgomery), d. 1893.
At Odds (1863), 102.
«* Taylor, George" (Professor Hausrath), b. 1837.
Antinous(i88o), 23.
JetU (1884), 26.
KlytU (1883). 52.
Taylor, H. C. Chatfield.
The Crimson Wing (1902), 1x4.
Taylor, M. Imlay.
The House of the Wizard (1899), 48.
On the Red Staircase (i89<S), 76.
The Rebellion of the Princess (1903)1 7^
An Imperial Lover (1899), 79.
213
Taylor, Philip Meadows, 1808—76.
A Noble Queen (1878), 57.
Tara (1863), 68,
Ralph Darnell (1865), 86.
Tippoo Sultaun (1840), 98.
Seeta (1873), '^o-
Thackeray, W. M., 181 1—63.
Esmond (1852), 78, 138.
Memoirs of Barry Lyndon (1 844), Sc.
The Virginians (1858—59), 88.
Vanity Fair (1848), 106.
Pendennis (i849h— 50) 125.
The Newcomes (1854—55), 125.
Thackeray, Miss, b. 1837.
Miss Angel (1875), 90. i6a
Thierry Gilbert Augustm, b. 1843.
Le Capitaine Sans-Fa9on (1882), 104.
Thomas, R. Ml
Trewem (1901), 108.
Thompson, Daniel P., 1795— 186&
The Green Mountain Boys (1839), 91*
Thompson, Maurice, b. 1844.
Alice of Old Vincennes (1901), 91.
Thorpe, Francis N.
The Spoils of Empire (1903), 47,
Thruston, Lucy M.
Mistress Brent (1901), 59.
Jack and his Island (1902), 104.
Tolstoy, Count A. K., 1818—75.
The Terrible Czar (1863), 54,
Tolstoy, Count Lyof N., b. 1828.
War and Peace (1864—69), 103. 138.
Sevastopol (1854— 56), 110.
Tomlinson, Everett T., b. 1859.
Under Colonial Colors (1902), 92.
A Lieutenant under Washington (1903), 92.
Washington's Young Aids (1897), 92.
Boy Soldiers of 1812 (1895), Z03.
Topelius, Z., 1818—98.
The Surgeon's Stories (1856—67) :— •
Tlie King's Ring (Times of Gustev Adolf). 64,
Times ofCharles XIL, 81.
Trollope, Anthony, 1815—82.
Oistle Richmond (i860), 125.
Barchester Towers (1857), 126.
Trowbridge, J. T., b. 1827.
Cudjo's Cave (1864), '"•
1
214
Tkowbridgb, W. H.'
A Girl of the Multitude (Egl^), (1902), 95.
Trub, John Preston.
On Guard ! Against Tory and Tarleton (1903), 93.
TUKNBULL, Mrs. L.
The Golden Book of Venice (1900), 54.
** Twain, Mark " (Samuel L. Clemens), b. 1835.
Personal RecoUections of Joan of Arc (1896), 42.
The Prince and the Pauper (1881), 49, 15a
Tynan, Katharine (Mrs. Hinkson), b. 1861.
A King's Woman (1902), 97, i6a
Tyson, J. Audrey.
The Stirrup Cup (1903), 93.
"Tytlbk, Sarah" (HenrictU Keddie), b. 1827.
In Clarissa's Day (1903), 80, 158.
A Loyal Little Maid (1899), 81, 159.
Gtoyenne Jacqueline (1865), 94.
U
Undbrdown, Emily.
Chiistina (1903), 36.
Vachbll, H. a., b. 1 861.
John Charity (1900), 108.
Valungs, H.
By Dulvercombe Water (1902), 75.
Van Zilb, Edward S.
With Sword and Crucifix (1899), 76.
ViGNY, A. de, 1797— 1863.
Cinq Mais (1826)9 63, 137.
W
Walford, Lucy B., b. 1845.
The Black Familiars (1903), 55.
Wallace, Lew, b. 1827.
Ben Hur (1880), 21.
The Prince of India (1893), 42.
The Fair God (1873), 47-
" Wallis, a. S. C" (Miss Opzoomer).
Royal Favour (1883), 49.
In Troubled Times (1879), 51.
215'
Walloth, Wilhelm.
The King's Treasure House (1883), 19.
Empress Octavia (Oktavia), (1883), 22.
Wa&bukton, Eliot, 1810—52.
Daiien (1851), 77.
Ward, Bryan W.
Tbit Forest Prince (1903), 36.
Wars, W., 1797—1852.
Aurelian (1838), 25.
The Last Days and Fall of Palmyra (Zenobia), (1838), 25.
Watson, H. B. Marriott-, K 1863.
Captain Fortune (1903 --4), 60.
The Rebel (1900), 73.
The Mohock (1903), 8a
The House Dividal (1901), 83.
Captain Sword (1903), 102.
Web of the Spider (1891), iii.
Watson, W. L.
Sir Sergeant (1899), 84.
Westall, W. 1834—93.
With the Red Eagle (1897), 103.
A Red Bridal (1899), 103.
Westbury, Hugh.
Acte (1890), 22.
Wbyman, Stanley, b. 1855.
The Story of Francis Cludde (1891), 50, 151*
The House of the Wolf (1890), 52.
Count Hannibal (1901), 53.
A Gentleman of France (1893), 53*
From the Memoirs of a Minister of France (1895). 54.
The Long Night (1903), 57-
Under the Red Robe (1894), 6^
The Man in Black (1894), 63.
My Lady Rotha (1894), 64.
Flore (1902) 65.
Shrewsbury (1898)1 7<^-
The House on the Wall (1902), 79.
The Castle Inn (1808), 89.
The Red Cockade (1895), 94.
Wharton, Edith.
The Valley of Decision (1902), 89.
Whisraw, F.
Harold the Norseman (1897), 32.
A Boyar of the Terrible (1896), 54.
A Splendid Impostor (1903), 57.
The lion Cub (1902), 76.
Mazeppa (1902), 77.
1
2l6
Whishaw, T.—coniintied.
Boris the Bear Hunter (1S95), &x
A Lost Anny (1896), 80.
Near the Tsar, Near Death {1903), 8a
Many Ways of Love (At the Court of Catherine) (i899)« 89.
A Forbidden Name (1901), 89,
Whistler, C. W., b. 1856.
Hayelok, The Dane (1900), 28.
A Thane of Wessex (1896), 29.
King Alfred's Viking {1899). 30.
Kins Olafs Kinsman (1898), 32.
Wulfric the Weapon Thane (1897), 32.
For King or Empress (1904), 33, 146.
WiLKlNS, Mary £., b. 1862.
The Heart's Highway (1900), 120.
Williams, Churchill.
The Captain (1903), 112.
Wilson, William R. A.
A Rose of Normandy (1903), 'jf'j,
Winofield, Lewis, 1842—91.
Lady Grizd (1884), 83.
My Lords of Strogne (1879), 99*
Wiseman, Cardinal, 1802—65.
Fabiola (The Church in the Catacombs) (1855), 27.
Wood, Charles.
On the Frontier with St. Clair (1902), 96.
Woods, Margaret L., b. 1856.
Esther Vanhomrigh (1891), 79.
Sons of the Sword (1901), I02.
YSATS, S. Levett. I
The Honour of Sayelli (1895), 46. ;
The Traitor's Way {1902), 51.
Chevalier d'Auriac (1897), 53.
The Lord Protector (1902}, 67, 145.
Yeoman, William Joseph.
A Woman'^s Courier (1896), 16.
Yonge, Charlotte M., 1823— 1901.
The Little Duke (1854), 30.
The Prince and the Page (1866), 36, 147.
The Lances of Lynwood (1855), 39, 147.
The Caged Lion (1870), 41, 148.
Two Penniless Princesses (i 891), 43, 149.
217
YONGBi Charlotte 11,^ continued.
Grisly GrisseU (1893), 43, 149-
The Dove m the Eagle's Nest (1866), 44.
The Armourer's Prentices (1884), 47, 15a
The Chaplet of Pearls (1868), 53.
Unknown to History (1882), 55, 151.
Stray Pearls (1883), 63.
A Reputed Changeling (1889), 73, 157.
Kenneth (1850), 103.
Zangwill, I., b. 1864.
The Maker of Lenses (1898), 71.
Zola E., 1840— 1902.
The Downfall (1892), 114.
INDEX OF TITLES
INDEX OF TITLES.
Abbot (The), 54, 136, iji.
About Catherine de Medici, 52.
Across the Salt Seas, 78, 155.
Acte, 22.
Adam Bede, w,
Adam Hepburn's Vow, 67.
Admiral, 97.
Adventures of a Goldsmith, loa
Adventures of Oiptain Bonneville,
123.
Adventures of Cynmo de Bergerac,
Adventures of Francois Founder, 95.
Adventures of Gerard, 105, 106.
Adventures of Harry Revel, 102.
Adventures of the Comte de la
Muette, 95.
Afloat with Nelson, loi, 161.
After Worcester, 67, 155.
Aftermath, 126.
Ag^nor de Maul^n, 39.
Agincourt, 41, 149.
A^es Surriage, 86.
Ahnen, (Die), 25.
Aide^e-Camp, loi.
Aladdin O'Brien, iii.
Alarums and Excursions, 80, 102.
Alfgar, the Dane, 32.
Alice Lorraine, 102.
Alice of Old Vincennes, 91.
Alton Locke, 125.
Amone the (>mps, 113.
Amor Victor, 23.
Amyot Brou^h, 87, 160,
Ange Pitou, 93.
Angel of the Covenant, 66,
Angelot, 104.
Annals of an Anglo-Saxon Family,
29.
Annals of the Parbh, I2i.
Ann^ des Merveilles, 51.
Anne of Geierstein, 44.
Anthony Evcrton, 60, 153.
Antinous, 23.
Antiquary (The), 122.
Antonia, 59.
Antonina, 28.
Armourer's Prentices, 47, 15a
Arthur Mervyn, 122.
As Others Saw Him, 22.
Ascanio, 49.
Ashes of Empire, 1 14.
Assassins (The), 34.
Astoria, 123.
At Agincourt, 41, 149.
At Odds, 102.
At the Court of Catherine, 89.
At the Point of the Bayonet, 99, 161.
At the Point of the Sword, 107.
At the Siege of Quebec, 92.
At the Sign of the Guillotine, 95.
At War with Pontiac, 9a
Atelier du Lys, 94.
Attila, 27.
Audrey, 121.
Aurelian, 25.
B
Balmoral, 80.
Banner of St. George, 39, 148.
Barbara Blomberg, 49.
Barbara Ladd, 91.
Barbara "V^^nslow : Rebel, 74.
Barchester Towers, 126.
Barlasch of the Guard, 103.
Barnaby Lee, 71.
Bamaby Rudge, 90, 138, i6a
Baron and Squire, 64.
Baronet in Corduroy, 78.
222
Baron's Sons, 109.
Bath Comedy, 85.
BAton Sinister, 73.
Bataglia di Benevento, 35.
Battle of the Strong, 97.
Battleground (The), 1 1 1 .
Battlement and Tower, 61, 153.
Bayard's Coorier, 112.
Beatrice Cend, 54.
Beau's Comedy, 122.
Beauchamp's Career, 126.
Beaufoy Romances, 42.
Before the Dawn, 112.
Beg^rs (The), 50.
Beggars of the Sea, 51.
Begum's Daughter, 77.
Beleaguered, 64.
Belshazzar, 19.
Ben Hut, 21. •
Bene the Briton, 22.
Betrothed (The), 34, 146-
Betrothed Lovers, 63, 137.
Betty Alden, 58.
Big Brother, 104.
Birthright (The), $$-
Bissula, 25.
Bivouac (The), 102, i6i.
Black Arrow, 43, 149.
Black Disc, 45.
Black Douglas, 42.
Black Dwarf, 120.
Black Familiars, 55.
Black Prophet, 124.
Black ShilUng, 77.
Black Tor, 58, 152.
Black Tulip, 71.
Black Wolfs Breed, 72.
Blennerhassett, 99.
Blithedale Romance, 125.
Blockade (The), 105.
Blue Banner, 35.
Blue Flag, 74.
Blue Pavilions, 75, 157.
Boerenkryg (De), 96.
Bonnet Conspirators, 106.
Boris the Bear Hunter, 80.
Both Sides of the Border, 41, 148.
Bow of Orange Ribbon, 41.
Boy of the First Empire, loa
Boy Soldiers of 1812, 103.
Boyar of the Terrible, 54.
Boyne Water, 75.
Boys of 1745, 86.
Braes of Yarrow, 47.
Brambletye House, 68.
Brave Resolve, 63.
Braves Gens, 114.
Bravest of the Brave, 79, 158.
Bride of Lammermoor, I20.
Bride of the Nile, 28.
Brigand (The), 52.
Brinton Eliot, 91.
Builders of the Waste, 27.
Burgomaster of Berlin, 44.
Burgomaster's Wife, 51.
Bunal of the Guns, 1 13.
Burning of Rome, 22.
Business in Great Waters, 96.
By Celia's Arbour, 127.
By Dulveroombe Water, 75.
By England's Aid, 51.
By Order of the Company, 59.
By Pike and Dyke, 51.
By Right of Conquest, 47.
By Stroke of Sword, 55.
By the North Sea, 75, 157.
By Weeping Cross, 41.
Cadet Days, 92.
Csedwalla, 28.
Oged Lion, 41, 148.
' Callias, 20.
Callista, 24, 135.
Calvert of Strathore, 93.
Cambria's Chieftain, 41, 148.
Camp of Refuge, 32, 145.
Camp on the Severn, 24.
Cap'n Nat's Treasure, 90, i6a
Capitaine Sans-Fa9on, 104*
Capsina, 107.
Captain (The), 112.
Captam Fortune, 60.
Captain Fracasse, 120.
Captain Jacobus, 67, 155.
Captain of the Guard, 42.
323
Captain of the Janizaries, 43.
Captain of the Wight, 44, 15a
Captain Sam, 104.
Captain Satan, 71.
Captain Singleton, 12a
Captain Sword, 102.
Captive of the Roman Eagles, 25.
Cardigan, 91.
Cardinal and His Conscience, 52.
Cardinal's Page, 42.
Carved Cartoon, 71.
Castle Daly, 125, 162.
Castle Dangerous, 37.
Castle in Spain, 102.
Castle Inn, 89.
Castle of Ehrenstein, 35.
Castle of the White Flag, 114.
Castle of Twilight, 1 19.
Castle Omeragh, 66.
Castle Rackrent, 121.
Castle Richmond, 125.
Catriona, 85, 1 6a
Cavalier (The), 112.
Cavaliers (The), 61.
Cerise, 82.
Challenge of Barletta, 46.
Champion of the FaiUi, 41, 149.
Chantrey Priest of Bamet, 43, 149.
Chaplain of the Fleet, 85, 160.
Chaplet of Pearls,53.
Charles O'Malley, 102, 161.
Cheap Jack Zita, 106.
Cherry and Violet, 69, 156.
Chevidier d'Auriac, 53.
Chevalier d*Harmenthal, 81.
Chevalier de Maison Rouge, 93.
Chevalier of the Splendid Crest, 37,
147.
Chien d'Or, 88.
Children of the New Forest, 61 , 1 54.
Choir Invisible, 122.
Chouans (The), 99.
Christ and Anti-Christ, 26.
Christina, 36.
Chronicle of the Reign of Charles
IX., 52, 136.
Chronicles of the Schonberg Cotta
Family, 46.
Chnrch in the Catacombs, 27.
Cinq Mars, 63, 137.
Citizen Bonaparte, 94.
Cito^enne Jacqueline, 94.
Clanssa Harlowe, 121.
Clash of Arms, 72.
Claybomes (The), 112.
Clementina, 81, 159.
Cleopatra, 21.
Clerk of Oxford, 36, 147.
Cloister and the Hearth, 45, 136.
Cloistering of Ursula, 119.
Coast of Freedom, 77.
Colloquies of Edward Osborne, 50^
Colonial Series, 87.
Colonials (The), 91.
Columbia, 45.
Columbian Historical Novels, 45.
Commune (La), 114.
Companions of Jehu, 98.
Comtesse de Chamy, 93.
Conquering and to Conquer, 26.
Conqueror (The), 98.
Conscript (The), 105, 139.
Constable of St. Nicholas, 45.
Consnelo, 87.
Copperhead (The), 112.
Comet of Horse, 79, 1^8.
Comet Strong of Ireton s Horse, 61,
Coronation, 41.
Corrageen, 97.
Count Hannibal, 53.
Count of the Saxon Shore, 27.
Count Robert of Paris, 33, 145.
Countess Alys, 38.
Countess of Rudolstadt, 87.
Countess Tekla, 119.
Country in Danger, 94.
Courtship of Morrice Buckler, 74.
Cranford, 125.
Creoy and Poitiers, 38, 148.
Cricnton, J3.
Crimson Si^ 75.
Crimson Wmg, 1 14.
Crisis (The), 99, iii.
Cromwell's Own, 6a
224
Croppies, Lie Down, 98.
Croppy (The), 98.
Cross of Pearls, 38.
Crossing (The), 99.
Crowborough Beacon, 103.
Cttdjo'sCave, iii.
D
Dagger and the Cross, 69.
Dame de Monsoreao, 53.
Daniel Herrick, 69.
Darien, 77.
Dark o' the Moon, 81.
Darkness and Dawn, 22.
Damley, 48, 150.
Daughter of France, 6$.
Daughter of New France, 76.
Dauntless, 66^ 154.
Day in the Wilderness, 11 2.
Days of Bruce, 37, 147.
Dayspring (The), I13.
Death of the Gods, 26.
Deb Clavel, 74, 157.
Debit and Credit, 125.
Deborah, 20.
Deborah's Diary, 70, 155.
Defender of the Faith, 48.
Deluge (The), 65.
Denis Dent, 126.
Denounced, 84.
D^sastre (Le), 114.
Deserter and other Stories, 43^ 112.
Desiderio, 119.
Destiny, 123.
Deutsche Krieg, 64.
Devereux, 79.
Dilemma (The), 1 10.
Disputed V.C., iii, 162.
Dmitri, 57.
Dr. Antonio, 109.
Dr. Le Baron and His Daughters, 58.
Dogs of War, 60, 152.
Dominique's Vengeance, 54.
Domitia, 23.
DofiaYsabel, 102.
Doris Kingsley, 92.
Dorothy Forster, 81, 138, 158.
Dorothy South, 127.
Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall, 55.
Dove in the Eagle's Nest, 44.
Downfall (The), 114.
Dragon and the Raven, 30.
Draytonsand the Davenants, 62, 153.
Dream Charlotte, 95.
Dreamers of the Ghetto, 71.
D'ri and 1, 104*
Duance Pendray, 80, 158.
Duke of Britain, 26.
Duke of Monmouth, 74.
Duke of Stockbridge, 93.
Duke*s Own, 98, 161.
Duke's Page, 49.
Duke's Servants, 59.
Dutchman's Fireside, 85.
E
Early Dawn, 29.
Eben Holden, 127.
Edwy the Fair, 31.
Egl6e, 95.
Egyptian Princess, 19, 135.
Eight Days, no.
Ekkehard, 31, 135.
^1 Ombu, 102.
El^ve de Garrick, 90.
Emperor (The), 23.
Emperor's Doom, 113.
Empress Octavia, 22.
Enemy to the King, 53.
Epicurean (The), 24.
Episodios Nacionales, 100^ 10 1.
Epoque (Une), 114.
Eric the Archer, 39, 148.
Erling the Bold, 30.
Errand Boy of Andrew Jackson, 104.
Esmond, 78, 138.
Esther Vanhomrigh, 79.
Ethne, 66, 154.
Eutaw, 93.
Evelina, 122.
Eveiy Inch a King, 41, 14S.
Exiled Scot, 84.
Exploits of Br^adier Gerard, 105.
22$
Fabiola, 27.
Face to Face with Napoleon, 105,
16a.
Fair God, 47.
Fair Tacobite, 79.
Fair Maid of Perth, 40, 148.
Fairfax, 86.
Fall of Asgard, 32.
Fall of Athens, 20.
Fallen Fortunes, 78, 158.
Fallen Star, 87.
Fanion, 19.
Fatal Gift, 9a
Father Darcy, 58.
Favor of Princes, 88.
Felidtas, 27.
Felix Holt, 124.
Fiddler of Lugau, loi.
Fiery Dawn, 107.
Fife and Drum at Louisbourg, 86.
Firebrand (The), 107.
First Fleet Family, 96.
Flame of Fire, 57.
Flamingo Feather, 54.
Flore, 05.
Flotsam, no.
Flower o* the Com, 78,
Flowers of the Dust, 114.
Foes of the Red Cockade, 94.
Follies of Captain Daly, loi.
Follow the Gleam, 62.
For Faith and Fatherland, 51.
For Faith and Freedom, 73, 156.
For Freedom, 109.
For God and Gold, 55, 151.
For His People, 65.
For King or £mpress, 33, 146.
For Sceptre and Crown, 113.
For the Old Flag, no, 162.
For the Red Rose, 43, 149.
For the Religion, 52.
For the Right, 107.
For the Term of his Natural Uft,
125.
For the White Rose, 8z.
For the White Rose of Anio, 84,
159.
Forayers (The), 93.
Forbidden Name, 89.
Forerunner (The), 45.
Forest Days, 36^ 147.
Forest Folk, 124.
Forest Lovers, 119, 139.
Forest Outlaws, 34, 146k
Forest Prince, 36.
Forge in the Forest, I2i*
Fortune's my Foe, 88.
Fortunes of Claude, 84, 159.
Fortunes of Fifi, loa
Fortunes of Nigel, 57, 136, 153.
Fortunes of Oliver Horn, 127.
Forty-Five (The), 53.
Fra Lippo Lippi, 42.
Francezka, 82.
Frederick the Great and His Family,
87.
Free Lance in a Far Land, 98.
Free Soil, Free Soul, S6.
Free to Serve, 82.
Friend of Cscsar, 21.
Friend of Nelson, loa
Friend Olivia, 68.
Friend with the Countersign, 112.
From Behind the Arras, 82.
From Kingdom to Colony, 91.
From the Memoirs of a Minister of
France, 54.
Frown of Majesty, 72.
Gallant Grenadier, no, 162.
Gallant Quaker, 68.
Garden of Swords, 1 14,
Gathering Clouds, 26.
Gathering of Brother Hilarius, 39.
Gavin Hamilton, 87.
Gelimer, 27.
General George, loo.
Gentleman of France, 53.
Gentleman Player, 57.
Geoffrey Hamlyn, 126.
Girl at the Halfway House, 127.
Girl of the Multitude, 95.
Gladiators (The), 22«
Gleaming Dawn, 41.
326
God Save England, 39.
God Save King Alfred, 3a
God Save the King, 68.
God Seeker. 119.
God, the King, my Brother, 39,
14S.
God WIls It, 33.
Golden Arrow, 68.
Golden Book of Venice, 54.
Golden Dog, 88.
Golden Fleece, 72.
Golden Galleon, 56, 152.
Gorgo, 2a
Grandissimes (The), 123.
Grantlcy Fenton, 105, 162.
Great Shadow, 105.
Great Treason, 92.
Green Book, 107, 139.
Green Mountain Boys, 91.
Grey Cloak, 65.
Grisly Grissiell, 43, 149.
Guavas the Tinner, 56.
Guerre des Paysans, 96.
Guy Fawkes, 58, 152.
Guy Mannering, 122.
Gwynnett of Thornhaugb, 79.
H
HalU The Pedlar, 82.
Hammer (The), 2a
Harold, 32, 135, 145.
Harold the Norseman, 32.
Harry Ogilvie, 66.
Hastings the Pirate, 3a
Haunt of Ancient Peace, 62, 153.
Haus Eckberg, 64.
Havelok the Dane, 28.
Head of a Hundred, 59.
Heart of Midlothian, 83, 138, 159.
Heart's Highway, 120.
Heilige (Der), 34.
Heir of Hascombe Hall, 46, 150.
Helmet of Navarre, 53.
Helon*s Pilgrimage to J emsalem, 2a
Henry Bourland, 112.
Henry VIH. and his Court, 48.
Henry Masterton, 65, 154.
Herald of the West, 104.
Heralds of Empire, 120.
Hereward the Wake, 32, 145.
Heritage (The), 92.
Heritage of Langdale, 80, 158.
Hero King, 3a
Hero of the Highlands, 84, 159.
Heroine of the Strait, 9a
Hetty Wesley, 83.
His Counterpart, 72.
His Grace ot Osmonde, 12a
His Grace o' the Gunne, 69.
His Heurt's Desire, 63.
Hohensollem, 34.
Holmby House, 61, 153.
Homo Sum, 25.
Honor of Savelli, 46.
Hoosier Schoolmaster, 125*
Hope the Hermit, 76, 157
Horse-shoe Robinson, 93.
Hosen des Hemn von Bredow, 46.
Hour and the Man, 100.
House Divided, 83.
House of De Mailly, 88.
House of the Wizard, 48.
House of the Wolf, 52.
House on the Wall, 79.
Household of Sir Thomas More, 47,
150.
How Dickon came by His Name, 43,
149.
How I Won my Spurs, 36, 147.
Hugh Gwyeth, 61, 154.
Hugh Wynne, 91.
Humphrey Clinker, 121.
Hungarian Brothers, 98.
Hungarian Nabob, 124.
Hypatia, 27, 135.
I Promessi Sposi, 137,
I Crown Thee King, 50, 151.
I Lived as I Listed, 68.
If I were King, 44.
Imperial Lover, 79.
In iElfred's D^s, 30.
In Blue and White, 92.
227
In Chaucer's Maytime, 39.
In Clarissa's Day, 80, 158.
In Colston's Days, 66.
In Exitii Israel S9.
In Fur Granada, 51.
In Freedom's Cause, 37, 147.
In Furthest Ind, 77.
In High Places, 6a
In His Name, 34.
In Jacobite Da3r8, 74, 157.
In "Kedar's Tents, 107.
In Kings' Byways, 65, 79.
In Kings' Houses, 78.
In Lincoln Green, 34, 146.
In Old New York, 86.
In Press-gang Days, 97, 160.
In Spite of All, 62, 154.
In Taunton Town, 74, 156.
In the Blue Pike, 46.
In the Day of Adversity, 72.
In the Days of Chivalry, 38, 148.
In the Days of King James, 58
In the Days of Prince Hal, 41, 148.
In the Days of St. Anselm, 33, 145.
In the Eagle's Talon, 99.
In the East Country with Sir Tho-
mas Browne, 70^ 156.
In the Golden Days, 70, 156.
In the Irish Brigade, 79.
In the King's Favor, 47.
In the King's Service, 66, 154.
In the Olden Time, 47.
In the Palace of the King, 51.
In the Service of Rachel, Lady
Russell, 70, 156.
In the Shadow of the Crown, 38.
In the Valley, 91.
In the Wake of King James, 76.
In the War with Mexico, ic^.
In the Wars of the Roses, 43, 149.
In the Year of Waterloo^ 105, 162.
In the Year '13, 104.
In Troubled Times, 51.
In Westminster Choir, 70.
Inca's Ransom, 47.
Inimitable Mrs. Massingham, 98.
In't Wonderjaer, 51.
Interpreter (The), iia
Intriguers' Way, 80.
Invasion (The), 29.
Iron Brigade, 112.
Isabella Orsini, 41.
Isegrimm, loi.
Ishmael, 108.
Island of Sorrow, 99.
Isle of Unrest, 113.
It is Never Too Late to Mend, 126.
Ivan de Biron, 87.
Ivanhoe, 34, 135, 146.
lyvinda, 22.
{ack and His Island, 104.
acobite (The), 76.
Jacobite Exile, 81.
Jacquerie (The), 39.
Jair the Aix>8tate, 19.
Jan Van £lselo, 50.
Janice Meredith, 92.
Jaidindu Roi, 113.
Jenetha's Venture, iia
Jessamy Bride, 85.
Jetta, 26.
Jesebel, 19.
ohn Burnet of Bams, 70.
ohn Charity, 108.
ohn Halifax, Gentleman, 123.
John Inglesant, 62, 137.
John Marmaduke, 66, 154.
ohn Maxwell's Marriage, 12 1.
John of Gerisan, 1 13.
John of Strathboume, 49.
John Splendid, 65.
John Standish, 39, 148.
toscelyn Cheshire, 92.
Journal of the Lady Beatruc Gra-
ham, 66.
Journal of the Plague, 69.
oume3rman Love, 109.
Judith Shakespeare, 58.
Org Jenatsch, 64.
K
Kallistratus, 20.
Kampf um Rom, 28.
Karine, 46,
0—2
228
Karl of Erbach, 64.
Karolinema, 8 1.
Kate Canaeron of Brax, 4a
Katerfelto, 122.
Kathleen Clare, 66.
Kathleen Mavouraeen, 97.
Katrina, 127.
Katzensteg, 104.
Kenilworih, 55, 136, 151.
Kenneth, 103.
Kensington Palace, 75, 157.
Kent Squire, 79.
Kentucky Cardinal, 126.
Kidnapped, 85, 138, 160.
Kilgorman, 97, 161.
King Alfred's Viking, 30.
King and His Campaigners, 81.
King by the Grace of God, 62.
King for a Summer, 82.
King Noanett, 68.
King Olaf' 8 lUnsman, 32.
ICing with Two Faces, 89i
King's Agent, 75.
King's Blue Boys, 87.
King's Deputy, 97.
King's Henchman, 53.
King's Own, 97.
King's Pawn, 53.
King's Pistols, 66,
King's Reeve, 36, 147,
King's Ring, 64.
King's Signet, 72.
Sling's Sons, 29.
King's Treasure House, 1 9.
Kin^s Woman, 97, 160,
Kleme Romane aus der Volkerwan*
derung, 27.
Klytia, 52.
Knight of the Golden Chain, 33, 146.
Knights of the Cross, 4a
Konnak the Viking, 3a
Lady Grizel, 83.
lAdy of Foit St John, 63.
Lady of Quality, 120.
Lady of the Regency, 106.
Lady's Honour, 79.
L'An '93, 94.
Lafitte of Louisiana, 103.
Lally of the Brigade, 77-
Lancashire Witches, 58.
Lances of Lynwood, 39, 147.
Last Athenian, 25.
Last Days and Fall of Palmyra, 25*
Last Days of Pompeii, 22, 135.
Last of the Barons, 43, 136, 149.
I^ast of the Qiflfords, 68, 155.
Last of the Mohicans, 88.
Last Recruit of Clare's, 88.
Lavengro, 123.
Lawrence Clavering, 81.
Lay Down your Arms, ilj.
Lazarre, loi.
Legend of Montrose, 65, 137, 154.
Legend of Reading Abbey, 34, 145.
Legends of the Province House, 122.
L^a, 45.
Lest We Forget, 5a
Liditenstetn, 46.
Lieutenant under Washington, 92.
Life and Death of Ric^urd Yea-
and-Nay, 34.
Life, Treason, and Death of James
Blount, 61,
Lifeguardsman (The), 74.
Like a Rasen Fiddler, 48, X5a
Like Another Helen, 86.
Lion Cub, 76.
Lion of Flanders, 37.
Lion of Janina, 107.
Lion of St. Mark, 40.
Lion of the North, 64.
Lion of Wessex, 3a
Lion's Brood, 20.
Lion's Whelp, 67, 155.
Lionel Lincoln, 91.
Little Captive Lad, 67, 15$.
Uttle Chie( 59.
Little Duke, 30.
Little Huguenot, 88.
Little Tarvis, 98.
Little Novels of Italy, 119.
Little Saint of God, 95.
Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come^
III.
229
Lochinvar, 75.
London Pride, 68.
Long Night, 57.
Long Wa, 39.
Longfeather, the Peacemaker, 59.
Lord of Dyneover, 37, 147.
Lord of the Dark-Red Star, 35.
Lord of the Soil, 119.
Lord Protector, 67, 155.
Lords of Strogue, 99.
Lords of the North, 124.
Lords of the World, 2a
Loma Doone, 73, 138, 156.
Lorraine, 113.
Lost Army, 80.
Lost Lady of Old Years, 84.
Lost Treasure of Trevlyn, 58, 152.
Love and Honour, loi.
Loye like a Gipsy, 92.
Love thrives in War, 103.
Lover Fugitives, 73, 157.
Loyal Little Maid, 81, 159.
Lysbeth, 5a
M
MacMahon, (The), 76.
Madame ThMse, 94*
Mademoiselle Mathilde, 94*
Mademoiselle Mori, 109.
Maelcho, 56.
Maid at Arms, 91.
Maid Marian, 34, 136.
Maid of Florence, 46, 136.
Maid of London Bridge, 49, 151.
Maid of Maiden Lane, 96.
Maid of Sker, 122.
Maid, Wife, or Widow? 113.
Maiden and Married Life of Mary
Powell, 62, 70^ 137, 153.
Maids of Paradise, 1 14.
Maker of Lenses, 71.
Making of Christopher Ferringham,
67.
Mamzelle Fifine, 89.
Man-at-Arms, 4a
Man in Black, 63.
Man of his Age, 52.
Man's Fear, 1 19.
Man's Foes, 75, 157.
Manasseh, 109.
Manchester Man, 106.
Many Ways of Love, 89.
March on London, 40, 148.
Marchioness of Brinvilliers, 72.
Marco Visconti, 38.
Margaret, 123.
Margherita Pusterla, 38.
Margot the Court Shoemaker, 72.
Marguerite de Roberval, 49.
Marguerite de Valois, 52.
Marie de Mancini, 65.
Marietta, 44.
Marius the Epiairean, 24, 135.
Mary Barton, 126, 162.
Mary Hamilton, 55.
Mary HoUis, 70.
Mary of Burgundy, 44.
Mary of Lorraine, 47, 151.
Master Beggars, 50.
Master Mosaic Workers, 49.
Master of Ballantrae, 84, 159.
Master of Gray, 55.
Master of the Musicians, 85, 159.
Master of Warlock, 127.
Master Skylark, <6, 152.
Masters of the World, 23.
Mazeppa, 77.
Member for Paris, 113.
Memoirs of a Cavalier, 62.
Memoirs of a Physician, 88.
Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, 85.
Men of the Moss Hags, 7a
Merry-Mount, 59.
Mervyn Clitberoe, 124.
Micah Clarke, 73, 156.
Middlemarch, 124.
Midst the Wild Carpathians, 71.
Mills of God, 96.
Minister's Wooing, 122.
Miriam Cromwell, 61, 153.
Mischief of a Glove, 50.
Mis^rables (Les), 106.
Miser's Daughter, 83.
Mis'ess Joy, 106.
Miss Angel, 90, 160.
Mississippi Bubble, 82.
230
Mistress Barbara, 124.
Mistress Barbara Cunlifiey 124.
Mistress Brent, 59.
Mistress Dorothy Marrin, 75.
Mistress Nancy Moleswoith, S4,
Mistress Spitfire, 6a
Mito Yashiki, 109.
Mohawks, 82.
Mohock (The), 80.
Monastery (The), 54*
Monk of Fife, 42.
Mononia, 108.
Monsieur Beaucaire, 8a
Monsieur Martin, 81.
Montezuma's Daughter, 47.
Moonfleet, 85.
Mossesfrom an Old Manse, 120, 121.
Most Famous Loba, 35.
MS. in a Red Box, 60.
Mutineer (The), 96.
My Friend Anne, 48, 15a
My Lady Joanna, 37, 147.
My Lady Marda, 94.
My Lady of Orange, 51.
My Lady of the Bass, 75.
My Lady Rotha, 64.
My Lord Winchenden, 68.
My Mistress the Queen, 75, 157.
N
Nameless Castle, loi.
Nameless Nobleman, 58.
Narcissus, 23.
Nesera, 21.
Near the Tsar, Near Death, 80.
'Neath the Hoof of the Tartar, 36.
Ned Leger, 83, 159.
Nell Gwynn, Comedian, 69.
Nero, 22.
Nessa, 67.
Nest of Linnets, 9a
New Canterbury Tales, 58.
Newcomes (The), 125.
Niccol6 de' Lapi, 46, 136.
Noble Purpose Nobly Won, 42.
Noble Queen, 57.
No^miy 42.
Not for Crown or Sceptre, 46.
Notre Dame, 45, 136.
Ocean Free Lance, 103, 161.
O'Donnel, 123.
Oktavia, 22.
Olaf the Glorious, 31.
Old Blackfriars, 61, 152.
Old Chelsea Bun House, 78, 158.
Old Dominion, 73.
Old London Nosegay, 60, 153.
Old Maigaret, 40.
Old Mortalitv, 70, 137, 156.
Old St Paul's, 69, 155.
Oldfield, 126.
Olympe de Cloves, 88.
On Both Sides of the Sea, 62, 155.
On Guard ! Against Tory and Tar-
leton, 93.
On the £(j^ of the Storm, 94.
On the Face of the Waters, i la
On the Frontier with St. Clair, 96.
On the Red Staircase, 76.
One of the 28th, 105, 162.
One Queen Triumphant, 55.
One Traveller Returns, 24.
Onesimus, 22.
Orange Girl (The), 9a
Otterboume, 4a
Our Forefathers, 25, 29.
Our Lady of Darkness, 95*
Out with Garibaldi, 109.
Outlaw (The), 74.
Outlaws of the Marches, 561.
Outside and Overseas, 86.
Over the Border, 6a
Ovingdean Grange, 67.
Pabo the Priest, 33, 145.
Page of the Duke <^ Savoy, 52;
Pakce of Spies, 103.
Pan Michael, 65.
Parisians (The), 114.
Parson Kelly, 80.
Parson's Daughter, 96, i6a
Passe Rose, 29.
231
Patricia at the Inn, 66.
Pearl Maiden, 22.
Peg Woffington, 85.
Pendennis, 12K.
Penruddock of the White Lambs, 67.
Penshnist Castle, 56, 152.
Per Aspera, 24.
Peri] of the Sword, iia
Perkin Warbeck, 44.
Perlycross, 125.
Perpetua, 24.
Personal Recollections of Joan of
Arc, 42.
Peveril of the Peak, 7a
Pharaoh and the Priest, 19.
Philip Augustus, 35, 146.
Philip Nolan's Friends, 99.
Philip RoUo, 64.
Philip Winwood, 92.
Philochristus, 21, 135.
Picdola, loa
Pikemen (The), 9S.
Pilot (The), 91.
Pirate (The), 12a
Plebiscite (The), II3,
Plowshare and the Sword, 63.
Poor Sons of a Day, 84.
Pretty Michal, 65.
Pride and Prejudice, 123.
Pride of Jennioo, 89.
Prince and the Page, 36, 147.
Prince and the Pauper, 49, 150.
Prince of Good Fellows, 47.
Prince of India, 42.
Princesse de Cl^es, 71.
Prisoners of Hope, 73.
Pnisias, 21.
Puritan's Wife, 69, 155.
Queen can do no wrong, 106.
Queen of Nine Days, 50, 151.
Queen's Maries, 54, 151.
Queen's Necklace, 89.
Queen's Quair, 54*
Queen's Serf, 79.
Qnentin Duxward, 44, 136.
Quintus Claudius, 23.
Qod Vadis, 22.
Ra&el, loi.
Raiders (The), 81.
Ralph Darnell, 86.
Ralph Wynward, 56, 152.
Ravenshoe, 109, 162.
Rebel (The), 73.
Rebellion of the Princess, 76.
Rebels (The), 97.
Red Axe, 64.
Red Badge of Courage, iii.
Red Bridal, 103.
Red Cockade, 94.
Red Republic, 114.
Red Rock, 113.
Red Rose and White, 43, X5a
Red Shirts, 95.
Redgauntlet, 89, 138.
Reds of the Mid[i, 94.
Refugees (The), 72.
Regent's Daughter, 82.
Regina, 104.
Reputed Changeling, 73, 157.
Resurrection of the Gods, 45.
Revolution in Tanner's Lane, 124*
Rhymer (The), 96.
Richard Carrel, 91, 99.
Richelieu, 63.
Ricroft of Withens, 84.
Rienzi, 38.
Ringan Gilhaize, 74.
Rii^ Heirs, 32, 145.
Road to Frontenac, 76.
Rob Roy, 81, 138, 158.
Robber Baron of Bedford Castle, 36^
146.
Robert Annys, Poor Priest, 39.
Robert Aske, 48, 150.
Robert Tournay, 95.
Rock of the lion, 90, i6a
Roderick Random, 83.
Rodney Stone, 99.
Roger Malvin's Burial, 121.
Romance of Dijon, 95.
232
Romance of Dollard, 68.
Romance of Gilbert Holmes, io8.
Romance of Leonardo da Vind, 45.
Romance of the First Consul, 100.
Romance of the Lady Arbell, 58.
Romance of the Tuileries, 109.
Romance of War, 102, i6i.
Romola, 44, 136.
Ropes of Sand, 96.
Rory O'More, 97.
Rose of Normandy, 77.
Rosslyn's Raid, 56.
Round Tower, 98, 161. ,
Round Anvil Rock, 123.
Royal Favour, 49,
Royal Georgie, 107.
Royal Sisters, 50.
Royston Gower, 35.
Rufus, or the Red King, 33.
RuheistdieErste BUrgerpflicht, lOl.
Runnymedeand LincolnFair,35, 146.
Rupert by the Grace of God, 63.
Said, the Fishennan, 127.
St CUir of the Isles, 42.
St George and St Michael, 61.
St George for England, 38, 148.
St Ives, 106.
St. James's, 78.
St. Katherine's by the Tower, 95,
St. Leon, 49.
St. Ronan's Well, 124.
Saint of the Dragon's Dale, 37.
Salammb6, 20, 135.
Salathiel, 21.
Sancta Paula, 26.
Saragossa, loi.
Sarchedon, 19.
Scarlet Banner, 27.
Scarlet Letter, 120, 139.
Scholar of Lindisfame, 28.
Scottish Cavalier, 74, 157.
Scottish Chiefs, 37, 147.
Scourge of God, 78.
Seats of the Mighty, 87.
Seeta, iia
Seething Days, 49) 251-
Serapis, 26.
Serf (The), 33.
Servants of Sm, 82.
Sevastopol, no.
Shadow of a Crime, 68.
Shadow of the Sword, 105.
Shadow of VictoiT, 123.
Shaven Crown, 28.
She who hesitates^ 8a
She- Wolves of Machecoul, 107.
Sheepstealers (The), 125.
Shirley, 123.
Shoes of Fortune, 85.
Shrewsbury, 76.
Shrouded Face, 56.
Shut in, 51.
Siege of Lady Resolute, 78.
Siege of Norwich Castle, 33, 145.
Siege of York, 60, 154.
Signal Boys, 104.
Signors of the Night, 57.
Silas Vemey, 69, 156.
Silk and Steel, 62.
Silver Cross, 65.
Simon Dale, 69.
Singer of Marly, 77.
Sins of a Saint, 31.
Sir Christopher, 59.
Sir Ludar, 55, 152.
Sir Mortimer, 55.
Sir Ralph Esher, 69.
Sir Sergeant, 84.
Sbter to Evangeline, I2I.
Sisters (The), 2a
Sketches of Christian Life, 29,
Slaves of the Padishah, 71.
Smith Brunt, 104.
Soldier of Manhattan, 88.
Soldier of Virginia. 87.
Soldier Rigdale, 59.
SonofiElla, 28.
Son of the Revolution, 99.
Song of a Single Note, 93.
Sons of Adversity, 55.
Sons of the Sword, 102.
Southerners (The), in.
Spanish Brothers, 51.
Spanish John, 84.
233
Spectre of Power, 9a
Spinoza, 71.
Splendid Impostor, 57.
Splendid Spur, 60, 153.
Spoils of Empire, 47.
Springhaven, icx>.
Spars and Bride, 35, 146.
Spy (The), 91.
Squatter's Dream, 126.
Standard Bearer, 74.
Standish of SUndish, 5&
Stanhope, 61, 153.
Star Chamber, 58.
States-General, 94.
Stirrap Cup, 93.
Stories of American History, 86.
Stories of Waterloo, 105.
Storm-rent Sky, 95.
Story of a Peasant, 94.
Story of a Scout, 102, 161.
Stoiy of Francis Cludde, 50, 151.
Story of Old Fort Loudon, 88.
Story of the Plebiscite, 113.
Story of Tonty, 77.
Stout English Bowman, 36, 146.
Stray Pearls, 63.
Strong Arm, 1 19.
Struggle for Rome, 28.
Sun of Saratoga, 92.
Sunningwell, 126.
Surgeon's Daughter, 122.
Surgeon's Stories, 64.
Swallow, 108.
Swallow Bam, 122.
Sweet "DoU** of Haddon Hall, 55.
Sword and Assegai, 108.
Sword of Justice, 54.
Sword of the King, 74.
Sybil, 125.
Taken from the Enemy, 106, 162.
Tale of Two Cities, 94, 138, 160.
Talisman (The), 34, 135, 146.
Tara, 68.
Taru Bulba, 120.
Tarry Thou till I Come, 21.
Tekla, 119.
Terrible Czar, 54.
Terror (The), 94.
Tbaddeus of Warsaw, 107.
Thane of Wessex, 29.
Theodora Phranza, 42.
Theophano, 31.
Thirsty Sword, 36.
Thorstein of the Mere, 31.
Thrall of Leif the Lucky, 31.
Three Musketeers, 62, 137.
Through Russian Snows, 103.
Through Swamp and Glade, 108.
Thyra varrick, 83, 159.
Time and Chance, 11 1.
Times of Charles XII, 81.
Times of Gustav Adolf, 64.
Tippoo Sultaun, 98.
To Arms, 81, 159.
To Have and to Hold, 59.
To Herat and Cabul, 108, 162.
To Right the Wrong, 62, 154,
To the Lions, 23.
Tom Burke of ** Ours," loi, i6l.
Tom Jones, 121.
Tom Tufton's Toll, 78, 158.
Tom Tufton's Travels, 78, 158.
Tonford Manor, 48.
Tom from the Foundations, 87.
Tory Lover, 93.
Tower of London, 50, 151.
Tower or Throne, 55.
Trafalgar, 100.
Tragic Comedians, 127.
Trail of the Grand Seigneur, 99.
Trail of the Sword, 76.
Traitor or Patriot, 70, 156.
Traitor's Way, 51.
Traits and Stories of the Irish
Peasantry, 123.
Treasure Island, 121.
Treasure of Don Andres, 56.
Treasure Trove, 83.
Trewem, xo8.
Triumph of Count Ostermann, 8a
Tron^ns du Glaive, 1 14.
True Heart, 46.
Trae to the Watchword, 75, 157.
234
Turbulent Town, 4a
Turkish Automaton, 89.
Twenty Years After, 62, 65, 137.
Two Chieb of Dunboy, 97.
Two Dianas. 52.
Two Little Confederates, 113.
Two Penniless Princesses, 43, 149.
Two Queens, 89.
Two Thousand Yeais Ago, 2i.
Tycfaiades, 2a
U
Uarda, 19.
Ulrick the Ready, 56.
Uncanomzed, 35.
Uncle Bemac, loa
Uncle Tom's Cabin, 126.
Uncrowning a King, 72.
Under Ba^rd's Banner, 48.
Under Calvin's Spell, 52.
Under Cheddar Qiflb, 99, i6i.
Under Colonial Colors, 92.
Under Salisbury Spire, 59, 153.
Under the Black Kaven, 30.
Under the Dome of St. Paul's, 79,
158.
Under the Iron FlaH, 114.
Under the Mendips, 107, 162.
Under the Red Rx>be, 63.
Under the Rose, 49.
Under the Southern Cross, 54.
Under the Spell of the Fleur de
Lis, 53.
Under Wellington's Command, 102,
161.
Under Which Kmg, S7.
Unknown to Histoiy, 55, 151.
Up for the Green, 98.
Urith, 74.
Uther and Igraine» 119.
Vagaboni (The), 112.
Vak of Cedars, 45.
Valentin, 114.
Valentino, 46.
Valerius, 23.
Valperga, 38.
Valley of Decision, 89.
Vanity Fair, 106.
Velvet Glove, 115.
Vengeance is Mine, 105.
Veva, 96.
Via Crucis, 34.
Vicai of Wakefield, 121.
Vicomte de Bragelonne, 71, 137.
Vikings of the Baltic, 31.
Villa of Claudius, 26.
Vintage (The), 107.
Virgin of the Sun, 47*
Virginia Comedians, 901
Virginians (The), SS.
Vittoria, 109.
Vive I'Empereur, 108.
Vivian of Virginia, 73.
Voice of the People, 127.
Von Gottes Gnaden, 62.
Vor dem Sturm, 104.
W
Wager (The), 76.
Waldemar, 35.
Wanderer and King, 66, 155.
War and Peace, 103, 138.
War of 1 812 Series, 103.
War of the Axe, 108, 162.
War to the Knife, iii.
Ward of King Canute, 32.
Washington's Young Aids, 92.
Wasbingtonians (The), ill.
Waterloo, 105, 139.
Wavcrley, 84. 138, 159.
Web of the Spider, 1 11.
Westcotes (The), 103.
Westminster Abbey, 48.
Westward Ho I j6, 136, 152.
Westward with Columbus, 45.
When Charles I. was King, 61, 154*
When George IIL was King, 100,
161.
When Knighthood was in Flower,
48.
When Spurs were Gold, 41, 149.
When the Land was Young, 73*
235
When Valmond came to Pontiac,
125.
Where Avon into Severn Flows, 43,
149.
Where Honour Leads, 83.
WhistUng Maid, 38.
White Aprons, 73.
White Company, 39, 147.
White King's Daughter, 66^ 155.
White Terror, 94.
White Queen, 48.
White Wyvill and Red Rathven, 43,
149.
Whiteboy (The), 124.
Whitefiriars, 69, 155.
WliitehaU, 6a
Whites and the Bines, 96.
Who Goes There? Z12,
Wild Humphry Kynaston, 44*
Will o' the Wasp, 104.
William the Conqueror, 32.
WiUowdene Will, 83.
Winchester Meads, 70, 156.
Window in Paris, 115.
Windsor Castle, 48, 15a
Winifrede's Journal, 59, 153.
With CUve m India, 86, i6a
With Crockett and Bowie, 108.
With Essex in Ireland, 56.
With Fire and Sword, 65, 137.
With Frederick the Great, 87.
With Lee in Virginia, 112.
With Moofc at Conmna, 102, i6i.
With Sword and Crucifix, 76.
With the King at Oxford, 60, 153.
With the Red Eagle, Z03.
With Washington in the West, 87.
Wixard King, 71.
Woe to the Conqoered, 2i«
Wolfs Head, 35, 146.
Woman and a Creed, 51.
Woman's Courier, 76.
Won by the Sword, 64.
Woodman (The), 44, 15a
Woodstock, 67, 137, 154.
Wooing of Judith, 67.
Wooing of O^rth, 29.
WorldWent Very WeU Then, 83.
Wulf the Saxon, 32, 145.
Wulfhc the Weapon Thane, 32.
Year One of the Republic, 94.
Yellow Fri^te, 44, 15a
Yemaasee (The), 82.
Yeoman Fleetwood, 106.
Young (Goodman Brown, 12a
Young Macedonian, 2a
Young Pioneers, 76.
Young Queen of Hearts, 58, 152.
Zenobia, 25.
SUPPLEMENT (4TH Edition).
SUPPLEMENT.
** Those who know very little of the past and care very little for
the future, will make but a sorry business of the present. . . . The
great Duke of Marlborough said that he had learnt all the history
he ever knew out of Shakespeare's historical plays. I have long
thought that if we persuaded those classes who have to fight their
own little battles of Blenheim for bread every day, to make such a
beginning of history as is furnished by Shakespeare's plays and
Scott's novels, we should have done more to imbue them with a real
interest in the past of mankind than if we had taken them through
a course of Hume and Smollett, or Hallam on the English Consti-
tution, or even the dazzling Macaulay."
Lord MorUy an ** The Gredt Commonplaces of Readingl^
SUPPLEMENT.
NOTE. — As pmiously, hooks of special worth are marked with an asterisk. Even
less than before am I disposed to insert prices ; nowadays these flttctuate con-
tinually. The method now adopted of putting Juv. against works which are
distinctly Juvenile, obviates the necessity for a separate list of tales suitable for
young folk ; it need hardly be said, however, that no arbitrary division can be
nutde between romances that are for grown-up people and those which are for
more youihful readers. Certain well-known writers for the young are quite
worthy of study by parent and child alike, while many of the best historical
novels may be read profitably by intelligent boys and girls entering on the " teen "
stage. While out-of-print books have been avoided, a few thai are more or less
easily obtainable second-hand, have been included ; juvenile tales are frequently
revived*
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SSMIRAMIS
The Cat of Bu-
BASTBS. Juv.
The Witch Queen
OF Khem
The Mightiest
Power
*KiNG AND Captive
Edward Peple
(Greening, Eng. ; and
Moffat, Yard & Co.,
U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Ena Fitzgerald
(Greening)
George Ryven
(Griffiths)
f
A Whisper "
(Blackwood)
subject.
Ancient Assyria (Ninus and
Semiramis).
Egypt in the time of Thot-
mes III. (Israelites —
Moses ** 40 years before
the Exodus ").
Egypt: Thebes at its highest
point as Capital of the
Pharaohs, about b.c. 1500.
Egypt about b.c. 1400.
^£fyp^ (Thebes), b.c. 1342.
King Seti Merenptah.
240
SUPPLEMENT.
PRE-CHRISTIAN EBA— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aThx Yokb
A Captain of Msn
David thb Captain
Jbzbbbl's Husband
(Azalim)
Lbmubl of the Left
Hand
author and publisher.
Elizabeth MiUer
(Stevens, £ng. ; and
Bobb8-Me]TiU.U.S.A.)
£. Anson More
(Alston Rivers, Eng ;
and Page, U.S.A.)
A. S. Way
(MacmiUan)
Mark Ashton
(£. Nash, Eng. ; and
L. C. Page, U.S.A.)
Alfred Clark
(Sampson Low & Co.)
For an Atonement Frances H. Wood
(F. Griffiths)
&The Assyrian
Bride
TBe King's Daugh-
ters. Juv.
Judith Triumphant
A Son of Ashur
W. Patrick KeUy
(Routledge, Eng. ; and
Dutton. U.S.A.)
Mary Bramston
(National Society, Eng.;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
Thompson Bachanan
(Harper & Bros.)
Capt. Willonghby Bed-
does
(Sonnenschein)
SUBJECT.
Egypt and the Jewish Exo-
dus, about B.C. 1300.
Tyre and its merchants in
B.C. 1058 ; " David, son of
Jesse," Ac.
The Bible story ol Saul and
David.
Damascus, Jerusalem, &c,
in the tune of Jesebel
(Elijah, Ahab, and Oba-
diah).
Days of Ahab, Jezebel, and
£lijah.
Palestine (Ramoth Gilead,
Ac) some years after Jehu.
Assyria, B.C. 750.
The children of King Zede-
kiah, about b.c. 580 (time
of Jeremiah and the Cap-
tivity).
Judith and Holofemes.
Babylon, Persia, and Egypt
in the time of Nebuchad-
nezzar.
a The Bxodus is generally assumed to have taken place about b.c. 1300 (Meneptah) ; bnC some
anthors (vide Mr. Henty above) adopt another chronology. I may allude here to one other story of
the Bzoons period, via. " The Secret of the Sphinx," by James South and John Wren Sutton (Wdby,
Bng.), somewhat conventfonal.
b The same author is responsible for a tale of Egypt in the days of the Biblical Joseph, " The
Stonecatter of Memphis " (Routledge, Bn^. ; and Dutton, U.S.A.). Like many other romances of
Pre-Christian times, these two works of fiction are entertaining enough, but can hardly be taken very
seriously.
SUPPLEMENT.
241
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Zoroaster
*Thb Star of Love
•A Victor of Sala-
MIS
Tales of old Sicily
The Astrologer's
Daughter
Alxibiades
On the Kmebs of
THE Gods
•Four Sons
^Alexander, the
Prince
Alexander, the
King
Alexander, and
ROXANA
author and publisher.
F. Marion Crawford
(Macmillan)
Florence Morse Kingsley
(Appleton & Co.)
W. Steams Davis
(Macmillan)
Alex. N. Hood
(Hurst St Blackett)
Geraldine M. Gay
(H. J. Drane)
Chas. H. Bromby
(Clifton : Baker ; and
London: Simpkin)
Anna Bowman Dodd
(Dodd, Mead & Co.)
A. H. Gilkes
(G. A. Symcox, Dnl-
wich)
Marshall Munroe Kirk-
man
(Simpkin, Eng. ; and
Cropley & Phillips,
U.S.A.
subject.
Mainly N.W. Persia in the
time of King Darius I.,
after the Persian conquest
of Assyria. The King
himself (about B.C. 500) is
prominent in the story, as
well as the half-historic,
half-mythical Zoroaster.
The Biblical story of Esther
and Ahasuerus (Xerxes) ;
Thermopylae and Salamis
are also introduced.
Days of Xerxes, Leonidas, and
Themistocles(Thermopylae) .
Empedocles (about B.C. 450) ;
S3rracuse and the War
with Athens; &c.
Athens in the Socratic period.
The Peloponnesian War (So-
crates and Aldbiades).
Athens, Corinth, and Syra-
cuse; time of Socrates,
and of Alcibiades' expedi-
tion against Sidly.
Southern Italy in the year
B.C. 338 (the Samnite
War) ; also (last chapter)
Alexandria, b.c. 307.
(A series of " Alexandrian
Novels," dealing with the
career of Alexander the
Great, from b.c 338 (Philip
of Macedon ; the Battle of
Chseronea; Sec),
a This ftnt novel appealed oxigiiiaUy (1903) under the title, " Iskander " ; in its later isine it is
revised and re-wiitten.
242
SUPPLEMENT.
PRE-CHRISTIAN ERA-H^tUinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Golden Hope
The Favored of
Baal (in *' Chival-
ric Days"). Juv.
The Young Cartha-
ginian. JUQ,
The Patriots of
Palestine. Juv.
Marcus : or the
Young Centurion.
Juv.
A Daughter op
Gaul (in " Draw
in yonr Stool")
^Cl^patrb
Vbsgiuus
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Robert H. Fuller
(Macmillan)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society, Eng. ;
andWhittaker. U.S.A.)
Geo. Manville Fenn
(E. Nister)
*' Oliver Onions *
(Mills & Boon)
(«
" Jean Bertheroy
(Armand Colm et Cie,
Paris)
Irving Bacheller
(Harper)
SUBJECT.
Alexander the Great and
various figures of his period
(Aristotle, DemostJienes,
Darius III., Sec). Athens,
Thebes, and Persia, about
B.C. 330.
Carthage, B.C. 238 (Hamilcar
and Hannibal).
Rome V. Carthage, about
B.C. 218-183 ; Hamilcar,
Hannibal, Varro, &c. Co-
vers Battle of Camue and
Hannibal's death.
Jerusalem, Ac, at the time
of the Maccabeean Revolt.
From B.C. 174 onwards.
Julius Caesar visits the home
of a Roman youth; then
— second part of tale — the
lad's experiences in the
Gallic Wars (Caesar again).
A very slight tale of life in
the galleys at the time of
the Roman Conquest.
The later years of Cleopatra,
about B.C. 31.
Rome (Augustus) and Pales-
tine, on the eve of Christ's
birth. Antipater, son of
Herod ; Salome, &c.
SUPPLEMENT.
243
FIRST CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aHBRMANN AMD
TRUSMBLDA. /fIV.
PSYCHB
£t Tu Sejanb 1
6JBSUS OF NaZARBTH
Under Pontius
Pilatb
cBarabbas
Adnah. Juo.
author and publisher.
Ferd. Schmidt (trans.)
(A. C. McClurg & Co.)
Walter S. Cramp
(Little, Brown & Co.)
Julia H. Twells
(Chatto & Windus)
S. C. Bradley
(Sherman, French
Co., U.S.A.)
William Schuyler
(Funk & Wagnalls)
&
subject.
Marie Correlli
(Methuen, £ng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
J. Breckenridge Ellis
(Religious Tract Society,
Eng. ; and G. W.
Jacobs, U.S.A.)
Germany just after the birth
of Christ ; Arminius, Chief
of the Cherusci, and his
victory over Varus in the
year a.d. 9.
A Greek dancing-^1 in
Rome, A.D. 23 (Tiberius,
Agrippina, and Sejanus).
Capri and Tiberius: a
feivouTable estimate of the
Emperor.
An attempt to fill up imagi-
natively the twenty for-
mative years of Christ's
life between his childhood
and his ministry.
An imaginary correspondence
between a young Roman
officer (nephew of Pilate)
serving in Judaea, and a
friend in Athens, a.d. 28
and 29.
A sensational New Testa-
ment romance.
Palestine (Capernaum, Jeru-
salem, &c.) in the time of
Christ, A.D. 30. Then,
ItaJy some years later.
a This interesting tale forms one of the volumes in an admirable series, '* Life Stories lor Young
People " (A. C. McQurg & Co., U.S.A.). Most of the *' stories " are to be classed under Biography
rather than under Ficuon ; but this tale — as well as another entitled " The Swiss Heroes," which
1 have inserted in my FiJFteenth Century section — may fairly be described as Historical Romance in
the stxict sense. Other volumes in this series deal with Charlemagne, Barbaroasa, William of Orange,
Beethoven, Hoeart, Haydn, Bach. Maria Theresa, Gudrun, Joan of Arc, William Tell, Frederick the
Great, Marie Antoinette, &c. All are translated from the Gennan by George P. Upton.
b This carefully written book is not a romance in the ordinarr sense, but it has at least as much
claim to the title as R. Bird's ** Jesus, the Carpenter of Nasareth " (/««.), which is sometimes entered
in lists of fiction.
c Deliberately excluded from my previous lists, but certainly as much worth reading as some
of those tomanees entered in the same section.
244
SUPPLEMENT.
FIRST CENTURY— continued.
TITLS OF BOOK.
I / A Son of Issacbar.
Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISBXR.
Ulric the Jarl : A
Story of thb Pbni-
TBNT Thief. Juv.
The Son of the
SWORDMAKER. JuV.
The SwoRDif aker's
Son. Juv.
I 0/ aTiTus :
*^ OF r
Juv.
A Comrade
Cross.
*Herodias (in
" Stories by G.
Flaubert ")
The Testament of
Judas
Judas Iscariot
Ben Tobit
Elsazar
1
)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
W. O. Stoddard
(C. H. Kelly, £ng. ; and
Eaton & Mains,
U.S.A.)
Opie Read
(Laird & Lee, U.S.A.)
W. O. Stoddard
(Unwin, Eng. ; and
Century Co., U.S.A.)
Florence M. Kingsley
(Frowde & Hodder, and
Ward, Lock, Eng. ;
and Altemus, U.S.A.)
Gustave Flaubert (trans.)
(T. C. and E. C. Jack)
H. Byatt
(J. Long)
Leonid N. Andreyev
(trans.)
(F. Griffiths)
subject.
Palestine about a.d. 30 ;
Christ, Pilate, Herod, &c.,
and various New Testa-
nient scenes — ending with
'^the Crucifixion.
Saxons in the Northland ;
also various sea and land
adventures (coast of Bri-
tain, &c.). Largely Pales-
tine in the time of Christ,
ending Calvary.
A Roman soldier in the time
of ^irist (Rome, Britain,
Palestine, Ac).
Palestine (Capernaum, Jeru-
salem, &c.) in the time of
Christ. Ends with the
Crucifixion, &c.
For the most part an ampli-
fication of the Gospel story,
ending with Christ's death
and resurrection.
Herod Antipas and John.
Supposed confession of Judas
Iscariot, edited by a Phcs-
nician.
Three New Testament tales,
published (Eng.) under the
one title : " Judas Is-
cariot." They deal, re-
spectively, with Judas and
his motives ; a certain
Jewish merchant's petty
experiences on the very
day of the Crucifixion ;
and Lazarus.
• The fixst of five Early ChzisUan tales from the same pea, the other four being, *' Love
Triumphant ; or, A Street Boy of Jerusalem " (the American title is, " Tor ; or, A Street Boy of
Jenisalem ") ; " Stephen, a Soldier of the Cross ; " " Paul, a Herald of the Cross ; " and *' The Cross
Triumphant.*' Based on such writers as Geikie, Edersheim, Farrar, Conybeare and Howson, &c.
Perhaps there is mote fictional interest in '* Love Triumphant " (a tale of Christ's time) than In
" Titus."
SUPPLEMENT.
245
FIRST CEiiTURY—conHHued.
li
TITLE OF BOOK.
I AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
I
SUBJBCT.
Saul of Tarsus
The Senator Lici-
NIUS
I S DiSCOBOL
*Thb Crown of Pine.
Juv»
At Sunrise
*By the King and
Queen. Juv,
For Queen and
Emperor. Juv,
A Story of Ancient
Wales. Juv.
Eldol the Druid.
Juv.
Britain's Great-
ness FORETOLD
Elizabeth Miller
(Stead's Pub. Co., Eng. ;
and Bobbs-Merrm,
U.S.A.)
W. Patrick KeUy
(Roatledge)
Compton Reade
(Robert Scott. Eng.)
A. J. Church
(Seeley & Co.)
Herbert Spurrell
(Greening St Co.)
Mrs. Jerome Mercier
(Simpkin, London ; and
W. North. Tewkes-
bury)
Ernest Protheroe
(Religious Tract Society)
H. Elrington
(National Society. Eng.;
andWhittaker. U.S.A.)
W. H. G. Kingston
(Partridge & Co.)
Marie Trevelyan
(John Hogg. Eng.)
Early Christianity from a.d.
36 up to the Conversioa of
St. Paul (Jerusalem, Alex-
andria. Rome, and Da-
mascus).
Rome under Caligula, a.d.
38.
Early Christians in the time
of CcJigula (Rome).
Rome. Corinth, and the
Isthmian Games (time of
Claudius, a.d. 50).
Dartmoor and S. Devon,
A.D. 31-61 (Ancient Bri-
tons and Romans; a
Phoenician trader. &c. .
Gloucester district, a.d. 50 ;
Druids and Christianity
(Caractacus and his father
Bran ; also Imogen. &c.).
Roman invasion of Britain,
and the Siege of Jerusalem,
about A.D. 50-70 (Boadi-
cea. Suetonius. Agricola,
Caractacus. &c.).
Bangor.Caerleon-on-Usk,&c.,
at the time of the Roman
invasion (Caractacus).
Western Britain in the third
quarter of the First Cen-
tury: Druids v. Christi-
anity, and the establish-
ment of Roman rule.
Roman invasion of Britain.
A.D. 59-62 (Boadicea ; the
Druids. &c.).
246
SUPPLEMENT.
FIRST CEKTURY—conHnued.
c
1
\'i
11
i>
TITLE OF BOOK.
Undxr tbb Roman
Eagles. Ju9.
A Roman House-
hold. Juv.
Glaucia tbb Greek
Slave. Juv.
oBy Thames and
Tiber
Naomi. Juu.
THE Forgotten
Door. Juv.
The City of De-
light
For the Temple.
Juv.
♦The Doomed City
author and pubusher.
<<
Amyot Sagon "
(Partridge & Co.)
G. Norway
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker. U.S.A.)
Emma Leslie
(Religious Tract Society)
Idrs. Aylmer Gowing
(J. Long)
Mrs. J. B. Webb
(Partridge, and others)
Frank Cowper
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Elizabeth Miller
(Jas. Clarke & Co.,
Eng. ; and Bobbs-
Merrill, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
John R. CarUng
(Ward, Ix>ck, Eng. ;
and E. J. Clode,
U.S.A.)
subject.
Britain and Rome in the
time of Nero. Early
Christians and the Cata-
combs; the Burning of
Rome, &c.
Rome under Nero (Early
Christians).
Rome in the time of Pop-
paea and Nero; also
Athens and Corinth (St.
Paul, Dionvsius the Areo-
pagite, &c.).
Rome under Nero. Early
Christians and St. Paul.
Jerusalem during its last
days, A.D. 67-8 (time of
Vespasian).
Escape of a Roman tribune
after the Jews' revolt, and
the repulse of Gallus (the
Zealots), A.D. 70.
Palestine, a.d. 70 (Siege and
Fall of Jerusalem).
Palestine and Jerusalem —
the aty's Fail (John of
Gischala).
Siege and Fall of Jerusalem,
a.d. 70.
• The first hall of this deddedlv mediocre tale deals with modem life in Rome ; the second half
(a girl's dream) with the Rome of Nero.
SUPPLEMENT.
247
FIRST CESTVRY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Thb Slaves of Sabi-
KUS. Juv.
JuDAUs Procura-
tor (in " Mother
of Pearl ")
*Thb Pribstbss of
Isis
Tub Slavs Girl of
POBIPBXI. Jito.
Nyria
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society. Eng.;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
tt
Anatole France " (trans.)
(J. Lane)
Edouard Schur^ (trans.)
(Rider & Sons)
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
Mrs. Campbell Praed
(Fisher Unwin)
SUBJBCT.
Batavia, Rome, &c,, in the
days of Vespasian, Titus,
and Domitian (Persecuted
Chnstisms).
Pontius Pilate at Bais, 40
years after the Crucifixion
(intended to show the
inferior place of Jesus in
the life and thought of
Roman contemporaries).
Last days of Pompeii.
Pompeii and Corinth, a.d.
79.
Rome under Domitian
(Early Christians).
NoTB. — ^Novelists and story-teUers have often tried to illustrate the life of
Christ, as well as the period immediately following. It must be confessed that
very few have succeeded in the difficult task. Besides the examples given above,
I ma^ here briefly allude to a few others. Among older works, WiUiam Ware's
" Julian " is probably one of the best. J. A. Ingraham's " Prince of the House
of David "is, I suppose, still read by a few. To turn to a much later example.
Mrs. A. F. Johnston's " Joel, a Boy of Galilee " (L. C. Page, U.S.A.) has been
written with a special view to young readers. The following have been published
within the last few years : — '' The Court of Pilate," by R. R. Hobbs ; " The
Princess of Gan-Sar " (Mary Magdalen), by Andrew Klarman ; " The Story of
the Child that Jesus took," by Dr. Newman Smyth ; " The Son of Siro " (Lazarus),
by Rev. J. E. Copus, S. J. ; " Mary' of Magdala," by Harriette G. Roberson ;
" Philo's Daughter : the story of the daughter of the thief with whom Christ was
crucified," by Nellie G. Robinson ; " The Centurion's Story " (Crucifixion), by
P. C. Macfarlane ; " The White Shield " (Phrygia, a.d. 50), by Caroline Atwater
Mason ; and " Lux Crucis " (St. Paul), by Samuel M. Gardiner. These nine tales
are written by American authors ; Mr. Gardiner's story has had some vogue.
248
SUPPLEMENT.
SECOND CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
aDBCEBAL's Daugh-
ter (in " A Royal
Story Book")
%
V
6THB Way of the
Cross. Juv.
^SiuwNUS THE Chris-
tian «
<;Marcus of Rome
(in "Historic
Boys "). Ji4V.
Marcus and Faus-
tina
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
H.M. the Qneen of Ron-
mania
(Digby, Long & Co.)
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
Dr. Edwin A. Abbott
(A. & C. Black)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
F. Carrel
(J. Long)
SUBJECT.
A short story of Roman con-
quest (Trajan) in the ooun-
try of the Dadans, ix. in
those Danubian r^ons
which are to-day called
Roumania.
Galilee at the beginning of
the Second Century.
The autobiography of an
imaginary Roman. He
sets forth (a.d. 163) the
account of his experiences
when attending the lec-
tures of Epictetus in Nico-
polis, dunng the second
year of Hadrian, a.d. 118.
Rome, a.d. 137 (boyhood of
Marcus Aurelius).
Rome in the days of Marcus
Aurelius and Vems: the
revolt of Avidius Cassius,
ending with his death.
a There are eight other stories in *' A Royal Story Book '* : all these slight Imaginative sketches
deal with bygone Roumanian periods. ** The Poet '* is a legendary tale of Ovid's banishment to the
Black Sea border ; '* The Dacian Virgin " treats ol the Roman Wars in the Danubian district ; other
tales depict much later scenes.
b A very slight tale, worthy of insertion — if for no other reason — ^because of the unusual period
with which it deals.
c This, and the other historical sketches in the same volume, are fictional in Part ; they are
interesting and well written. All the twelve stories will be found in my Supplement, under their
respective periods.
THIRD CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
♦A Hero in Wolf-
Skin. Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHSR.
Tom Bevan
(Religious Tract Society,
Eng. ; and G. W.
Jacobs, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Goth V. Roman, a.d. 250-1
(the Danubian district and
Rome— Emperor Gallus).
SUPPLEBIENT.
249
THIRD CEHTURY— continued.
K
TITLE OF BOOK. AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
aTbe Exiles of the
Cebsnna. Juv,
(Lucia's Marriage.
Juv.
.£milius. Juv.
Lapsed, not Lost
(Lapsed, but not
Lost). Juv,
The Farm of Ap-
TONGA. Juv.
♦La Fin de Tadmor
*A Christian but a
Roman
cThe Theban Legion
(in " Followers of
the Lord "). Juv.
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray ft Ck>.)
Mrs. Rnndle Charles
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Ed. de Fr^jac
(Lonis-Michand, Paris)
M. Jokai (trans.)
(Doubleday & McClure)
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorhain, U.S.A.)
subject.
France (Aries), a.d. 250-1.
llie Persecution under
Decius.
The Idumaean Desert, about
A.D. 250-1 (Decius).
Antioch, a.d. 250-1 (Decian
Persecution) ; and Rome,
Antioch, Nisibis, &c. ,
about A.D. 257- 69
(Valerian Persecution, and
the conquest of Valerian
by the Persians).
Carthage about a.d. 250-8
(Deaus). St. Cyprian, Ac.
Africa, a.d. 253-8 (St. Cyp-
rian).
The Emperor Aurelian and
Zenobia, Queen of Pal-
myra, A.D. 271-2 (Paul of
Samosata, Sec).
Christians (Rome and dis-
trict) in the time of the
Emperor Carinus, a.d.
283-5. Ends with the
assassination of Carinus
and Diocletian's election.
Lake Leman district, a.d.
285 (Emi>eror Maximian).
a Pablished both sepacatcjy and In the volume, " Fnuioe and Spafai " (Parker's Tales Illustrating
Church History).
b Published both separately and in the volame, " Asia and Africa " (Parker's Tales lUustraUng
Church HiOory).
c Besides the volome from which this story is taken, there are several other volumes of short
stories by the same author, dealing mostly with Early Cfarastian and Mediaval Church periods ; the
tales comprising them, however, are very brief indeed, and not sufficiently out of the common — as
regards subject and date — to justify separate insertion. The said volumes are, " Evenings at Sack-
ville College " ; " Deeds of Faith " ; " Lent Legends " ; " Tales of Christian Heroism " ; and "Tales
illustrative of the Apostles' Creed." All five are now published by the Christian Knowledge Society
in England, and by Gorham in U.S.A.
250
SUPPLEMENT.
THIRD CEiiTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb Gags of a
Princess (in
" Chi valric Days").
Juv,
A Daughter of the
Druids
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Patnam, U.S.A.)
Sidnejr Newman Sedg-
wick
(A. H. StockweU, Eng.)
SUBJECT.
Rome, A.D. 292 (the yoatii
of Constantine).
Roman Britain (Surrey dis-
trict ; Venilam ; &c)
A.D. 296-303. Tlie Dio-
cletian and Constantius
period (St. Alban).
FOURTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
•The Egyptian Wan-
derers. Juv.
The Victor's
Laurel. Jw.
•No. XIII. ; or. The
Story of the
Lost Vestal. Juv.
The Seed of the
Church (in
" Faith's First
Christmas, and
other stories"). Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
A. D« Crake
(Mowbray)
Emma Marshall
(Cassell & Co.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.:
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Christians in the Egyptian
Deserts about a.d. 300
(the Tenth Persecution).
Southern Italy (Puteoli), and
the African Deserts, &c.,
A.D. 302. School life dur-
ing the Tenth Persecution
(Epilogue, A.D. 325).
Severus in Britain (Veru-
1am), A.D. 303 ; the mar-
tyrdom of St. Alban.
Then Rome under Diocle-
tian (303) and under Con-
stantme (313). Ends
Alexandria, a.d. 333.
Roman Britain (Herts) about
A.D. 304 (Martyrdom of
St. Alban).
SUPPLEMENT.
2SX
FOURTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
author and publisher.
SUBJECT.
aT&b Cavb in the
Hiixs. Juv.
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
Roman Britain (St. Albans),
A.D. 305 (time of the
Diocletian Persecution).
EVANUS. JUV.
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
Scotland and S. Britain (Chil-
tern district), about a.d.
300-6 ; then, Rome and
Italy A.D. 312 (Constan-
tine).
6Trb Daughtbrs of
POLA. JUO,
J. M« Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
Harbour of Pola (Austria),
A.D. 303 (Persecution
under Diocletian).
cTrb Quay of the
Dioscuri. Juv,
On trb Empbror's
Service. Juv.
J. M. Neale
(Parker. Oxford)
Emma Leslie
(Religious Tract Society)
Alexandria, Rome, Nicaea,
&c., in the early Fourth
Century (Athanasius v.
Alius).
Alexandria, Nicaea, Carthage
&c., in the time of Con-
stantine (Athanasius and
the Arians, etc.). Then —
30 years later — Antioch in
the time of Julian.
The Victory that
OVERCOlfETH. Juv.
Annie L. Gee
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Sebaste (Cappadocia), a.d.
315-23 (time of Con-
stantine).
The Meeting of the
Ways
J. D. Baxter
(Greening & Co.)
A tale of the Roman Wall
in Britain, a.d. 367-9.
and the fighting against
the Picts.
Stars in the Twi-
light. Juv,
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker.U.S. A.)
Rome about a.d. 384 (time
of St. Jerome and Pope
Damasus). Last chapter,
Bethlehem (fugitives from
the sack of Rome in a.d.
410).
a Publisbed both separately and in Vol. I. (" England : Tbe Early Period ") of Parker's TaUs
Ittusiruting Church HisUuy.
b Published both separately and in the volttme, " Eastern and Northern Europe *' (Parlcer's
Tales iUustrtUing Church History).
c Published both separately and in the volume, " Asia and Airica " (Parker's Taltt Ittusirating
Church History).
252
SUPPLEMENT.
FOURTH CESTURY—cotUiuued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Lbo op Mediolanum.
Juv,
The King's House
(in " A Fair Haven,
and other stories ") .
Juu.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Gertrude Hollis
(Christian Knowledge
Society, £ng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
St. Ambrose and the Arians,
A.D. 374-87 (Milan).
St. Ninian and the Chnrch
in Scotland (Sonthem Picts)
A.D. 397.
FIFTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
The Penitent (in
a" Wild Scenes
amongst the
Celts"). Juv.
♦NicANOR, Teller of
Tales. Juv,
oIkb Alleluia Bat-
tle. Juv.
The Easter Victory
(in " The Shepherd
Prior, and other
stories "). Juv.
•Attila and his Con-
queror. Juv.
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
C. Bryson Taylor
(A. C. McClurg & Co.)
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
andWhittaker.U.S.A.)
Mrs. Rnndle Charles
(Christian Knowledge
Society ; and Gor-
ham. U.S«A.)
SUBJECT.
Ireland and Cornwall, about
A.D. 410 (St. Piran).
Britain in the period a.d.
410-46 (end of the
Roman dominion).
Britain (Trent district), a.d.
428-9. The Pelagian con-
troversy.
Wales about a.d. 430 (Drnid
survivals).
Ireland, Rome, France, etc.,
in mid-Fifth Century. The
Sack of Rome by the
Vandals (Days of St.
Patrick and St. Leo the
Great).
m Published both separately and in Vol. I. (" England } The Early Period ") of Paxlcer's Totes
IttusSrating Church HisUlry.
SUPPLEMENT.
«53
FIFTH CENTURY-^on/mw^.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Tbb Gssat Hand-
writing (in " The
Shepherd Prior,"
&c.). Jtn.
Thb Fall op Andb-
RIDA (in "Stories
from Old English
History"), /w.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society* Eng.;
and Whittaker» U.S.A.)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
SUBJBCT.
Ireland (Meath) about a.d.
450 (St. Patrick).
Sussex (Pevensey) in a.d.
491 (time of the Anglo-
Saxon Conquest).
SIXTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Blub and Grbbn
Thb Homb Coming
Thb Cook and
Captzvb. Juo
^Vbranilda
•Thb Star in
Wbst. Juo.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Sir Henry Pottinger
(Chapman & Hall)
A. Conan Doyle
{Strand Magaxine, Dec.
1909)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S. A.)
George Gissing
(Constable & Co.)
SUBJBCT.
\
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Constantinople, a.d. 514 on-
wards (Empress Theodora,
Justinian, Belisarius, John
of Cappadoda, &c.).
A short tale dealing with the
Empress Theodora, a.d.
528.
The Franks, a.d. 532 (time
of St. Remi, &c.).
Rome and Italy* fCentral
and Southern) m me time
of Justinian and Belisa-
rius. The struggle with
the Goths; St. Benedict
in his monastery near
Casinum, &c. About a.d.
530 to 540.
The British Church in Wales
about A.D. 550 (Llancarfan
district in time of Yellow
Plague, &c).
^54
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTH CEHTVRY'-cofUinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
TBb Pbace of the
Church. Juo,
A Love in Ancient
Days
The Doomed City.
Juv.
An Angel Unawares.
(in "The Shepherd
Prior," Ac). Juv.\
After Many Days!
{Sequel, in same]
vol.). Juv,
The Druidess
AUTHOR AND PUBU8HER.
An Island of the
Blest (in "Faith's
First Christmas,
&c.). Juo.
HowNechtan kept I
his Vow (Sequel,]
insamevol.). Juo.
The Fugitive (in
a" Wild Scenes
amongst the
Celts"). Juv.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
T. H. Crosfield
(Elkin Mathews)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
SUBJECT.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
Florence Gay
(J. Onseley, Eng.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
Monastery of Llancaifen
(S. Wales) about A.D. 550.
Romano-British maidens and
the Saxons (mid-Sixth
Century).
Britain (Chiltem district)
about a.d. 570-90. The
Anglo-Saxon Conc^uestand
St. Augustine's Mission.
(i) Rome, a.d. 586-90 (St.
Gregory and the Saxon
slaves).
(2) Canterbury, a.d. 597.
Ireland, West of England,
and Wales. Celt v. Saxon,
and Druid v. Christian,
about the last decade of
the Sixth Century (St.
Columba at the conven-
tion of Druimceta).
(i) West Coast of Scotland,
a.d. 592 (St. Columba).
(2) Monastery of lona, a.d.
597 (S^* Columba).
Scotland and the Hebrides
(lona), A.D. 590-7 (St.
Columba).
a Published both separately and in VoL I. (** England : The Early Period '*) of Parker's TeUt
lUustftUimt Ckitrch HittOfy.
SUPPLEMENT.
255
SIXTH CESTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aThs Rivals. Juv.
6Thb Paladins of
Edwin the Great.
JU9.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
Sir C. R. Markham
(A. & C. Black)
SUBJECT.
Kent, A.D. 594"7* King
Ethelbert and St. Angus-
tine ; the Anglo-Saxon
Church.
England, Rome, and the
East, about a.d. 588 to 633
(King Edwin oi Northum-
bria).
« Published both separately and in VoL I. (" England : The Eaxly Period ") of Parker's Tales
lUuslraHmg Church History.
b Hazdly fiction, very historical and didactic.
a SEVENTH CENTURY.
title of BOOK.
The Flower of
Destiny
Imogen. Juo.
♦The Soul of a Serf
(Fated to Win)
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Margaret Mordecai
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
Enuiy S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
J. Breckenridge Ellis
(Lee & Laird)
SUBJECT.
Persia at the beginning of the
Seventh Century (time
of the Empires oi Persia
and Rome).
Wales and Kent in the first
decade of the Seventh
Century. The ancient
British Church and its
new rival from Rome (St.
Augustine).
Saxons v. Angles on the
Baltic shores, beginning
of Seventh Century ; and
Britain, c. 616 : — ^Ethel-
frith of " North Humbria,"
and Penda of Mercia. Also
Edwin, son of Ella, just
before his Northumbrian
Conquest.
a Five of the seven tales in A. D. Crake's " Stories of the Old Saints and the Anglo-Saxon Church "
<Mowbray) deal with the Seventh Century : bnt, as these tales are all very slight, and the periods
dealt with axe more or less oovexed by Kiss I)ebenhani and other writers, I merely allude to the volpme
as a whole.
256
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTH CENTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Into the Dark (in
" Faith's First
Christmas/' Ac)
Juo,
*KiNG Pbnda's Cap-
tain (No. z of
Historical Ro-
mances for Young
Pimple). Juv.
The Coming of the*
King (in "Faith's,
First Christmas/' I
&c.). Juv.
The Battle in the
West (Sequel, in
same vol.). Juv. ,
What Ercongeta
Saw (in " The
Peace of the
Choich, and other
stories"). Juv.
The Shepherd
Prior. Juv.
The Lark's Carol
(in "Faith's First
Christmas/' &c.).
Juv.
The Painter's Mes-
sage (in " The
Shepherd Prior/'
&c.). Juv.
A Fisher of Men
(in " The Peace of
the Church/' &c.).
Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJECT.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Mackenzie MacBride
(J. M. Dent & Co.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker. U.S.A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society. Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
York, A.D. 626-7 (Edwin.
King of Bemicia).
Young Pictish hero's ex-
ploits under Penda, King
of Mercia. Nottingham,
&c., and the county of
the Picts, about the second
quarter of the Seventh
Century.
(i) Lindisfame, a.d. 633
(King Oswald).
(2) Lindisfame, a.d. 635-42
(St. Aidan).
Northumbria, a.d. 665-72
(Bishop Wilfrid and Bis-
hop Chad).
Tweed district (Melrose),
A.D. 664-80.
Whitby (Abbess HUda) about
A.D. 670.
Rome and Northumbria,
A.D. 680 (St. Benedict).
Sussex, A.D. 682 (Bishop
Wilfrid).
SUPPLEMENT.
257
EIGHTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Tbb Angbl of THB
Fbn (in " The
Peace of the
Church," &c.).
Jtto.
•A Prxncb of Corn-
WAZX. JWf.
Thb Rbscttb (in
tf"The Dove of
Tebenna," &c.).
An Ascbnsiontidb
Drbam (in "The
Shqpherd Prior,
&c.). Juv.
9t
bTHB Childhood of
Offa (in " Stories
from Old English
History"). Juo.
The Opbn Window
(in " The Peace of
the Church." &c.).
Juv,
cTm Lily of Tiflis.
Juv.
The Tell-Tale Foot
(in " Chivalric
Days "). Juv.
The Avenger of
Blood (in" Stories
from Old English
History"). Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJBCT.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
C. W. Whistler
(Wame & Co.)
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
East Anglian Fen Country,
A.D. 700.
Glastonbury and the West
Country at the beginning
of the Eighth Century
(time of Ina of Wessex).
Spain, A.D. 718 (Moorish
Conquest).
Jarrow, a.d. 735 (Death of
Bede).
Mercia, a.d. 735-55.
Wimbome Nunnery, a.d.
730-60 (time of St. Boni-
face).
Tiflis (Caucasian region), a.d.
750. The Crescent and the
Cross.
Paris, A.D. 750 (Pepin).
Wessex (Winchester, &c.) in
A.D. 754.
a Published both sepantely and in the volume, " France and Spain ** (Parker's TaUs IttustroHng
Church Uutory).
b A tiny story, bat a most unusoal period.
e Published both separately and in the volome, " Asia and Africa " (Parker's Tales lUustraiing
Church History).
S
258
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTH CENTURY— con/«««<!i.
title of book.
For the White
Christ. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Robert Ames Bennet
(Putnam, £ng. ; and
McClurg, U.S.A.)
•A King's Comrade. C. W. Whistler
Jf4V. (T. Nelson & Sons)
♦A Prince Errant. C. W. Whistler
Juo, I (T. Nelson & Sons)
subject.
Charlemagne and his Camp
Court, A.D. 778 (War with
the Moors in Spain).
Hereford in the time of Offa,
and Ethelbert of East
' Anglia, about a.d. 792
I (arrival of the Danes).
i S.W. Wales, Cornwall, and
Ireland, about a.d. 795
(Saxon, Briton, Norseman,
and Dane).
NINTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
aThe Dove of Ta- J. M. Neale
BENNA. JUV.
The Way of Service
(in " The Peace of
the Church," Ac).
Juv.
♦A Son OF Odin. Juv.
A King's Thegn.
Juv,
(Parker, Oxford)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society. Eng. ;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
E. K. Seth-Smith
(Jarrold)
Geraldine M . Gay
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Monastery of Tabenna, near
Cordova, a.d. 851 (Chris-
tians and Mahometans).
East Anglia, a.d. 858-70
(King Edmund).
Norsemen at Winterton (East
Anglia), a.d. 861. War
with the Danes, &c.
England in time of Ethelred
(Winchester, a.d. 867) ;
then. King Alfred among
the Danes, &c., a.d. 878.
a Published Iwth separately and in the volume, " France and Spain " (Parker's TaUs IttMstfating
Church History)'
SUPPLEMENT.
259
NINTH CEHTVRY—conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aXBS BiACK Dambs.
Juv.
Through ths Door
OF Hope. Juv.
Wulnoth the Wan-
derer. Juv.
The Martyr's Vic-
tory. Juv.
How the King Pas-
sed By (in " A
Fair Haven," &c.).
Juo.
* At the King's Right
Hand. Juv.
^Keepers of Eng-
land. Juv.
W. E. Heygate
(Parker. Oxford)
Annie L. Gee
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
H. Escott-Inman
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ;
and McClnrg, U.S.A.)
Emma Leslie
(Religioxis Tract Society)
SUBJECT.
Bfary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Mrs. E. M. Field
(Wells Gardner)
England, a.d. 870 (King
Edmund) ; and a.d. 893-4
(Alfred). Time of the
Danish Wars.
England, about a.d. 868-80
(the Danish Invasion,
Guthmm and Alfred).
Time of Ethelred and Alfred ;
tihe Danish harrying(Battle
of Ethandune, a.d. 878).
Conversion of the Danes in
East Anglia, about a.d.
880-90 period (Saxons of
Merda go to lung Gnth-
rum's Court at Thetford).
King Alfred, a.d. 898.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Danes v. Saxons about a.d.
870-901 (Ethelred — ^Alfred
period). Essex, Berk-
shire, Dorsetshire, and
Norway.
E. Wessex border, a.d. 878 ;
then A.D. 893-901. King
Alfred and the Danes,
ending with the King's
death.
a Published both lepaxately and in Vol. I. (" Bo«laod : The Euiy Period ") of Parker's TmUs
TUustrating Church History.
26o
SUPPLEMENT.
aTENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Co]f AN THB Wonder-
worker (Seauel to
" Keepers oi Eng-
land'% Juv.
* A Sba Queen's Sail-
ing. Juo,
TBb Ealdorman's
Story (in "The
Peace of the
Cbxach/'Ac,).Jiiv.
Brian of Monster
(in " Historic
Boys"). Juv.
The Story of Edgar
AND Elfrida (in
" Stories from Old
English History").
Juo.
6THE Forsaken. Juv,
Edward the Martyr
(in " Stories from
Old English His-
tory"). Juv.
f The Conversion of
St. Vladimir. Juv.
In the Van of the
Vikings. Juv,
AUTHOR and publisher.
Mary Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
C. W. Whistler
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
J. W. Donaldson
(Parker, Oxford)
M. F. Outram
(Religions Tract Society)
SUBJBCT.
An Irishman ("Scot") and
a Saxon youth as captives
in Norway, a.d. 9x2-13:
the Norsemen and Chfis-
tianity. Glimpses of Nor-
mandy and England.
The Vikings about a.d. 935.
Northern and Irish Coasts
(time of Hakon the Good).
St. Dunstan, about a.d. 940.
Ireland (County Clare), a.d.
948. The boyhood of
Brian Bom.
Devonshire, a.d. 965 (time
of St. Dunstan).
Winchester, &c., in the time
of Archbishop Dnnstait
and King Edgar.
Edward and Ethelred, a.d.
975.
Russia (Kiei). Vladimir I.
and his conversion to
Christianity, a.d. 988.
King Olaf Tryggvason, a.d.
995-1000.
A A slight anonymoiu tale entitled, "Brave Dame Maxr*' (Chxtstian Knowledge Society) ii
frequently mfsplaoed in lists of fiction ; the book, which is ot poor quality, does not depict Tenth
Century England, but SeutnUmth Century England (Civil War) I
b Published both separately and in VolTlI. (" England : The Medisval Period ") of Parker's
Tola Ittustraling Churek History,
0 Published both separately and In the volume, "Eastern and Northern Europe*' (Parkei's
TOet lUustrtUing Church History),
SUPPLEMENT.
361
TENTH CENTURY— co»itffi««i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
The North Star.
Juv.
The Star of Val-
halla. Juv.
M. E. Henry-Ruffin
(Little, Brown ft Co.)
Myxa Cross
(F. A. Stokes Co.)
Ireland and Norway in the
time of King Olaf Trygg-
vason.
The spread of Christianity in
Norway.
ELEVENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Sorceress of
Rome
author and publisher.
Nathan Gallizier
(Dean, Eng. ;
Page, U.S.A.)
and
subject.
Olaf of Norway (in
" Historic Boys ").
Juv,
The Vinland Cham-
pions. Juv.
•The Story of Rolf
AND THE Viking's
Bow. Juv,
aTHE Northern
Light. Juv.
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Ottilie A. Liljencrantz
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
Allen French
(Little, Brown & Co.)
J. W. Donaldson
(Parker, Oxford)
The Emperor Otto III., and
Stephania, wife of Cres-
centius (Senator of Rome),
in the year zooo. The
Prelude deals with Rome,
at the time of Pope Gre-
gory V.'s assassination, and
the election of Sylvester II.
Sweden and Norway in loio.
(Boyhood of KingOlaf II.).
Vikings in North America,
early Eleventh Century.
Iceland in the Eleventh Cen-
tury— ^The old religion and
the new.
Iceland and Greenland, mid-
Eleventh Century (Bishop
Isleif, ftc).
• PnbUslied both separately and in the voltime, " Eastern and Northern Eoiope " (Parker's
TaUt IttuMtrtUmi Church Histofy).
262
SUPPLEMENT.
ELEVENTH CENTURY--con/»«««i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
A Good Shbphxrd
(in " A Fair
Haven," &c.). Juo.
William of Nor-
mandy (in " His-
toric Boys"). Juv,
Elciva
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
The Ladye of Lyd-
linch. juv»
*The Fall of the
Grand Sarrasin.
Jw).
A Northumbrian in
Arms. Jtm.
*Gytha's Message.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Patnam, U.S.A.)
D. Ryles Griffiths
(Fisher Unwin)
Mary Schofield
(H. G. Commin, Bonme-
montfa)
Wm. John Ferrar
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
George Surrey
(Frowde ; and Hodder)
Emma LesUe
(Blackie)
SUBJECT.
Canterbury, Z012
bishop Alphege).
(Arch-
Rouen, 1040 (The
queror's boyhood).
Con-
Thb Dragon of the
North. Jtm.
a*THE Andreds-
weald. Juv,
E. J. Oswald
(Seeley & Co.)
A. D. Crake
(Parker, Oxford)
Monmouthshire from 1042.
Time of Edward the Con-
fessor: Saxon and Nor-
man, &c.
England in 1046, and in io66.
Winchester and West Par-
ley,
A Moorish Pirate's invasion
of Guernsey in 1057 (Duke
WiUiam of Normandy, &c.)
Northumbria and Wales in
the period just before the
Norman Conquest (Here-
ward the Wake).
Saxon England (Bristol, Lon-
don, Winchester, &c.),
1053-66. Ends with the
coming of William and the
Battle of Hastings.
S. Italy (Salerno, &c.), 1020-
56 : time of the first Nor-
man rulers. Olaf, Em-
peror Henry, &c. The
Saracens.
Pevensey, &c., from about
1065-S7 (Norman Con-
quest period). Covers
Stamford Bridge, Hastings,
and William's reign up to
his death.
• ConstitutM VoL IV. (The Nomun Conquest) in Parker's Tales IttustroHng Church Hisiofy,
SUPPLEMENT.
263
ELEVENTH CENTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aiN THB New Forest.
Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER. <
SUBJECT.
Behind the Veil.
Juv.
Herbert Strang and John
Aston
(Frowde ; and Hodder)
EmUy S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
A Saxon whom the I Mary H. Debenham
Normans Loved
(in "The Shepherd
Prior," &c.). Juv.
The Sword and the
Cowl
The Queen's Ferry
(in " Faith's First
Christmas," &c.).
Juv.
A Goodly Pearl.
Juv.
Malcolm Canmore's
Pearl
*Thb Pilgrim
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
Edgar Swan
(Digby I^ng & Co.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A .)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
Agnes Grant Hay
(Hnrst ft Blackett)
Arthur Lewis
(Blackwood)
England under William the
Conqueror, 1066-87 : be-
gins with Battle of Hast-
ings (full account), and
ends with the King's death.
The Battle of Hastings and
after (Sir Wm. de Percy in
Northumbria). Later chap-
ters deal with th^ First
Crusade, 1096-7.
West of England about 1080
(Bishop Wulfstan of Wor-
cester).
Cotswold Manor in the Nor-
man Conquest period
(Saxon and Norman).
Fifeshire Coast, about 1075
(King Malcolm and Queen
Margaret).
Court of Malcolm III. of
Scotland : Margaret, sister
of Edgar Atheling.
Malcolm III. of Scotland, and
his bride, Margaret (the
" pearl "). Ends with the
King's death in 1093.
A Welsh pilgrim in Rome,
1075-76 ; last chapter,
1084. Pope Gregory VII.
(Hildebrand) and his
struggle with the Emperor
Henry IV. of Germany.
« One of Herbert Strtm^s Historieal Series ; the aim of bouks in this well-conceived series is to
present the more important events of a reign or period, ** intermingled with a rousing story of ad-
venture."
264
SUPPLEMENT.
ELEVENTH CENTURY— cottHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
• AuTOUR D'Uhe Tiasb
aTRB Cross In Swe-
den, /kv.
The King's Stirrup.
Juv.
Tbe Stranger whom
England Loved
(in "The Shepherd
Prior," &c.). Juv,
6AUBREY de L'Orme.
Juo,
^Gerald the Sheriff.
Juv,
author and publisher.
* A Saxon Maid. Juv.
^inile Gebhart
(Armand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
J. W. Donaldson
(Parker, OzfQrd)
£. Harcourt Mitchell
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham. U.S.A.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
W. £. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
C. W. Whistler
(Wame & Co.)
SUBJECT.
Eliza F. Pollard
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Caldwell, U.S.A.)
Italy (Rome and Canossa) in
the time of the Emperor
Henry IV. and Pope Gre-
gory VII., 1075-85.
Sweden, Z078-S1 (King Ingi
and his victory near Up-
sal).
The New Forest in the days
of William Rufus, ending
with the King's death
(Prince Henry, Walter
Tyrel, Ac).
A Worcestershire Monastery.
1^093 (St. Anselm).
Normandy and England,
1077-1109 (St. Anselm).
A sea-tale of the English
South Coast (Isle of Wight,
&c.) in the time of William
Rnfas, Z098.
Abbey of Romsey, ftc, in
the William Rufus — Henry
I. period (Norman devas-
tations). Henry, Arch-
bishop Anselm, &c.
a Published both separately and in the volume, "Eastern and Northern Europe*' (Parker's
TaUs lUusinUitig Church History),
b Published both separately and in Vol. II. (" England : The Mediaval Period **) of Parker's
Tales lUustftUing Church History.
SUPPLEMENT.
265
TITLE OF BOOK.
Armadim
Brian Fitz Count.
Juo,
Won — ^Not by Might.
Juo,
Xbb Knight of thb
Cavb. Juo.
The Lady of Tri-
POU
Baldwin of Jbru-
salbm (in "His-
toric Boys"). Juv.
TBb Vicar of thb
Marcbbs
aXHB Diary of Bro-
ther Bartholo-
MBW. Juo,
TWELFTH CENTURY.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
Alfred Bowker
(Sir J. Causton & Sons)
A. D. Crake
(Longmans)
Annie L. Gee
(Christian Knowledge
Society, £ng. ; and
Gorham« U.S.A.)
W. L. O'Byme
(Blackie)
M. Barrington
(Chatto & Windus)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Patnam. U.S.A.)
Clinton ScoDard
(Sherman, French,
U.S.A,)
Mrs. Rundle Charles
(H. R. Allenaon)
SUBJBCT.
Winchester in the days of
Henry I., Bishop Henry
de Blois, and Stephen (the
latter's accession, and the
avU War with Matilda).
Wallingford Castle, 1139 ;
then Oxford, Wallingford,
and Dorchester Abbey,
1 141-53. Time of the
avil War (Stephen).
England, 1147-53: moor-
land feud in tiie days of
Stephen.
England (time of St^hen —
Civil War),Ireland, France,
and Italy. St. Bernard,
Innocent II., and the
Second Cmsade.
S. France (Bordeaux district)
and Tripoli, &c., in the
z 1 40-50 period: Rudel,
the Troubadour Prince of
Blaye, and Odiema, Coun-
tess of Tripoli.
The Second Crusade, 11 47
(Baldwin III.).
Italy in the
radllL
days of Con-
Germany (the Odenwald) and
S. France, mid to late
Twelfth Century. Bernard
of Clairvaux ; Pierre Waldo
and the Poor Men of Lyons,
&c.
a AnimaginuymonUahneord; brief, bat synmtbetieaUy leeonitnicting the icUgk^
-— e— '^ of the period. Tte'-DiMy" b now (end 1010) first paWfilied
tloDS of the more esmeet ypfad* -_
lepentcly: it originally appeated some fifty TMin afo in a votaune of
LOe/' publlihed by Nitbet.
««
Tales and Sketches of Christian
266
SUPPLEMENT.
TWEUFTH CEiiTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AKD PUBLISHER.
aTHE Falcon King. W. L. O'Byme
Juv.
•The Love Story of
GiRALDUS
♦One Snowy Night.
Juv.
Let Erin Remember
(Blaclde)
Alice Cuiminghame
(F. Griffiths)
The Straight Road\
(in " The Peace of
the Charch." Ac).
Juv.
The King's Business
{Sequel, in same
vol.). Juv.
Agnes de Tracy.
Juv.
Dolphin of the
Sepulchre. Juv.
The Shadow of the
Raggbdstone
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
««
May Wynne
(Greening)
•»
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Gertrude HoUis
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
C. F. Grindrod
(EUdn Mathews)
subject.
Henry II. and his time. Be-
gins Wales, X146; then
France; bnt culminates in
the Anglo-Norman Inva-
sion of Ireland, 1171
(Strongbow, Dermot» &c.).
Time of Henry II. (Eng.) and
Eleanor of Poitou. The
French Court and the
University of Paris; also
the Welsh Borders.
Oxford, 1159 : Gerhardt and
his mission.
Ireland, x 1 70 and 1 171 . The
Wedding of Dermot's
daughter to the Norman
baron Strongbow.
(i) Kent, 1 162-6 (Thomas k
Becket).
(2) Kent, 1 1 70 (the murder of
Becket).
Time of Thomas k Becket.
Ditto.
Raggedstone Hill (Malvern
Hills district). Story of a
monk in the time of
Henry II. and Thomas k
Becket.
a Good semi-fictioiuU history.
SUPPLEMENT.
267
TWELFTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aFAiR Rosamond (in
" Historical Vig-
nettes").
A Bottle in the
Smoke
The Last of the
Fatimites (in "The
Flower of Destiny,"
&c.)
♦The Brethren
author and publisher.
SUBJECT.
•Between Two Cru-
sades. Juv,
De Hbllingley (in
" Stories of the
Crusades"). Juv.
Winning His Spurs.
Jwf,
♦Brothers in Arms.
Juv.
Bernard Capes
(Fisher XJnwin)
Cooke Don-Carlos
(R. F. Fenno &
U.S.A.)
Co.,
Margaret Mordecai
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
H. Rider Haggard
(Cassell, £ng. ; and
McQure, Phillips,
U.S.A.)
Gertrude HoUis
Queen Eleanor and " Fair
Rosamond/' about 1 176.
The Benedictine Monastery
at Bury St. Edmunds in
the Henry II. — ^Richard I.
period.
Egypt, 1 171.
I
England (Essex) and Pales-
tine. Tlie Crusades— Sala-
din, &c.
Downfall of the Latin king-
(Christian Knowledge \ dom of Jerusalem in 1187
«__.^^ « , (Saladin).
Lewes, 1x85, and the East
(Saladin's capture of Jeru-
salem in II 87).
England, France, Palestine
(Third Crusade), Germany,
&c. Richard I., Philip
Augustus, and Saladin.
The Sie^e of Evesham, and
Prince John's plots, ending
with Kmg Richard's return
in 1Z94.
Siege of Acre, &c. (Third
Crusade) ; also France,
England (Sussex), and
Scotland, 1189-99. Time
of Richard I., WiUiam the
Lion, and Philip Augustus.
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Sampson Low & Co.)
F. Bayford Harrison
(Blackie)
a The volume In which this story appeals, viz. HistoHaU VigmOUSt contains a large nnmber of
brief fictional sketches based on history and legend. Some of the *' vJgnettes " are deddedly blood-
cardling, others are homoroos ; they treat of many different oonntries and periods — First Centnrir
Palestine, England in Saxon and later times, France, lUW, ftc Of the twenty-seven tales (eaeh
covering not more than a dosen pages) ten are given in my lists as showing the author at his best.
a68
SUPPLEMENT.
TWELFTH CENTURY— <:<»rf»n«ei.
TI7XB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AKD PUBLISRBR.
Sir Guy's Trust.
JU9.
With Richard thb
FBARLBSS. Ji4V,
oLiON Hbart. Juv.
Whbn Liom-Hbart
WAS Kino. Juo.
Thb Nambsakb of
thb King. Juv,
* Wbstminstbr Clois-
ters
Thb Witch of Hunt-
ingdon (in "Faith's
First Christmas/'
&€.). Juv,
•Edwin, thb Boy
Outlaw. Juv.
Marion Andrews
(Partridge & Co.)
Paul Creswick
(£. Nister; andDntton,
U.S.A.)
H. Strang and R. Stead
(Frowde: and Hodder)
Escott Lynn
(Blackie)
A. M. Barham
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Mary Bidder
(Wells Gardner)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
J. F. Hodgetts
(Partridge & Co.)
*Thb Sbverbd Man-
TLB
William Lindsey
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin,
U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT.
Palestine and England
(Knaresborough Casue) in
the days of Richard I. :
the distorbed state of
things in his absence.
Richard I., the Crusades, and
Blondel, &c.
England and Abroad (Cru-
sade, &c.), 1189-99 ; ends
with dea& of Richard I.
Robin Hood, Prince John,
and Richard I.
Brittany, 11 96-8 (Richard I.
of England, Pzince John,
&c.). A little boy-play-
mate of Prince Arthnr of
Brittany.
A monk-artist at West-
minster in 1193 (Richard
I., Queen Eleanor, Prince
John, &c.).
Stowe (Lincolnshire), 1 199.
Bishop Hugh of Lmcoln.
England (Nottingham dis-
trict) in the end Twelfth to
the beginning Thirteenth
Centttzy period (Robin
Hood, ue Signing of Magna
Charta, &c.).
Provence and the Trouba-
dours in the late Twelfth
Century.
a One of Htfbsrt Strands Historic^a Serus.
SUPPLEMENT.
269
TWELFTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR,
SUBJECT.
Henry db Pombroy
Mrs. Anna Eliza Bray
(Chapman & Hall)
Tavistock, Berry Pomeroy*
and Dartmoor district ;
also St. Michael's Mount.
Time of Richard I. Con-
tains good local colour.
THIRTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Flame Gathbr-
A Boy's Ride. Juv.
Sir Sleep-Awake
AND His Brother.
Juv.
aWALTER the Ar-
mourer. Juv.
Alan's Vow (in " A
Fair Haven," &c.).
Juv.
For Church and
State {Sequel, in
same vol.). Juv.
The Good Sword
Belgarde. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSBBR.
Margaret H. Potter
(Macmillan)
Gulielma 2k)Uinger
(A. C. McClorg ft Co.)
Grace I. Whitham
(Blackie)
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
SUBJECT.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
A. C. Curtis
(H . Frowde, and Hodder,
Eng. ; and Dodd,
Mead, U.S.A.)
India in 1205.
England in the days of King
John.
Time of King John ; Pales-
tine (Crussides), and Spain
(the Moors).
Norwich in the time of King
John and the Papal Inter-
dict.
(I) England: the Papal Inter-
dict, 12 1 3-14 ;
(2) Archbishop Langton (The
Charter), 12x4-15.
French v. English in the time
of King John (Siege of
Dover, ftc).
0 Publisbed twth sepatately and in Vol. II. (" England : The Mediarral Period ") of Parkec'a
Tides lUuartUing Chitiek History »
270
SUPPLEMENT.
THIRTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Tub Constable's
Tower. Juv.
*Fribdhelm. Juv.
Sir Raoul. Juv,
Frederick of Ho-
HENSTAUFBN (in
"Historic Boys").
Juv.
*Cross and Dagger.
Juv.
*The Sign of
UMPH. Juv.
Tri-
The Children's Cru-
sade. Juv,
♦On the Forgotten
Road
AUTHOR and PUBLISHER.
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
E. K. Seth-Smith
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
James M. Ludlow
(Oliphant, Eng. ; and
Revell, U.S.A.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
W. Scott Durrant
(Methuen, Eng.
Lane, U.S.A.)
and
Sheppard Stevens
(Chapman Sc Hall, Eng.;
and Page, U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Henry Baerlein
(J. Murray)
SUBJECT.
Dover, Windsor, &c., in the
days of King John and
Magna Charta: Hugh de
Burgh and the Siege of
Dover Castle.
Germany and the East (Cru-
sades) in the days of the
Emperor Frederick II.,
1202-4. Last chapter, 1220.
The Fourth Crusade (Venice,
Acre, Constantinople, &c.),
1203.
Palermo, 1207 (Boyhood of
the Emperor Frederick II.).
Germany, 1212 (Otto IV.),
and the Children's Crusade;
then France, Epypt, Syria
(largely), and Sicily, 1212-
22. " The Old Man of the
Mountain," St. Francis of
Assisi, and the Emperor
Frederick II.
France, 12x2 ; the Children's
Crusade. Experiences dur-
ing the march to the
Mediterranean.
The " Crusade " of 1212, and
what happened to three
boys — two English and one
French — among theMoors.
Mainly France, 12 12 (Philip
Augustus, and the Chil-
dren's Crusade). The later
portion of this imaginary
autobiography covers
twenty-three years' cap-
tivity in Egypt, with a
final glimpse of France in
1235 (St. I^uis).
SUPPLEMENT.
271
THIRTEENTH CEKTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
♦The Divine Min-
strels
The Heart's Key
(in *• Fond Adven-
tures ")
♦The Albigbnsbs
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
•Sir Walter's Ward.
Juv.
Angnste Bailly (trans.)
(P. Lee Warner, Eng. ;
and Scribner, U.S.A.)
Maurice Hewlett
(MacmiUan, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Chas. Robert Maturin
(Hurst, London; and
Constable, Edinburgh)
William Everard
(Bladde)
The Wanton
Frances Harrod "
(Greening & Co.)
The Lady of the
Well
Eleanor Alexander
(E. Arnold, Eng. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
1
A Son of the Em- ! Newton V. Stewart
peror I (Methuen & Co.)
♦The Rout of the
Foreigner. Juv.
Gulielma Zollinger
(A. C. McClnxg & Co.)
subject.
Umbria, early Thirteenth
Century. St. Francis of
Assisi (ends with his death
in 1224).
Southern France (Toulouse)
during the Albigenses'
persecution, early Thir-
teenth Century.
France under Philip Augus-
tus, 12 1 6. The Albigenses
in Languedoc.
Germany (Thuringia) and the
East during the Crusades.
The Emperor Frederick II.
crowned " King of Jeru-
salem " in 1228, &c.
Germany in the days of the
Emperor Frederick II.
The struggle with the Pope
— Council of Lyons ; the
Saracens, &c.
Italy in the fifth decade of
the Thirteenth Century.
Time of Emperor Frede-
rick II. and Pope Innocent
II.
Enzio, King of Sardinia
(natural son of the Em-
peror Frederick II.), mid-
Thirteenth Century.
Bedfordshire, the Midlands,
and London, 1223-24
(Henry III.). Archbishop
Langton figures promi-
nently. Tale ends with
Siege of Bedford Castle.
272
SUPPLEMENT.
THIRTEENTH CENTURY— «»»i<MM««i.
TITLB OF BOOK.
• ■ — 1 — ■
author and publisher.
subject.
A Friar of Ordbrsn
Grey (in "The
Peace of the
Church," &c.).
Juv,
Writer and Fight-
er (Stf^ntf/, in same
vol.). Juo.
M[ary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
(i) Oxford about 1225 (Gros-
seteste).
(2) Grosseteste as Bishop of
Lincoln, 1246.
The King's Guide
" Nannton Covertside "
(Simpkin & Co.)
London (the Tower), Kenil-
worth, and Wales in 1243
and the years just follow-
ing : Prince Llewelyn,
Simon de Montfort, ftc.
A Royal Road. Juv.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
andWhittaker,U.S.A.)
England, 1247 (Henry III.)
and Eg]rpt, 1249 (the 8th
Crusade, led by St. Louis).
The House of Wal-
DBRNB. Juv.
A. D. Crake
(Longmans)
Sussex ; also Kenilworth,
Oxford, &c., 1253-64. The
Barons' Wars, ending with
Battle of Lewes.
•The Lion of De
MONTFORT. Juv.
Roland Home
(Dent & Co.)
Time of the Barons' Wars,
ending with the Battle of
Lewes, 1264 (Hereford,
Gloucester, London, Roch-
ester, and Lewes).
•The Red Saint
Warwick Deeping
(CasseU)
Time of De Montfort ; Kent
and Sussex, during the
Batons' Wars (Battle of
Lewes).
King of the Barons
J. F. Waight
(Sisleys, Ltd.)
Simon de Montfort (Battles
of Lewes and Evesham).
•De Montfort's
Squire. Juv.
Frederick Harrison
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Sussex, 1264-5 (Battles of
Lewes and E veaham) . In-
troduces Simon de Mont-
fort, Roger Bacon, Prince
Edward, &c.
SUPPLEMENT.
273
THIRTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb Adventures of
HuMFREY Chat-
teris. Juv.
*Ralph the Outlaw.
Jt*v,
Princess Adelaide.
Juo.
Sir Valdemar the
Ganger. Juv.
Falaisb of the
Blessed Voice
The Crusade of St.
Louis {m " Stories
of the Crusades ").
Juv,
A Slave of tbe
Saracen. Juv,
*Thb Oriflamms
Egypt
IN
*Arnoul the Eng-
lishman
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Sheila E. Braine
(Nister, Eng. ; and
Dntton. U.S.A.)
Mrs. H. Clarke
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
Josephine Fotheringhame
(S. Low & Co.)
W. Steams Davis
(Macmillan)
}. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham» U.S.A.)
Gertrude HoUis
(T. Nelson & Sons)
C. H. Butcher, D.D.
(Dent & Co.)
Frands Aveling
(Metfauen)
subject.
Bo3rish adventures, 1265 ;
Roger Mortimer, Guy de
Montfort, &c. Prince
Edward a prisoner in
Hereford Casue ; and the
Battle of Evesham.
East Coast, London, Oxford,
&c., in the days of Henry
III. and De Montfort
(Prince Edward at Wind-
sor).
England (London, Windsor,
&c.) in the Henry IIL —
Edward I. period (mostly
1264-7). An Italian Prin-
cess, mece of Queen EI60-
nore : the Siege of Kenil-
worth.
Alexander III. of Scotland,
and his victory over Haco
V. of Norway at Laigs, in
1263.
The Youth of St. Louis, King
of France.
France and the East (the
Eighth Crusade, 1248-54).
France and the East (the
Crusade under St. Louis
from 1248).
St. Louis in Egypt, 1249-50 ;
also England (wilts) under
Henry III. ; Matthew
Paris, &c.
Time of Henry III. of Eng-
land, and of St. Louis of
France. The University
of Paris (Regulaxists v.
Secularists; Aquinas, ftc.)
274
SUPPLEMENT.
THIRTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
!
TITLE OF BOOK. | AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
aThe Sea-Tigers. Juv.
Castel del Monte
Provenzano
Proud
THE
*Thb Boy and the
Baron. Juv.
♦San Celestino
Florestane the
Troubadour
♦The God of Love
bTBB Orphan of Eve-
sham. Juv,
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
Nathan Gallizier
(Dean. Eng. ; and Page.
U.S.A.)
Evelyn H. Gifford
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Adeline Knapp
(Century Co.)
J. Ayscough
(Smith, Elder. Eng.;
and Putnam, U.S.A.)
Julia de Wolf Addison
(Dana Estes & Co.)
Justin H. McCarthy
(Hurst & Blackett,Eng.;
and Harper. U.S.A.)
H. C. Adams
(Parker, Oxford)
SUBJECT.
Christians in Asia about 1250
(The Nestorian Church).
Palermo— Guelph v. Ghibel-
Une. The fail of the Ho-
henstaufen D3masty in
Italy (Battle of Benevento,
1266).
Italy. Z268 onwards. The
struggle between Siena and
Florence; the Battle of
Tagliacozzo. &c.
Germany, about 1260-80.
The robber knights, and
their suppression by Ru-
dolf I. of Hapsburg,
The career — ^from boyhood
to death— of Pi6tro di
Murrone (1215-96). who
founded the Celestines, and
became Pope in 1294 as
' Celestine V.," for five
months.
S. France (chiefly) and Italy,
about the yeari 270. Cima-
bue, the Painter, is intro-
duced, while there are
glimpses of Dante (as
Httle boy) and of Sordello.
Florence about 1290. Dante
and Beatrice (supposed
narration by a friend of the
poet).
Battle of Evesham. 1265
(Henry III.) ; then the
Welsh War, 1282 (Edward
I.). The prejudices of the
age against the Jews.
(«
• Published both separately and in the volome, " Asia and Africa " (Parker's 7«to lUustrtUitu
Church History).
b In Vol. III. of Parker's 7«to lttuaf§Hnt Ckmtih History : mi poUiahed separately.
SUPPLEMENT.
275
THIRTEENTH CEHTURY—conUnued.
TTTLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJECT.
a A FORGOTTSN Hbro ;
OR, Not For Him.
Juo.
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
Edmimd, Earl of Cornwall,
Z290-8 (Cornwall andBerk-
hampstead).
• Formerly entitled " Not lor Him t the Story of a Forgotten Hero."
FOURTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Prbnticb Hugh. Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJBCT.
A Lady of Francs
•Thb Dryad
Bbrtrand Dugub-
scuN (in " Contes
Historiques"). Juv,
In Northern Seas.
Juv.
Dudley Castle
Frances Mary Peaid j
(National Society, Eng. ; \
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
B. Symonds
(Stanley Paul & Co.)
Jnstin H. McCarthy
(Methnen)
Madame EugWe Foa
(Williams & Norgate,
1886 ; and various
French pnbUshers)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Chris G. Gardner
(A. H. Stockwell)
London and Exeter in the
last years of Edward I.
(Bishop Bitten and Exeter
Cathedral in 1303).
Paris at the b^;iiuuag of the
Fourteenth Century. Time
of Philippe le Bel.
French Knights in Greece
(Athens) at the beginning
of the Fourteenth Century.
Time of Philippe le Bel.
Rennes, early Fourteenth
Century.
Venice and the Faroe Is-
lands, &c., early Four-
teenth Century.
En£[land (mostly Midland
districts) in the time of
Edward II. Thomas. Earl
of Lancaster ; Roger Mor-
timer; and other historical
characters, including the
King and Queen.
276
SUPPLEMENT.
FOURTEENTH CESTVRY—coniinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Tus Glory and Sor-
row OF Norwich.
Juv,
Hugh the Mbssbn-
GER. Juv.
author and pubusher.
M. M. Blake
(Janold)
With the Black
Prince. Juv.
aWiTH the Black
Prince. Juv.
The Lady Alda's
Pilgrimage (in
" The Shepherd
Prior," &c.) Juv,
The Abbot's Bridge.
Juv.
*Brakespeare
5^SiR Nigel
Gertrude Hollis
(Christian Knowledge
Society, £ng. ; and
Gorham. U.S.A.)
W. O. Stoddard
(Appleton)
H. Strang and R. Stead
(Frowdfe ; and Hodder)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Frances Mary Peard
(National Society, Eng.:
and Whittaker,U.S. A. }
George Alfred Lawrence
(Routledge)
A. Conan Doyle
(Smith, Elder, Eng. :
and McClure, U.S.A.)
subject.
Edward III. and the Black
Prince at Norwich in 1340.
Then the French Wars, the
Plagae in Norwich, &c.,
1340-50-
Time of Edward III., 1344-
47. Norwich, London,
Ghent, and Calais (Siege) —
introducing the Slack
Prince, Van Artevelde, &c.
England (Warwickshire) in
the time of Edward III. ;
also the FrenchWar (Battle
of Cie9y, 134^)-
England and France, 1338-
76; the Sack of Southamp-
ton; Battles of Cressy and
Poictiers, &c.
Canterbury Pilgrims in 1347.
Bury St. Edmunds in X347.
England and France in the
tmie of Edward III. and
the Black Prince; the
winning of Calais, 1346-47,
and the Battle of Poictiers,
1356. The Free Com-
panions.
Time of Edward III., begin-
ning 1348. The French
War, covering Calais and
Poictiers (1356).
a One of Herbtrt Siramf^ Histarieal Seria,
b Thit book dMis with the yoiOh of " Sir Nigel" Conaa Doyle's *• The White Company " {vid*
p. 39) depicts him c. 1366-67.
SUPPLEMENT.
277
FOURTEENTH CENTURY— coit/t»M««i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
TjOB Rbd Knight.
T&B Mistress of
Aydon
^Minstrel Dick. Juv.
^Bertrand of Brit-
tany
Under the Flag of
France. Juv.
The Sword Decides
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
G. I. Whitham
(Blackie)
R. H. Forster
(J. Long)
Christabel R. Coleridge
(Gardner)
Warwick Deepiog
(Haqier)
David Ker
(Blackie)
i<
JeRANNE of THE
Golden Lips
Marjorie Bowen "
(Alston Rivers, and
Greening, £ng. ; and
McClure, U.S.A.)
Frances G. Knowles-
Foster
(Mills & Boon, £ng. ;
and J. Lane, 17.S.A.)
\
F^icitX
^SlNGOALLA
alHE Island of En<
CHANTMENT
t4
Christopher Hare "
(Harper)
Viktor Rydberg (trans.)
(Walter Scotl)
Justus M. Forman
(Harpei)
SUBJECT.
England (Windsor, ftc.) in
the second half of Edward
III.; Black Prince, Sir
John Chandos, and other
historic figures.
Northumberland in the later
period of Edward III.
Herts (Berkhampstead) in the
last days of the Black
Prince ; also Chelsea and
London. Ends with the
Prince's death, 1376.
Bertrand du Guesdin — ^his
earlier days.
Bertrand du Guesdin, the
Moors in Spain, &c.
Giovanna of Naples, i343-'4*
Plague, &c.
Naples, 1343-45 ; Queen Je-
hanne of Sicily, Andrea of
Hungary, and Louis of
Taranto. Boccaccio ap-
Siena in mid-Fourteenth Cen-
tury. The Black Death
penod, Z348.
Sweden (Plague background)
about 1350.
Venice, but mainlv Arbe (one
of the N. Dalmatian is-
lands) in 1355: time of
Lewis of Hungary's attack.
• A tUght Irot vivid love-story ; the illostntioiis in colour by Howard Pyle are exoeptioDaUy
food.
278
SUPPLEMENT.
FOURTEENTH CENTURY— con/»«««?.
\
\
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
*Thb Discxplb of a
Saint
♦Thb Lovb Story of
St. Bsl
Hawkwood
Brave. Juo.
Vida D. Scndder
(Dent & Co.)
Bernard Capes
(Methuen)
William Beck
(Blaclde)
SUBJECT.
The Viper of Milan
'Arethusa
The White Lady of
Hazblwood. Juv.
Dearer Than Life.
Juv,
0 ''TwixT Old and
New. Juv.
The Wardship of
Steepcombe. Juv,
" Marjorie Bowen "
(Alston Rivers, Eng. ;
and McClure, U.S.A.)
F. Marion Crawford
(MacmiUan)
The Accolade
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
Emma Leslie
(Religions Tract Society);
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society. Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
C. E. D. Phelps
(Lippincott)
St. Catharine of Siena. An
imaginaiy biography of an
historical person. Siena in
Plague Tune; the Papal
Court at Avignon, &c.
Siena, 137A (time of St.
Catharine).
The Free Companions in
Italy, under Sir John
Hawkwood, late Four-
teenth Century ; Gian Vis-
conti of Milan, &c.
Gian Galeazzo Visconti, D uke
of Milan, and his wars with
the free towns of N. Italy,
late Fourteenth Century.
Constantinople in 1376.
London and Herts, 1372-4 :
Margaret, Countess of
Montfort.
Oxfordshire and London, &c.p
in the time of Wycliffe»
1366-84.
Time of Williamof Wykehanu
Chaucer, Langland, &c,
1377-81, and 1393.
Winchester, London, &c., in
the days of WyclifEe and
William of ^keham.
Ends with the Peasants'
Revolt.
Chaucer, the poet.
SUPPLEMENT.
279
FOURTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Tkb Fbn Robbbrs.
Juv.
The Dukb's Ward.
Juv,
To THB Shrine of
St. Truth. Juv.
•The Seven Nights
♦Philip Okeover's
Pagehood. Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Red Dickon, the
Outlaw. Juv.
*A Dream of John
Ball
aALicB OF Fobbing.
Juu.
SUZAMNE
De Foix
Tom Sevan
(T. Nelaon & Sons)
Dora M. Jones
(OUphant)
E. K. Seth-Smith
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Marion Fox
(Elliot Stock)
Gertmde Hollis
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Tom Sevan
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
William Morris
(Longmans)
W. E. Heygate
(Parker. Oxford)
Valentina Hawtrey
(J. Murray)
Mrs. Anna Eliza Bray
(Chapman ft Hall)
SUBJECT.
England in 1377 (Cambridge,
London, Essex Fens, Lm-
colnshire, &c.). Will
Langland and tiie peasants.
Kent, 1377-81 (Simon of
Sudbury, and the Peasants'
Revolt).
London and Chillingley
(Surrey) in 1381 : WUuam
Langland.
Opens in Brittany; then
England (Kent) and Wat
Tyler's Rising.
Northamptonshire and Lon-
don just before and during
the Peasant8'Revolt(Geofi-
rey Chaucer, Simon of
Sudbury, and the Peasant
leaders).
The Peasants' Revolt — ^Wat
Tyler and John Ball.
Kent in the days of the
Peasant Revolt (John Ball,
Jack Straw, Wat Tyler,
&c.).
England, 1381-2 (The Peas-
ants' Revolt).
France, 1362 ; then about
twenty vears later — ^time
of Charles VI. and the
Flemish War.
Southern France in late
Fourteenth Century (Gas-
ton de Foix up to his
death in 1391).
« Published both separately and in Vol. II. (" England : The Mediaeval Period ") of Parker's
TaUs Itkuirsling Chunk History,
28o
SUPPLEMENT.
FOURTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Ths Cloister of the
Seven Gates (in
"ChivalricDays").
Juv,
a* Under One Scep-
trb ; or Morti-
mer's Mission.
Juv.
A Master Builder
(in " A Fair
Haven," &c.). Juv.
*Dam£ Joan of Pb-
vbnsby. Juv.
Ian of the Orcades.
Juv.
♦The New June
Patcola
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. ShaAv)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
E. E. Crake
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.
Wilfred Campbell
(Oliphant, Eng. ; and
Revell, U.S.A.)
Henry Newbolt
(Blackwood)
subject.
Ena Fitzgerald
(Greemng)
Servia in Z389.
Roger Mortimer, Fourth Earl
of March and Ulster. Usk
(MonmouthB^iire), Ireland,
and London, 1373-99.
Winchester, 1390-4 (time of
the Black Death).
Sussex Coast, 1390-9 : John
of Gaunt, &c. ; ends with
the coming of Bolingbroke.
Scotland (Castle Gimigoe,
Caithness) at the end of the
Fourteen^ Century. Time
of Robert III.
England(Richard II. — Henry
IV.), and France, Italy, &c.
The founding of Mount
Grace Priory (Yorks) in
1396 ; various historical
figures are introduced, and
the book ends with the
Battle of Shrewsbury.
A story of Vijayanagar, a
city in Southern India,
founded 1^36. The period
covered is between the
Fourteenth Century and
the Sixteenth. Supposed
to be related by a hermit
to a young Englishman in
the first years of the
Seventeenth Century.
a Formerly entitled, " The Lord of the Marches ; or, The Story of Roger Uoctliiier."
SUPPLEMENT.
281
FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
MiSTRBSS Margery.
Juv.
Men of Iron. Juv.
Harry of Monmouth
(in " Historic
Boys "). Juv.
•Harry of Athol
•Hearts of Wales
The Spurs of Gold.
Juv.
The Blacksmith of
Boniface Lane.
Juv.
Kinsman and Name-
sake. Juv.
•Father Felix's
Chronicles
PSRRONELLE
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Emily S. Holt
(J. F. Shaw)
Howard Pyle
(Osgood, £ng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Elbiidge S. Brooks
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
It H. Forster
(J. Long)
i«
Allen Raine "
(Hutchinson)
J. Brown Morgan and J.
Rogers Freeman
(A. Melrose)
" A, L. O. E."
(T. Nelson & Sons)
R. Stead
(Blackie)
Nora Chesson
(Unwin, Eng. ; andi
Wessels, U.S.A.)
Valentina Hawtrey
(J. Lane)
SUBJECT.
England (Oxfordshire), 1395-
X401. William Sastre and
Archbishop ArundeL Last
chapter, Henry V., 141 5.
England in X400 ; also in
140S-18 (Henry IV. —
Henry V. period).
Berkhampstead Castle, and
the Welsh Marches, 1402
(Henry V.'s boyhood).
Northumberland, 1402 (Hot-
sfmr, and the struggles
with the Percys).
Owen Glendower and the
Welsh Rebellion.
Dunstable Priory, Shrews-
bury, &C., 1394 and 1402-
3 ; the Lollards ; and the
Welsh War (Hotspur and
Glendower).
London in the time of Henry
IV. : Prince Hal and John
Badby, the Lollard.
Yorkshire in the time of
Henry IV. : Archbishop
Scrope's conspiracy.
Norfolk (Norwich Priory) in
the time of Henry IV. An
imaginary monk's story,
reflecting the mysticism of
the period, and introducing
several historic figures.
Bourgeois life in Paris, 1400.
1
282
SUPPLEMENT.
FIFTEENTH CENTURY— co«/»»M«i.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*Ths King of ▲ Day.
Juu.
Thb Last Days of
John Hus
*Crushed ybt Con-
quering. Juu.
aMARK's Wedding.
Juv,
frCLAUD THE Archer.
Juv,
•Jenkyn Clyffb,
Bedesman. Juv.
Squire and Page.
Juv.
The White Stan-
dard. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
Florence Wilf ord
(Masters)
Anonymous (trans, by
Prof. W. R. MorfiU)
(Religions Tract Society)
Deborah Alcock
(Religions Tract Society)
H. C. Adams
(Parker, Oxford)
Herbert Strang and John
Aston
(Frowde ; and Hodder)
Gertrude HoUis
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
G. I. Whitham
(Blackie)
EUza F. Pollard
(Blackie)
France (Paris, ftc), 1404-10 :
Charles VI. period. Then
— ^last chapter — ^nineteen
years later : Joan of Arc,
X429.
A semi-fictional account of
the trial and martyrdom of
Hus, 1414-15.
Part I. — ^The council of Con-
stance and John Hus (his
death), 1415; Part II.—
Bohemia (the Hussites),
X415-29.
Kent, 1413 (time of Henrjr
v.). The Lollards and Sir
John Oldcastle (Lord Cob-
ham), ending with the
latter's death in 14x7.
England and France, 14x4-
22 : Henry V. at Agin-
court, &c., ending with his
death.
An old man relates (X440) his
former experiences under
Henry V. Treats of Henry,
first as Prince in 1409, then
as King from 14x3 ; the
French Wars (Agincourt
and Normandy).
Henry V.'s camp at South-
ampton, &c. ; plots before
the King's departure for
France.
Scotland (Court of James I.),
and France (Charles VII.
and Joan of Arc).
« In Vol. III. of Parker** TaUs lUuHratimg Church Hisiory ; not published separately.
b OMotHsfbtrtStrtt^tHiitofical Series.
SUPPLEMENT.
283
FIFTEENTH CEKTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJBCT.
♦The FtowBR of
Francs
♦Joan the Maid. Juv.
A Heroine of
France. Juu.
*The Days of Jeanne
d'Arc. Juv.
♦Lbs Gens d'I^pinal
Catharine Douglas
•A Kino's Tragedy
♦Maid Margaret
♦Wenzbl's Inheri-
tance. Juv.
The New Moon of
Islam (in "The
Flower of Destiny,"
&c.)
Justin H. McCarthy
(Hurst, £ng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Rundle Charles
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorhaxn, U.S.A.)
£. Fverett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Mary H. Catherwood
(Cvay, Eng. ; and Cen-
tury Co., U.S.A.)
R. Auvray
(Armand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
Rachel Willard
(Janold)
<f
»»
May Wynne
(Digby, Long & Co.)
S. R. Crockett
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
Annie Lucas
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Margaret Mordecai
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
The career of Joan of Axe.
Cornish Coast, 1415 and
later; then France and
Joan of Arc (her trial and
death), X429-31.
Joan of Arc; the chief
events from her " vision "
to her death.
Last three yeaxs of the Maid's
life, 1429-3Z. Charles VII.,
Yolande, Dowager Queen
of Sicily, Agnes SoreC &c.
Fiance under Charles VII.,
in period 1423-44.
Scotland, 1436. Earl Doug-
las, and James I.'s assasn-
nation in 1437.
Scotland, 1436-7. James I.'s
assassination ; Catherine
Douglas, ftc.
Scotland(Galloway) in James
II. poiod. Conflict be-
tween the Stuarts and the
Douglases.
Bohemia, 1434 ; the Battle-
field of Lipan; then —
more than twenty years
on — ^the Picards (Prague,
&c.).
The Balkans in 1444 (Hun-
garians V. Turks).
284
SUPPLEMENT.
FIFTEENTH CEiHTURY— continued.
TITLB 07 BOOK.
Lbopard and
Lily
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Our Lady of Bbauty
Martin the Mummer
*A Lodging tor the
Night (in " New
Aiabian Nights.")
«Nebdles and Pins
" Marjorie Bowen "
(Doubleday, Page & Co.)
" Lucas Qeeve "
(Digby, Long & Co.)
Dorothy Margaret Stuart
(Constable)
RiDOLTO : THE COM-
ING OF THE Dawn
^Tbb Roman
DENTS
R. L. Stevenson
(Chatto & WinduE)
Justin H. McCarthy
(Hurst, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Egerton R. Williams, Jun.
(A. C. McCluig & Co.)
SUBJECT.
Stu- Deborah Alcock
I (Fisher Unwir)
^SiGiSMONDO Pan -
DOLFO MaLATESTA
Romance of Fra
FiLiPPO Lippi (Ro-
mance of a Friar
and a Nun)
Edward Hutton
(Dent & Co.)
A. J. Anderson
(Stanley Paul, Eng. ;
and Dodd, Mead,
U.S.A.)
Brittany in 1444*
Charles VII. of France and
Agnes Sord, 1450.
Burgundy in the year 145 1 :
Duke Philip the Good, and
his wife Isaoel of Portugal ;
Adolf de Cleves; and
numerous real characters.
A story of Francois Villon in
1456.
Poitou in the time of Louis
XL: ViUon's Courtship
and Marriage.
Italy (Perugia) in the Early
Renaissance period.
Italy (Venice, Rome, &c)
early to late Fif teenUi Cen-
tury. Time of Popes Pius
II. and Paul II.; also
Pomponius Laetus, & c.
The Humanists and Re-
ligion on the eve of the
Reformation. Ends,South-
em France.
A semi-fictional account of
the Italian despot. Sigis-
mondo Malatesta (Rimini
in mid-Fifteenth Centur>-).
The love story of the artist,
f resented as a novel:
tato and Florence, be-
ginning 1456.
m Sequel to '* If I were King '* {wUs p. 44)-
SUPPLEMENT.
285
FIFTEENTH CEHTVRY —conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb History of
Richard Raynal
Hbld by Rsbbls.
Juv,
*Brazbnhbad
Grxat (in " Fond
Adventures ")
The Queen's Badge.
JU9.
*Thb Queen's Man.
Jttv.
Magic Casements
The Herd Boy and
His Hermit. Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Robert Hugh Benson
(Sir Isaac Pitman)
Tom Bevan
(Collins)
Maurice Hewlett^
(Bfacmillan, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.) J
Frances M. Wilbraham
(BAilner, London)
Eleanor C. Price
(Constable & Co.)
Arthur S. CrippsJ
(Duckworth)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
The Men of Harlbcb " Wirt Gerrare "
(Ward A Downey)
Margaret of Anjou
(in " Historic Vig-
nettes ")
Bernard Capes
(Fisher ifnwin)
Fifteenth Century Quietism :
Henry VI., Cardinal Beau-
fort. &c.
England (Kent) in 1450:
Jack Cade's march on
London.
The Pilgrim's Way to Can-
terbury in X450 (Jack
Cade's RebeUion),
Cheshire, London, &c., 1455-
6x (Queen Margaret and
the Wars of the Roses,
covering various battles of
the period).
Wars of the Roses from 1460 :
the Battles of Wakefield.
St. Albans, &c. (Henry VI.
and Queen Margaret).
Several short stories dealing
with life in Sussex and
Essex in 1460-1, and in
1471.
Cumberland in the Wars of
the Roses period, about
146 1-7 1 (Henrv VI. and
Queen Margaret).
Wales in the Henry VI. —
Edward IV. period, from
1460. Wars of the Roses
and the Siege of Harlech
Castle (Queen Margaret,
King Edward, &c.).
Queen Margaret in 1463.
286
SUPPLEMENT.
FIFTEENTH CEiTtURY— continued.
TITUS OF BOOK.
•IH Stbbl
Leather
Jane Shore
AND
Sir Roland Pree-
DEROY. Juv.
The King who was
Never Crowned.
Juo.
Under the Red
Rose. Jtto.
The Luck of Chervil
Juv,
oTrb White Rose of
Lynden. Juv.
* Beatrix of Clare
*A Knight of the
White Cross. Juv,
AUTHOR and FUBUSBBR.
R. H. Forster
(J. Long)
J. E. Muddock
(J. Long)
Frank Cnrzon Britten
(Religious Tract Society)
SUBJECT.
Gertrude Hollis
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Escott Lynn
(Cassell)
H'. Elrington
(T. Nelson & Sons)
H. C. Adams
(Parker, Oxford)
J. R. Scott
(E. Grant Richards,
Eng. ; andLippincott,
U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Northumberland in the Wars
of the Roses (Henry VI. —
Edward IV.) : Queen Mar-
garet, &c.
A tale based on the chief
events of Jane Shore's Ufe.
England (Edward IV.) ;
France (Louis XI.) ; and
England (Richard III.).
Ends with the Battle of
Bosworth, 1485.
London, in 1483 : the murder
of the Princes in the Tower.
Prince Edward, Richard
III., &c. Last chapter,
1499 (Henry VII.).
England (Herefordshire, Lon-
don, &c.), 1483-85. Earl
Rivers, the Ptinces and
their murder, Richard III.,
and Henry VII. ; ends with
Battle of Boswcnrth.
Wars of the Roses, 1476-95
(Richard III., &c.).
Oxford and Kent in Richard
III.'s time (John Colet,
&c.) ; the suppression of
the Bible in English.
Richard III., 1482-3. The
romance presents him in a
favourable Ught.
England and Abroad, 1470-
80 (Battle of Tewkesbury,
Ac. ; and the First Si^e of
Rhodes).
m In Vol III. of Parker's Talts tttitstratitii Ckwch History ; noi published separately.
r
SUPPLEMENT.
287
FIFTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLS OF BOOK.
* Joan of the Sword
Hand
VoLANDA, Maid of
Burgundy
Marcbllb the Mad
•The Duke's Ven-
geance
•The Swiss Heroes.
Juo,
The Prior of St.
Come (in " Historic
Vignettes ")
•A Jay of Italy
(Bembo)
•Richard Hawxwood
author and pubushbr.
S. R. Crockett
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
Dodd. Mead, U.S.A.)
Charles Major
(Macmillan)
Van Zo Post
(McClure Co., New York)
Seth Cook Comstock
(Appleton)
Michael Kaye
(Greening)
A. A. Willys (trans.)
(A. C. McClnrg & Co.)
Bernard Capes
(Fisher Unwin)
Bernard Capes
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
H. N. Maugham
(Blackwood)
SUBJECT.
Germany about 1470-80
(Pope Siztus IV., Ac),
Styria, Ac, about the 1470-
80 period. Time of Louis
XI. (France), of Edward
IV. (England), and of
Charles the Bold, Duke of
Buxgundy.
Adventures in Flanders and
France in the time of
Charles the Bold.
France in the time of Louis
XI. and Charles the Bold
of Burgundy (the Duke's
Court, &c.).
Louis XI. of France. Bor-
deaux, Amboise, &c. (Duke
Charles of Burgundy, the
Due de Guienne, &c.).
Charles the Bold from 1473 to
his defeat and death at
Nancy in 1477 (Basle,
Treves, &c. — ^The Swiss
Confederation).
Louis XI. of France in the
year 1473.
Milan, X476 (Galeazzo Sforza)
Itahr, X477: Lorenzo de'
Medici. Various figures of
the period are introduced,
including Leonardo da
Vinci and Sandro Botti-
celli.
288
SUPPLEMENT.
FIFTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Thb Angels of Mbs<
SBR Ercolb
*Thb Justice of thb
King
The Kikg's Scape-
goat
The Tailok of Vitri&
(The Gipsy Count)
♦The Court Jester.
Juv,
A Maid of Brit-
tany
*Thb Magada
Lady Dear. Juo,
*Fair Margaret
♦Soldiers of
Cross. Jup.
author and publisher.
Dnffield Osborne
(F. A. Stokes Co.)
HamOton Drummond
(Stanley Paul, Eng.; and
Macmfflan, U.S.A.)
Hamilton Dmmmond
(Ward, Lock & Co.)
<r
May W3nine "
(Gay & Hancock, Eng. ;
and McBride Co.,
U.S.A.)
Mrs. Cornelia Baker
(Stevens, Eng. ; and
Bobbs-Mer^ U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
••
May Wynne "
(Greening)
W. M. Ardagh
(J. Lane)
MilUcent E. Mann
(A. C. McClurg & Co.)
H. Rider Haggard
(Hutchinson, Eng. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
Eliza F. Pollard
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Italy in the late Fifteentli
Century. Time of Pem-
gino, the painter.
France in 1482: Louis XI.
and the Dauphin. Also
Villon, Commines, &c.
Last few months of Louis
XL, 1483.
Brittany, 1483. Pierre Lan-
dais. Minister of Duke
Francis II.
France, Germany, and Spain,
about X 485-90 (Duchess
Anne of Brittany and ttte
Princess Marguerite of
Austria).
Hostilities between France
and Brittany in 1491
(Charles VIII. and Anne of
Brittany).
The Grand Canary, 1482-92 :
last stand of the inhabi-
tants of the Canary Islands
against the Spaniards.
A little Spanish girl in the
days of Queen Isabella
(Columbus period).
Henry VII. and the London
of 1491, but chiefly Spain
under Ferdinand and Isa-
bella. Ends
1501.
in Esses.
England (Henry VII.) and
Spain (Ferdinand and Isa-
bella—Spaniards V. Moors).
SUPPLEMENT.
289
FIFTEENTH CENTURY— «m<»»««i.
TITLE OP BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
SUBJBCT«
*Max»Fiutz and Hob.
Juo.
*Thb Blub Dragon.
Juv.
A Trusty Rbbbl.
/w.
Giovanni of Flo-
RBNCB (in " His-
toric Boys"). Jitv.
Don Tarquinio
*£lbna
Cliristabel R. Coleridge English youth's adventures
(National Society* £ng.; in Bavaria, 1492; ends,
and Whittaker,U.S. A.) Thames Valley and Henry
VII. at Whidsor.
Frances liiary Peard
(National Society, £ng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Mrs. Henry Clarke-^
(T. Nelson Sc Sons)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
F. Rolf e
(Chatto & Windus)
Evelyn B. Warde
(Simpkin & Co.)
England under Henry VII. :
Chester, 1494-6. Miracle
Plays, ih» Plague, &c.
Perkin Warbeck from 1495.
Florence, 1490 (the boyhood
of Pope Leo X.).
Rome under the Borgias in
the 3rear 1495. One day in
a man's life.
Italy, 1493-97* and 1507.
Careful studies of Caesar
Borgia and his sister
Lucresia.
SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Trb Sbcrst Cbam-
bbratCbad. Juo,
aThb Gorgbous Bor-
gia
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Justin H. McCarthy
(Hurst, Eng. ; and Har-
per, U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT.
England at the B^rinning
of the Sixteenth Century
(Henry VII.): the Lol-
lards.
Rome, 1497-1507 (Cai
Borgia).
0 This novel may advantaceoiuly be oontxasted with Sabatini's fine romance. '* The Shame of
Motley " ; In the latter bookCasar Bonia is depicted as a man relentless but mmnm, while Mr.
McCarthys pages present him as the nnreoeemed monster of the traditional view.
^
290
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CENTURY— «)n/m««i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aThb Court of Lu-
cifer
*Thb Shame of Mot-
ley
♦Love at Arms
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
Nathan Gallizier
(L. C. Page & Co.)
Rafael Sabatini
(Hutchinson)
I Rafael Sabatmi
j (Hutchinson)
SUBJECT.
♦XlMHNES
The Hermit
Livrv. Juv.
(f
of
Faithful, but Not
Famous, /uv.
The Romance of the
Fountain
♦Hassan Le Janis-
SAIRE
The City and the
Castle. Juv.
♦The Sword of the
Lord
" Jean Bertheroy
(Annand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
M. R.H.
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Emma Leslie
(Religious Tract Society)
Eugene Lee-Hamilton
(Fisher Unwin)
L6onCahun
(Armand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
Annie Lucas
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Joseph Hocking
(Cassell, Eng. ; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
Rome and the Borgias —
especially Caesar Borgia.
Italy, 1498-1503 : Caesar
Borgia, Lucrezia Borgia,
and Giovanni Sforza.
Italy and the Sforzas about
the year 1500. Time of
Caesar Borgia's conquests.
Cardinal Xim^n^s in 1500.
Picardy, 1501-25 (Louis XII.
— ^Francis I.). Dawn of
the Reformation ; the Sor-
bonne, &c.
France (Paris and the Sor-
bonne, &c.) in period 1510-
19. Dawn of the Reforma-
tion; Guillaume Farel, &c.
Pursuit of the Fountain of
Youth by the Spanish ad-
venturer. Ponce de Leon,
at the beginning of the Six-
teenth Century.
Turkey, Syria, and Egypt in
1516.
Zurich, 1 5 1 7 . The Reforma-
tion in Switzerland : Ulric
Zwingle, &c.
England (Henry VIII.) and
Germany : an Englishman
sent on a secret mission.
Martin Luther in Witten-
berg, 1517 ; also Tetzel,
Erasmus, &c.
• This volume completes the author's trilogy of romances deaUng with medisval Rome {vide
** The Sorceress of Rome,** on p. 261, and ** Castel del Bfonte," on p. 274).
SUPPLEMENT.
291
SIXTEENTH CEt^TURY—cotiUnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
a* In thx Days of
LUTHBR
&Thb Hbrmit of
LiVRY. JUV.
Ixtul' of Tbzcuco
(in " Historic
Boys "). Juv.
Thx War God and
THB Brown Mai-
den. Juv.
Roger the Bold.
Juv.
The White Con-
querors OF Mexi-
co (The Whits
CoNgnERORs)./KV.
*The Crimson Con-
qxtbst
The Unstrung Bow
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Esm^ Stuart
(Sonnenschein)
Emma Leslie
(Sunday School Union)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Tom Bevan
(Collins)
Capt. F. S. Brereton
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
CaldweU, U.S.A.)
Kirk Munroe
(Blaclde* Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
C. B. Hudson
(Grant Richards, Eng. ;
and McQuxg, U.S.A.)
D. O. Batchelor
(Sherman, French,
ton)
SUBJECT.
With Pizarro the { A. L. Haydon
Conquistador. | (Melrose)
Juv. t
Germany (Black Forest,
Wittenberg, and Worms),
1520-25. Martin Luther ;
the Peasants' Revolt, &c.
Ficardy in the time of
Francis I., 1521-36 ; Cal-
vin's boyhood and yonth
up to his leaving France.
Mexico, X515. Last of the
Aztec princes.
A Devon lad in Mexico
(Monterama).
Conquest of Mexico.
Ditto.
Pisano and Pern.
An Englishman in Pern at
the tmie of Pixarro's con-
quest.
The Spaniards in Peru.
ti
a Odg^naXkv pabliabed undex tlw title, " Tbe Fate ol Cattle L6wen«axd.'
b This book not oolv caxries on (chronolagically) the story of the Refonnation depleted in the
same aathor's *' Falthfai, hat not Famous " ; it sJso sapplements the tale of the same title by
" M. R. H." which has alieady been entered. It does not often happen that two books by diffennt
writeis have exactly the same title, deal with exactly the same part of the world, and cover almost
exactly the same pniod I Both tales are well written, and fair examplfs of their kind.
292
SUPPLEMENT-
SIXTEENTH CESTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
a*£viL May-Dat. Juo.
Thb Last Abbot of
Glastombuky.
Juv.
bAT TBX Sign of thb
GOLDSN FlBBCB.
JU9.
cAgmxs Martin. Juv.
Thb Hxir of Trb-
BBBNB. Juv.
Amptbill Towbrs.
Juv.
Tbb Forbst of
Ardbn. Juv.
Tbb Cbancbllor's
Spy. Juv.
AUTBOR AND PUBUSHBR.
suBjBcrr.
£. Everett Green
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
Emma Leslie
(GaU & Inglis)
W. £. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
A. J. Foster
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
W. Gresley
(Masters)
Tom Bevan
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
London, 1517 : Henry VIII.
at begixming of his reign.
The hatred of alien arti-
ficers, and consequent riot
of the 'prentices (Newgate
attacked, ftc).
Dissolntion of the Monas-
teries (England). Prologne
presents Glastonbury Ab-
bey in 1524 ; Part I. deals
with the Abbe3r's destmc-
tion, 1538-9: Fart 11.
takes the reader to Dart-
moor, Exeter, ftc, 1545-7.
Oxford and London, 1520-36.
The Reformation period —
Wolsey, Tyndale, etc.
Oxford in Wolsey's time : the
Cardinal's Fall and Death.
I Devon and Cornwall, 1530-
' 52 : time of Thomas Crom-
I well and the Western Re-
I bellion, ftc.
' Bedfordshire, 1532-3. Time
I of Catherine of ArragOD
I and Anne Boleyn.
I
Warwickshire, ftc, 1535-55.
The Reformation period
(Latimer).
Last days of Anne Boleyn,
and the coming of Jane
Seymour (Thomas Crom-
well, Henry VIII., Princess
Mary, ftc).
a A far 1«M interettlnir tale by Miis Ertntt Green dealing with almoet tlie same peiiod — b,
'* For the Faith " (early Reformation inllnenoes at Ozlord).
6 A less InterestiDg tale of the Reformation period by the tame author b, *' Peter the Apptentfea **
rReliidoQs Tract Society) ; it deab with London and Greenwich aboat 1935—30.
TPnblished both separately and fai Vol. II. (" BngUnd : The Medl«val Period **) of Paifeer's
TtOa lUustraiing Church History.
SUPPLEMENT.
293
SIXTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
The Annb-Quebn's | Reginald Farrer
Chronicle (Alston Rivers)
Old London Bridge
G. Herbert Rodwell
(Routledge)
The Church and £. Everett Green
TbB King. Juv. (T. Nelson & Sons)
a^THE King's, Robert Hugh Benson
Achievement (Sir I. Pitman)
A Friar Observant Frances M. Brookfield
(Sir I. Pitman)
*Thb Lady of Bloss-
HOLME
H. Rider Haggard
(Hodder & Stoughton)
SUBJECT.
Clean Hands (in " A Mary H. Debenham
Fair Haven/' &c.). (National Society, Eng.;
Juv. and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
The Queen's Nurse Bernard Capes
(in " Historical (Fisher Unwin)
Vignettes ")
*Th£ Fifth Queen Ford Madox Huefier
(Alston Rivers)
•Privy Seal
Ford Madox Hueffer
(Alston Rivers)
History of the last five
months in Anne Bolejm's
life, presented in fictional
form. Favourable to Anne.
Edward Osborne as a London
apprentice, 1536; Henry
YIII., Jane Sesrmour, Tho-
mas Cromwell, &c.
Henry VIII. and the Dis-
solution of the Monasteries
(Yorkshire, Londcm, &c.).
Henry VIII. and the Dis-
solution of the Monasteries.
The King, More, Thomas
Cromwell, ftc.
England (Dissolution of the
Monasteries) ; Germany
(Luther) ; and Italy.
England (Eastern Counties
and London), 1535-6 ; the
Pilgrimage of Grace. Henry
VIII. and Thomas Crom-
well.
Henry VIII. and the Monas-
teries, 1537.
Jane Seymour, and the birth
of Edward VI. in 1537.
Katharine Howard, X539-40-
Thomas Cromwell and Kath-
arine Howard.
a Written from a Roman Catholic standpoint.
294
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CESTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
^Xbe Fifth Queen
Crowned
*The Arrow of the
North
♦The Witch's Sword
For the Soul of a
Witch
Ford Madoz Huefier
(Eveldgh Nash)
R. H. Forster
(J. Long)
subject.
A King's Masquer-
ade
D. Kerr Fulton
(£. Arnold)
J. W. Biodie Innes
(Rebman)
««
May Wynne "
(Greening)
♦Moor and Moss. Juv.\ Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, £ng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
♦Two Dover Boys.
Juv.
a^RENEB
Gertrude Hollis
(Blackie)
Henry Curties
(Grant Richards)
Katharine Howard ; Ponte-
fract Castle and Hampton
Court.
Northumberland at the be-
ginning of the Sixteenth
Century : the Scotch War,
ending with Flodden, 1513.
Scotland, 151 3 (Flodden and
after). Also Paris, &c.
North Scotland (Forres and
district), about the second
quarter of the Sixteenth
Century. Mediaeval Witch-
craft.
James V. of Scotland in dis-
guise : a tale of adventure
in the Border district.
Cumberland, and the Border
Country (Liddesdale), 1520
and the years following.
Raids of the Armstrongs,
Ac
Adventures in the Mediter-
ranean and North Africa,
1554-5 ; time of the corsair
Barbarossa, and of the
Emperor Charles V.'s cap-
ture of Tunis.
France (Bourges, Rennes,
&c.), 1515-20. Marriage
of Francis I. to Princess
Claude ; Battle of Marig^
nano ; and the Field of the
Qoth of Gold.
• The first volume in • new ** trilocy of historical novels by Sylvester Cole " is s«id to deal with
the " time of Francis I.** (France) ; as uie book under the title of ** A Son of Navarre " (Connoisseur's
Press, Jersey City, New York) wHI not be obtainable until after my final notes have been made, this
bare allusion to it must suffice.
SUPPLEMENT.
295
SIXTEENTH CEKTURY^conUnued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AMD PVBLISHBR.
f
Story of the Fibld Elbridge S. Brooks
OF THE Cloth of (Blackie, Eng. ; and
Gold (in " Chival-
ric Days"), /ur.
•The Queen's Page.
Juv.
Mid Clash of
Swords. Juv.
aA Journey Through
THE Air (in " A
Feast of Stories
from Foreign
Lands ")* Juv,
•The Plough of
Shame
A Night with Ales-
SANDRO
•The Cripple of
Nuremberg. Juv.
6The Bride of Ram-
cuttah. Juv,
Century Co., U.S.A.)
Cornelia Baker
(B. F. Stevens, Eng. ;
and Bobbs-MerriU,
U.S.A.)
George Surrey
(H. Frowde,andHodder)
SUBJECT.
James F. Cobb
(Wells Gardner)
Mary B. Whiting
(Dent St Co.)
Treadwell F. Cleveland
(Chapman, Eng. ; and
Holt, U.S.A.)
Felicia Buttz Clark
(C. H. Kelly, Eng. ; and
Jennings, U.S.A.
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
England (Bucks) and France,
1520. Henry VIII. and
Francis I.
S.W. France in the 1520-30
period (Francis I.) ; Msu*-
guerite of Angoul^me,
Queen of Navarre.
The Sack of Rome, 1527.
Time of Benvenuto CeUini,
&c.
Austria (Marburg), 1530 ;
time of the Turnsh incur-
sions.
Ferrara, Florence, &c., in
the days of the Emperor
Charles V. and Pope Cle-
ment VII., Ariosto, Tasso,
Michelangelo, etc.
Florence under Duke Ales-
sandro de' Medici, in the
time of the Emperor
Charles V. and of Francis I.
of France. Fourth decade
of the Sixteenth Century.
Nuremberg, 1546-7 (just
after Luther's death) : re-
ligious divisions and per-
secutions. The Emperor
Charles V., Alva, &c.
Ends with the Battle of
MQhlberg, 1547.
East Indies (Goa), 1545-58 :
Francis Xavier and his
missions in the East.
a A very short tale, bat It deserves to be mentioiied because of its race subject.
h Published both separately and in the volume, " Asia and Africa " (Parker's Tales Illustrating
Church History),
296
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CESTVRY—cotMuued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Pearl Fishers.
Juv,
*» John Knox's Bairns.
Juv.
*TliE Gage of Red
AND White
author and publisher.
Gertrude HoUis
(T. Nelaon & Sons)
Margaret H. Roberton
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Grahain Hope
(Smith. Elder & Co.)
*Orrain
The Cuckoo
S. K. Levett-Yeats
(Methuen, £ng. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
Hamilton Drummond
(F. V. White)
Sir Galahad of W. H. Johnson
New France i (Ward. Lock. Eng. ;
and Turner. U.S.A.)
Cloister to Court
Frances M. Cotton-Walker
(Ix}ngmans & Co.)
The Golden Glory.
Juv.
♦For Kett and
Countryside
♦In the Face of
Night
D. H. Parry
(£. Nister)
F. C. Tansley
(Jarrold)
subject.
(<
Dick Donovan "
(J. Long)
A Portugese boy among
the Indians of the Eastern
Seas. mid-Sixteenth Cen-
tury : Francis Xavier's
mission work.
Scotland and France, about
Z546-8. John Knox ; Mary
of Guise and her little
daughter Marie ; &c.
France, about 1548. Little
Princess Jeanne of B^am ;
also Catherine de' Medici.
Cardinal Charles of Guise,
and the youthful Coligny.
Henry U. of France ; Cathe-
rine de' Medici v, Diane
de Poitiers.
Peasant and Seigneur in
France at the time of
Coligny and Guise.
France (time of Coligny),
and Florida. 1552.
France (Meaux) and Ger-
many (Heidelberg), in
period. 1559-75 : Charlotte
de Bourbon as Abbess of
Jouarre. &c., up to her
marriage with William of
Orange.
England in the dSLys of
Edward VI. ; a Norwich
youth in Kett's Rebdlion.
Norfolk in 1549 (Edward
VI.) : the Peasant Rising.
Life in Glasgow and district
about 1550.
SUPPLEMENT.
297
SIXTEENTH CEHTURY—couUnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Ths Daughters of
Suffolk
Under two Queens.
Juv.
*The Roskerry
Treasure. Juv,
The Tangled Skein
(In M a r y's
Reign)
The Queen's Tra-
gedy
House of Torment
author and publisher.
SUBJECT.
Wm. Jasper NicboUs
(Lippincott)
£. Everett Green
(J. F. Shaw)
Mrs. Henry Clarke
(T. Nelson & Sons)
fi
Baroness Orczy "
(Greening, Eng. ; and
Cupples, U.S.A.)
Robert Hugh Benson
(Sir I. Pitman)
C. Ranger-Gull
(Greening)
The Cruise of the, S. Hancock
Golden Fleece, i (Religious Tract Society)
Juv. \
A Devonshire Lass
England's Eliza-
beth
H. C. Moore
(R. Scott)
Judge E. A. P&rry
(Smith. Elder & Co.)
The Un wedded I Wm. Robert CuUen
Bride i (J. Long)
Lady Jane Grey, and her
sister. Lady Katherine
Grey.
London, 1552-4: time of
Lady Jane Grey and Sir
Thomas Wyatt.
Cornwall and London dis-
trict in the time of Wyatt's
Rebellion.
Hampton Court in the days
of Queen Mary.
Queen Mary (a defence} ;
Princess Elizabeth, Philip
of Spain, Cardinal Pole, &c.
England (London, Chelms-
ford, &c.) and Spain, in
1555 • Plulip II. and Mary.
Time of Rowland Taylor's
martyrdom and the In-
quisition.
A story of adventure in the
days of Philip and M y.
Devon (Plymouth), and
Spain (Philip II. and the
Inquisition). Bqgins a
few days before Elizabeth's
accession.
Hertfordshire, Kent, London
Ac, in the Hairy VIIL--
Elizabeth period: Cecil,
Wyatt, etc.
Aberdeen and Edinburgh,
1560-1. Mary Queen of
Scots, and the religious
struggles of the period.
298
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CEKTVRY— continued.
TITLE OP BOOK. I AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
In the Queen's , " Dick Donovan "
Service
•With the Warden
OP the Marches
aXHX Prior's Ward.
Juv.
With Poison and
Sword
By what Authority
•Pam the Fiddler
(J. Long)
Howard Pease
(Constable)
H. C. Adams
(Parker, Oxford)
W. M. O'Kane
(Mills & Boon)
Robert Hugh Benson
(Isbister)
H. Sutclifie
(T. Werner Lanrie)
Love While ye May Henry J. Swallow
(Janold)
An Old Time Yarn.
Juv,
When Hawkins
Sailed the Sea.
Juv,
Sea Dogs All. Juv.
•Across the Spanish
Main. Juv,
Edgar Pickering
(Blackie)
Tinsley Pratt
Mary Qneen of Scots and
I>Bimley.
Scottish Border in the time
of Mary Qaeen of Scots.
English religions divisions
about 1550-79 (Bishop
Jewel, &c.).
i London and Ulster, 1561-
62 : Irish and Spajiish
I plots against Elizabeth.
The Qneen, Dudley, Cecil,
I Dee the astrologist, ftc.
' Religion under Eli2abeth
from 1569: London, &c.,
and the North.
W. Yorkshire, 1569: the
Nortons of Rylstone, and
the Catholic Rising. Mary
Queen of Scots at Bolton.
Also Elizabeth, Cedl. &c.
London, in 1547 andini592 ;
but mainly the Durham
Coast, &c.. 1569-72.
West Indies and Mexico.
Hawkins and Drake in
1567.
English Naval Supremacy
(Grant Richards, Eng. ; ' in Elizabethan days,
and Brentano's,U.S. A.l
Tom Bevan
(T. Nelson & Sons)
" Harry CoUingwood "
(Blackie)
Elizabethan England (Forest
of Dean), and the Spanish
Main (Drake, &c.)
Adventure in the Indies
(Cuba, &c.) in the time
of Elizabeth.
a In Vol. III. of Parker's 7«te lUusttBting Ckufek History ; it is not published separatety.
SUPPLEMENT.
299
SIXTEENTH CENTURY— con/m«^.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Hurrah for the
Spanish Main. Juo,
*WiTH Drake on the
Spanish Main
(On the Spanish
Main). Juv.
aA Mariner of Eng-
land. Jl4V.
♦In the Days of
Drake. Juo.
author and publisher.
subject.
* Under Drake's
Flag. Ju9,
R. Leighton
(Melrose)
Herbert Strang
(H. Frowde, and Hodder,
Eng. ; and Bobbs-
Menill, U.S.A.) j
H. Strang and R. Stead
(H. Frowde ; and
Hodder)
J. S. Fletcher
(Blackie)
The Voyage of the
••Avenger." Juv.
Renegat
A Coronation
(in " Tales of Rye
Town ")
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
H. St. John
(Jarrold)
Augustin Filon
(Armand Colin et Cie,
Paris)
Maud Stepney Rawson
(Constable)
Drake's third voyage to
Darien, starting from Ply-
mouth, 1572.
Among the Islands of the
Carribbean Sea in the days
of Elizabeth.
England, the Netherlands,
the Armada, &c., 1570-96.
Elizabeth, Drake, Essex,
and others.
A Yorkshire boy carried
away to Mexico, and his
experiences there, 157&-80
(Spanish Inquisition, and
fiiuJ release by Sir Francis
Drake).
Time of Elizabeth, 1572-88.
Begins Plymouth, but deals
mostly with adventure on
the Spanish Main and in
South America (Drake and
Hawkins). Ends Armada.
Devon and the West Indies
&c., 1583-95 ; Drake, end-
ing with his death.
England in the time of
Drake and the Armada,
1586-93.
Elizabethan Rye (Queen
Elizabeth " crowns " a
child with flowers).
•Basil the Page. I G. I. Whitham
Juv.
A lad's adventures in the
(Wells Gardner, Eng. ; West Country (England),
and Dodge, U.S.A.) j London, and Virginia :
time of Elizabeth, Mary
Queen of Scots, Drake, ftc
a One ol Hubert Strands Historical Series.
300
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CENTURY— cofri»»««i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AKD PUBLI8HSR.
StXBJBCT.
Ravbnsdals Castle. I Louisa C. Silke
Juo, (Religious Tract Society)
A Ladder of Swordsj Gilbert Parker
(Heinemaan, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
*A Gemtleicam of Eliza F. Pollard
England. Juv.
Tax, Old Moat Farm.
Juv.
(Partridge & Co.)
Eliza F. Pollard
(Blackie)
The Splendid ; H. a. Hinkaon
Knight ! (F. V. White, London ;
I and Sealy, Dublin)
The Queen's Knight! Beatrice Marahall
Errant. Juv, \ (Seeley & Co.)
■|
Sir Walter Raleigh* Wm. Devereuz and S.
(Raleigh) i Lovell
I (Greening, Eng. ; and
I Lippincott, U.S.A.)
I
TAe Wounds of a \ Dora G. McChesney
Friend I (Smith, Elder & Co.)
Xx>YAL Hearts and
True. Juv.
The Faith of Hilary
LovBL. Juv.
Thb Fighting Lads
of Devon. Juv.
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
E. Everett Green
(Religious Tract Society)
W. Murray Graydon
(Partridge)
Elizabeth, 1575 : the Earl of
Leicester at Kenilwortb,
&c.
Elizabeth and Leicester, &c.
Sir Phihp Sidney : Kent and
Abroad.
Kent and America (Virginia):
Sir Philip Sidnev. Princess
Pocahontas, Raleigh, &c.
Sir Walter Raleigh.
Ditto.
Elizabeth and Raleigh :
Hants, London, &c., about
the time of Mary Queen of
Scots' death.
America (Virginian settle-
ment), and England :
Elizabeth's Court, and the
coming of the Armada.
Elizabeth and her Court
(Walsingham, Sidney,^tc.).
Ends with the Armada.
London (Greenwich Palace,
WhitehaU, &c.) just before
and during the Armada,
1387-88.
Devon (Dartmoor) and Lon-
don, 1587-8: Earl of
Essex, Walsingham, Drake,
&c. The Armada.
SUPPLEMENT.
301
SIXTEENTH CEIiTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*In Mortal Peril.
Juu.
For Cburcb and
Cbibftain
aA Queen of Men
•The Queen's Host-
age
A Knigbt of God
My Rapier and My
Daughter (in
" Flower o* the
Orange/' Ac.)
My Lord of Essex
The Failure of a
Hero. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
£. £. Crake
(Religioas Tract Society)
«<
May Wynne "
(Mills ft Boon)
WiUiam O'Brien
(Fisher Unwin)
Harriet T. Comstock
(Little, Brown A Co.)
Edith Mary Power
(Sands & Co.)
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Charles Brookfield
(Sir I. Pitman)
SUBJECT.
Mary Bramston
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Defeat of the Spanish Ar-
mada, 1588. The hero is
taken captive to Spain.
Elizabethan Ireland ; time
of the Earl of Desmond, ftc.
Chiefly Ireland (Galway) in
the Armada period: Grace
O'Malley, Sir John Perrot,
&c. In the later chapters
Elizabeth appears, and
Perrot's death m the Tower
(1592) is described.
Queen Elizabeth and her
Court about 1590: love
and intrigue. Ben Jonson
and Shakeroeare (produc-
tion of " Love's Labour
Lost" at the Globe
Theatre).
Yorkshire, 1592 : Roman
Catholics and their griev-
ances under Elizabeth.
Tale of a young London
swordsman, and his Italian
instructor, 1595 (Eliza-
beth).
Earl of Essex and Sir Robert
Cecil in 1596. Chiefly
London and district ; also
Spain (capture of Cadiz).
Queen Elizabeth, Raleigh,
&c.
The great Elizabethans,
1 590-1612 : Shakespeare,
Sir Henry Wotton, Donne,
Richard Hooker, Essex.
Bacon, &c.
a A grap^ account of Iriih afltein about this laine period is given in Mr. Standish O'Giady's
tnt4 story, "The Flight of the Eagle " (Sealy, Bryeis & Walker). A new edition haa been recently
issued. Messrs. Sealy also publish a second edition of the same author's highly praised '* The Bog
of Stars and other Stodes and Shetches of EUsabethan Ireland."
302
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^Shakespeare's
Sweetheart
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
Sara Hawks Sterling
(Chatto, Eng. ;
Jacobs, U.S.A.)
and
The Romance op
Gentle Will
The Players of
London
^Shakespeare's i
Christmas
Captain Ravenshaw
Clyde C. Wcstovcr
(Neale Publishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Louise Beecher Chancellor
(B. W. Dodge. U.S.A.)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng.;
and Longmans, U.S. A.)
R. N. Stephens
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ;
and Page. U.S.A.)
Courtship and early married
life of the Pdet (Ann
Hathaway, Ben Jonson,
&c.). Supposed to be re-
lated, five years after
Shakespeare's death, by
his widow.
The story of William Shake-
speare : Ann Hathaway.
&c.
First performance of Shake-
speare's " Romeo and
JuHet.'
»»
Shakespeare in 1598.
I
The Knight of the
Nebdlb Rock
Court Cards
Mary J. Wilson
(Elliot Stock)
Midsummer Morn
Doctor Adrian. Juv.
tt
'Brothers Five. Juv,
Austin Clare "
(Fisher Unwin)
R. H. Forster
(J. Long)
Deborah Alcock
(Religious Tract Society) ,
Violet T. Kirke
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham. U.S.A.)
An adventurer in London
and neighbourhood to-
wards the end of Eliza-
beth's rdgn.
Isle of Wight, &c., 1571-1606
(Elizabeth — ^James I.).
Intrigues between English
and Scotch Courts (Eliza-
beth and James VI.) : the
Gowrie Conspiracy period.
Tjrnedale and Liddesdale,
X598 (raiders).
The Netherlands, 1566-82;
Antwerp, Leyden. ftc.
The Prmce of Orange and
the Beggars.
The Netherlands (Friesland,
&c.). 156S-74: Louis of
Nassau. Battles of Heili-
gerlee, Ems, and Mooker-
hyde. Epilogue, 1579,
SUPPLEMENT.
303
SIXTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*The Mavis and the ! Mary H. Debenham
Merlin. Juv.
*Raoul, Gentleman
OP Fortune
* Jacqueline of the
Carrier Pigeons.
Juv.
(National Society, £ng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
H. C. Bailey
(Hutchinson, £ng.; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
Augusta H. Seaman
(Sidgwick, Eng. ; and
Sturgis. U.S.A.)
The " Grey Fox " Tom Bevan
OF Holland. Juv. i (T. Nelson & Sons)
Monsieur Le Capi-
taine Douay
The Rebel Prince
The Betrayal of
BIlSTRBSS DONIS
King Stork of the
Netherlands. Juu.
The Cruise of the
Angel. Juu,
•A Captive of the
Corsairs. Juv.
A Knight of St.
John. Juv.
Seth Cook Comstock
(J. Long)
Seth Cook Comstock
(J. Long)
G. Connock Dyke
(Skeffington)
Albert Lee
(JarroM)
Edgar Pickering
(Wame & Co.)
J. Fixmemore
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Capt. F. S. Brereton
fSlackie)
Antwerp in 1573 and in 1576
(sack of the city) ; also
Elizabethan Chelsea.
The Revolt in the Nether-
lands from 1573-84.
A girl of seventeen and her
young brother in Leyden,
Z574 (Siege by the Span-
iards).
The Netherlands Revolt,
1576.
The Defence of Antwerp in
1576.
William the SUent in the last
seven years of his life,
1577-84 (Netherlands).
The Netherlands and William
the SUent,
Leyden, Antwerp, &c., in the
early days of the Dutch
Republic, ending 1584 :
the Duke of Anjou, the
" Familiars/' &c.
The Siege of Antwerp. 1585,
and the Beggars.
Tunis in Elixabethan days,
and the Si^e of Ifalta,
1564.
Havre, and the Siege of
Malta, 1564.
304
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CESTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
a*GASTON dbLatour
St. Bartholomew's
EvB. Juv.
*FoR THB Admiral.
Juv.
CuTHBBRT, Lord of
LOWBDALB (ThB
Lord of Lowb-
dalb). Juv.
A King's Trbachbry.
Juv.
For Faith and Na-
VARRB (HBNRY of
Navarrb)
*Thb Whitb Plumbs
OF Navarrb (Thb
Whitb Plumb)
AXTTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
Walter Pftter
(MacmiUan)
G. A. Henty
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
W.J.Marx
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Jacobs, U.S.A.)
R. D. Chetwode
(Jarrold, Eng. ;
Estes, U.S.A.)
and
Albert Lee
(Pilgrim Press)
It
" May Wynne
(J. Longp and Greening,
Eng. ; and Putnam,
U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(ReUgious Tract Society,
Eng. ; and Dodd,
Mead, U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT«
Chartres, Paris, &c. about
15^-72. Time of the Re-
ligious Wars and St. Bar-
tholomew'sEve(Montaigne,
Ronsard, Charles IX., &c.).
France, 1567-72 : Cond^,
Coligny, King and Queen
of Navarre, &c. Covers
the Battles of Jamac and
Moncontour, and ends with
St. Bartholomew.
Admiral Coligny, 1568-72 :
covers the Battle of Jamac,
the murder of Cond6, the
wedding of Henry of Na-
varre, and St. Bartholo-
mew.
Durham man tells (1626) his
youthful experiences, 1570-
73. France (Charles IX.) ;
Belgium (Siege of Mons) ;
and Poland (Duke of An-
jou's election as King).
Huguenots in France and the
Netherlands: Charles IX.,
Catharine, Coligny, Prince
of Orange, Sec. Ends St.
Bartholomew.
France, 1572-83 ; St. Bar-
tholomew, and then several
years later.
Paris (the Night of St. Bar-
tholomew) ; also Southern
France and Spain (time
of the Inquisition). Philip
of Spain, Henry of Na-
varre, &c.
a An unfinished philosophical romance. Though only a fragment, this book has been classed
very high by leading oitlcs.
SUPPLEMENT.
305
SIXTEENTH CENTVRY— continued.
TfTLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AMD PUBLISHBR.
SUBJECT.
aLARACHB. JUV,
Thb Sbcrbt of thx
GOLDBN KbV, JuV.
*The R08B OF Dau-
PHINY
Frank and Saxon.
Juv.
In Sxarch of
Jbbannb
frXHB Mystbribs of
Udolpho
A Gallant of Gas-
cony
Thb Ark of
CURSB
Thb King's Mignon
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
Lucie M. Hart
(C. H. KeUy)
Philip L. Stevenson
(Stanley Paul & Co.)
G. Manville Fenn
(Christian Knowledge
Society, £ng. ; and
Gorhain, U.S.A.)
Avis Hekking
(J. Long)
Mrs. Ann Radcliffe
(Routledge)
Philip L. Stevenson
(Hurst ft Blackett)
*Thb Coming of Na-
varrb. juo.
t»
K. L. Montgomery
(Hurst & Blackett)
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Everett ft Co.)
O. V. Caine
(Nisbet ft Co.)
t>
Portugal in 1578.
France (Charles IX.): Hugue-
not domestic life, and the
Massacre of St. Bartholo-
mew.
French Wars of Religion,
1574-6: Henry of Na-
varre, Montbrun, ftc.
England (Elizabeth), and
France (the Massacre of
St. Bartholomew, Henry of
Navarre, ftc).
France (St. Bartholomew) ;
and Italy, mid to late Six-
teenth Century.
Southern France and Italy in
the time of Henri III.
Marguerite de Valois, 1585-6
(period of her rupture with
Henry, ftc).
France in the time of Henri
III.: theCagots.
France, 1588, and the Wars
of the League ; the few
months after the assassina-
tion of the Duke of Guise.
English boy's adventures in
France, 1588 (just after the
Armada). Time of Henri
III., the Due de Guise, and
Henry of Navarre: the
Huguenot victories, 1590.
0 Published both separately and In the volume, " France and Spain " (Parker's TaUs Illustrating
Omrch History).
b Fault havinff been found with me for the omission (deliberate) of this very lamous book, I noir
include it ; I would, however, warn intending readers that-— whatever the tale's merits as literature—
as hi^oricM fiction it cannot be regarded as of any real value.
X
3o6
SUPPLEMENT.
SIXTEENTH CEtiTURY— continued.
TITL£ OF BOOK.
*Th£ Abbess
Vlaye
OF
The Grey Domino
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Stanley Wejrman
(Longmans)
Mrs. PfaiUp C. De
pigny
(Nash)
a*LA Gloirb db Don • Enrique Barreta
Ramire
The Tiger of Mus- F. Whishaw
(Mercore de France,
Paris)
COVY
The Cardinal's
Pawn
*La Princesse db
Venise
Brave Sidney
SOMERS. Juv»
(Longmans)
$»
" K. L. Montgomery
(Unwin, Eng. ; and
McOurg, U.S.A.)
Maxime Formont
(Lemerre, Paris)
F. M. Holmes
(Bladde)
A Prince of Dream-
ers
The Slave Girl of
Agra
Flora Annie Steel
(Heinemann, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
Romesh C. Dutt
(Fisher Unwin)
SUBJECT.
France in 1595. Time of
Henri IV.
Southern France and F^iis
about 1598 (Henry of
Navarre, &c.).
Spain at the end of the Six-
teenth Century (Philip II.).
Moscow in the time of Ivan
the Terrible, late Sixteenth
Century.
Florence and Venice about
X580 (Francesco de' Medici).
Venice, 1597.
An English youth's adven-
tures during a voyage to
the East in a spice ship,
later Elizabethan period.
Akbar, the great Mogul Em-
peror of India.
India in the days of Akbar.
a Translated from the Spaouh by Remy de Goonnoiit. A powerful, bat painful book.
SUPPLEMENT.
307
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thb Hand of thb
North
author and publisher.
Marion Fox
(J. Lane)
Queen Elizabeth
(in " Historical
Vignettes ")
Bernard Capes
(Fisher Unwin)
His Most Dear | Beatrice Marshall
Ladyb. Juv. I (Seeley & Co.)
Gowrie'sVengeance. £. Everett Green
Juo. (T. Nelson & Sons)
•The " Half Moon
f >
•Mary Paget
Shepperton Manor.
Juv.
Heart's Dbught
(The Great Mo-
gul)
Ford Madoz HuefEer
(Nash, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
Minna Caroline Smith
(Macmillan)
SUBJECT.
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Louis Tracy
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
Qode, U.S.A.)
Late Elizabethan London,
x6oi, at the time of the
Essex plot and its failure
(Earl of Southampton, Earl
of Essex, &c.). Then
Hexham (Northumber-
land), and the wild Border
district.
A very brief but vivid story
of Queen Elizabeth on
February 25th, 1601 (the
beheading of Essex).
Sir Philip Sidney's sister, the
Countess of Pembroke.
Salisbury, &c., 1599-1621 ;
Shakespeare, Massinger,
Lady Arabella Stuart,
James I., &c.
Scotland in 1600 ; the Gow
rie Conspiracy.
England (Rye) in the time of
James I. ; then the New
World (Hudson, the Navi
gator).
About equally, England
(Tavistock) and theBmnu-
das (St. George's Town) in
James I.'s reign. Earl of
Southampton,Shafcespeare»
&c. Penod e, z6io-^o.
English Church in x6i6 :
Bishop Andrewes,
Adventures of two York-
shiremen in India, z6zi.
308
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OV BOOK.
John Brown, Buc-
CANXBR
SUBJSCT.
G.Griffith
(F. V. White)
John O'Jamestown
John Smith, Gentle-
man Adventurer
•My Lady Pokahon-
TAS
alHB Chief's Daugh-
ter. Juv,
Vanghan Kester
(McClure Co.)
C. H. Forbes-Lindsay
(Lippinoott)
John Esten Cooke
(Houghton, Mifflin &Co.)
R. King
(Parker, Oxford)
Within Four Walls J. Bloundelle Burton
(J. Milne)
The Bright Face of
Danger
♦St. Martin's Sum-
BiER
•Cardillac
R. N. Stephens
(Nash, £ng. ; and Page«
U.S.A.)
Rafael Sabatini
(Hutchinson)
Robert Barr
(Mills & Boon, Eng. ;
and F. A. Stokes,
U.S.A.)
Begins Seville, 1592 (the
Inquisition) ; then the
West Indies early Seven-
teenth Century (Devon
adventurers and Span-
iards).
Captain John Smith, and the
Settling of Jamestown*
Virginia.
The Settling of Jamestown.
Pocahontas, &c.
The Settling of Jamestown,
and the trading with In-
dians, in 1607.
Jamestown, 1607 : Pocahon-
tas, Captain Smith, Ac.
Paris just after the assassina-
tion of Henri IV., in 1610
(Marguerite de Vsdots, Ra-
vaillac, &c.) ; then Geneva*
1612.
France, 1608
adventure.
a story ol
Domestic tragi-comedy in
France (Dauphiny) about
1615 : period of Marie de'
Medici's Regency.
France, 161 7-18: beginning
of Louis XIII.'s Reign.
The Queen-Mother, Marie
de' Medici, at Blois.
a Publuhed both separately and In the volume, " America and Our Colonies " (Parker's Tales
lUustrnting Church History).
SUPPLEMENT.
309
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
I
•Saxby. Juu.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
j Emma Leslie
I (Religious Tract Society)
aTHX Winter Queen
*SlR BSVILL
*Xhe Lady Mary of
Tavistock
Horcar
Marie Hay
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin,
U.S^.)
A. C. Thynne
(J. Lane)
Harold Vallings
(J. Milne)
Thomas Scott
(Greening)
6B0YS OF Baltimore.
Juu.
A. A. B. Stavert
(Bums & Oates)
subject.
Bucks, London, &c., and
New England, about 16x9-
44 : period of the Spanish
Match, Buckingham's as-
sassination, the Star Cham-
ber, and the Civil War
(Hamx>den, Milton, and
Cromwell introduced).
The career of Elizabeth of
Bohemia, daughter of
James I. of England.
Sir Bevill Grenville, Cornish
Royalist, 1595-1643 : De-
von and Cornwall.
Devon about 1630: "the
infamous Sir Richard
Granville."
Northumberland and London
about 1630 : the Family of
Morcar, William Dobson
the painter, &c.
Ireland (Co. Cork), N. Africa,
and London, in 1 63 1 . The
adventures of two boys
carried ofi by pirates to
Algiers, and sold as slaves.
Lord Wentworth (Straf-
ford), "Captain" Crom-
well, Laud, and Charles I.
appear.
a The aotkoress describes her work as " a romance." While not a novel in the ordinary sense,
this stccy ol Elisabeth Stnart is a good exam|4e of semi-fictional biography.
6 This Roman Catholic tale is decidedly interesting and well written, but somewhat partial in
Its tone, Cromwell is depicted (in a brief intenrlew) as a sanctimoaious hjrpocrite.
310
SXJPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AX7THOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJBCT.
*ThB FORBRUMNBit
H. Elwyn Thomas
(Ljmwood & Co.)
I
S. Wales (Breconshire, Car-
marthenkhire, and Cardi-
ganshire) in 1635, and Jast
after. Early Pontan
struggles as viewed by a
strong s]rmpathiser. Old
Welsh manners and tradi-
tions are vividly depicted
in this romance of a young
travelling evangelist.
AFairHavbn. Juo.
A SBRVAirr of the
KiKG
&God's Bairn. Juv.
1
Aiary H. Debenham ■ Nicholas Ferrar, 1633.
(National Society, Eng.; j
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
£. Aceitnna Griffin
(Blackwood)
Dorothea Moore
(Blackie)
The King's Libge. | H. A. Hinkson
Juv.
The Separatist
(Blackie)
Anonymous
(Sir I. Pitman)
Thb Binding of the
Strong
•Andrew Marvbl and
His Friends
Caroline Atwater Mason
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Revell. U.S.A.)
Marie HaU
(A. Brown & Sons, Hull
and London)
, Earl StrafiEord up to his trial
and death.
Lincolnshire Fen district,
1632-45 : the story of a
boy foundling ; also z66o.
Plot to kidnap Charies I.
at Oxford (pre-Rebellion
period).
' London, Dublin. Ac, before
and during the Civil War.
Period of Strafford, Or-
monde, Hampden, and
Pym (the last-named ap-
pears prominently).
The love story of John
Milton, the poet.
Marvel, the poet. Hull.
1640-3 ; and Hull, Lon-
don, &c., 1645-77 ; ending
with Marvel's death.
« Awarded lint prise at the Welsh National Ebteddlod. It may be mentioned that the same
author has written-^in the original Welsh — a tale of CromireUian days entitled, ** Ifor Owain '* (Hnghei^
Wrexham).
b An interesting little tale, but somewhat too anti-Puritan in its tendency.
SUPPLEMENT.
3"
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Axx POR THE Love
OP A Lady
*WiTH Musketeer
AND RedSKIK (with
Puritan and Pe-
QUOT.) Juv.
aRuTH OP Boston.
Juv,
6Thb Little Green
Door
My Lady op Intri-
gue
*TuB Bravest Gen-
tleman IN France.
Juv.
author and publisher.
subject.
Elinor Macartney Lane | Edinburgh and the Highland!^
(Hodder, Eng ; and ! about 1640 (French Royal
Appleton, U.S.A.) | Duke's courtship of a
Scottish lady).
W. Murray Graydon
(Shaw, Eng. ; and Penn
Co., U.S.A.)
>>
" James Otis
(Appleton, London ;
and American Book
Co., Chicago)
Mary £. Stone Bassett
(Lothrop & Co.)
Humfrey Jordan
(Blackwood)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
*Bardelys the Mag- I Rafael Sabatini
NIPICENT
(E. Nash)
New Pl3rmouth, 1636: Gov-
ernor Vane, Anne Hutch-
inson. Roger Williams,
Winthrop, &c.
Home life in Massachusetts
Bay Colony, 1630 onwards :
Governor Winthrop, Roger
Williams, &c.
Louis XIII., Anne of Austria,
and Richelieu, c. 1640 : a
somewhat patiietic ^e of
a maiden's experiences in
the King's private garden.
Mainly France (Paris, Ver-
sailles, Nantes, &c.), 1626-
29. Louis XIII., Riche-
lieu, Anne of Austria,
Gaston Due d'Orl6ans, and
Marie de Rohan (Duchesse
de Chevreuse).
Paris in the time of Richelieu:
the Due de Montmorency.
Paris and Languedoc, 1632 :
time of the Orleanist Re-
bellion, and the Due de
Montmorency's downfall.
Louis XIII. at Toulouse.
•Cadbt-La-Perle
LtoClar^tie
(Ollendorfi, Paris)
Paris, 1635 : Cardinal Riche-
lieu, &c.
a One of a very naefalseriM of short tales written for ehildfon. They are told in simple language,
and deal with the famity Ufe of the American setttefs. Other volames in the aeries are, " Mary of
Plymonth"; *« Richard of Jamestown *' ; " Calvert of Maryland " ; " Peter of New Amsterdam " ;
and " Stephen of Philadelplda."
b The dainty format, and charming illnstratlons of this volume, make it a speciallv nuitahle gift
for older girls.
312
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY—conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUIHOR AND PUBLISHES.
I
K N I GH THOOD
FtOWBR
The Duke's Motto
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Hurst & Blackett)
*Thb Cardinal's
Past
Justin H. McCarthy
(Methuen. £ng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Michael Kaye
(Greening)
aXHE SCHOOLMASTSR
AND His Son. Juv,
•The Fortune-
Hunter
Carl Heinrich Caspari
(trans.)
(Wells Gardner)
Harald Molander (trans.)
(Heinemann)
*A Trooper of the
Finns. Juv.
My Lady's Kiss
Tom Bevan
(Religious Tract Society)
Norman Innes
(Ward. Lock, £ng. ; and
Rand, McNaUy,U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Fiance under Louis XIII.
The persecution of the
Huguenots; La RocheUe
(1628) ; and the death of
Cardinal RicheUeu (1642).
France under Louis XIII.
Begins in the earlier stages
of Richelieu's power; then
deals with the period after
the Cardinal's death.
Plot agaiust Richelieu, 1626
(favourable depiction of
the Cardinal). Ix>uisXIII.,
Anne of Austria and the
Duchesse de Chevrense.
The experiences of a poor
schoolmaster in Franoonia,
1610-39 (time of the
Thirty Years' War).
*
Germany : Wallenstein at
the Siege of Magdeburg.
1629 ; Gustavus Adolphus,
&c. The novel depicts —
powerfully but not always
pleasantly — the adven-
turer type of the Thirty
Years' War period.
Tale of a Scotsman serving
under Gustavus Adolphus
in X630 (Gustavus, Prince
Rupert, Elizabeth of Ba-
varia, &c.).
Germany in 1631 : the Thirty
Years' War at its height. '
a The tnnilatar (Mr. J. F. Cobb) says, " It is not a fictitloas tale, bot a simple reeital of historical
events." As^ however, the book reads like fictkm, and gives a vivid pictnie of life at the time, I
inclade tt. In this note I may allude to a very femons German novel, J. W. Meinhold's " The Amber
Witch " (translated by Lady Duff Gordon, 1844) ; while dealing with the time of GusUvos Adolphus
and the Thirty Years'^ War, the book is not historical romance in the tme sense ; moceover, even the
latest BngUsb edition (D. Nutt 1895) is now out of print.
SUPPLEMENT.
313
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY—coniinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aT&s Thorn For-
tress. Juv,
•The Story of a Cat
AND A Cake. Juv.
The Black Cuiras-
sier
The King's Service.
Juv.
author and publisher.
subject*
Mary Bramston
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Mary Bramston
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
Philip L. Stevenson
(Hnrst & Blackett)
Deborah Alcock
(Religious Tract Society)
Arrows of Ambition
•The Woman and the
Sword
6The Lazar House of
Leros. Juv.
CDORBS DE GUALDIM.
Juv.
Albert F. Hochwalt
(Mayhew Publishing Co.,
Boston)
Rupert Lorraine
(Fisher Unwin)
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
J. M. Neale
(Parker, Oxford)
Germany in 1631
Adolphus.
Gustavns
Nuremberg and Bohemia,
163 1-2 : Gustavus Adol-
phus, and the Siege of
Nuremberg by Wallen-
stein.
General Pappenheim's cuiras-
siers, and the Thir^ Years'
War, 1632-4 : WaUenstdn
up to his death.
Scotland and Germany, 1632
onwards : the Thirty
Years' War (Gustavus and
Wallenstein period).
A romance of the Thirty
Years' War.
Somerset and London (time
of Laud and the Star
Chamber) ; also Germany,
1634: the Thirty Years'
War.
The Levant, i635«-S.
The Revolution in Portugal,
1640 : the country freed
from Spanish rule.
« A very brief, Init well-told sUsy of two chfldven, and thdr experienoet in the Thirty Yeaxs'
War period.
b PabllBh«d both sepsrately and in the volome, " Eastern and Northern Buiope " (Parker's
c PabUshed both separately and in the volume, " France and Spain " (Parker's Tales lUusttoHng
Bparateiy
Tafcf IBuarating Chuweh liistory),
both sei
Ckuf^ History).
3X4
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
aONE OF Rupert's . H. Strang and R. Stead Charles I. and the Civil War :
Horse. Juv. i (H. Frowde ; and Hod- ', Yorkshire, Ac, 1639-49.
der) Edgehill, Marston Moor,
I and Naseby.
Mbrrylips
ElinorArden, Roya-
list. Juv.
Beulah Blarie Dix
(MacmiUan)
Mary Constance Da Bois
(Centary Co.)
I
♦Aylmbr Court. Juv. I " Henley I. Arden "
(WeUs Gardner)
T&E Prisoner op S. H. Burchell
Carjsbrooke (Gay & Bird)
Fairlbigh
Juv.
Hall.
The Lady of Loyal-
ty House
Her Faithful
Knight
Captain John Lister
Girl masquerades as a boy in
the English Civil War
(Wilts).
An orphaned Royalist girl's
adventures in Civil War
time. Based on an episode
in Princess Henrietta
Anne's life.
Warwickshire in the Civil
War (Oliver Cromwell pro-
minent).
Civil War period, 1641-49:
the Governor of Cam-
brooke Castle and Charles
I. Much of the story deals
with London.
Oxfordshire in the Charles I.
— Restoration period, (i)
1641-6 : EdgehiU and
Chalgrove — John Hamp-
den ; (2) 1652; (3) 1660
and the Restoration.
Justin H. McCarthy I Oxfordshire, 1642, beginning
(Methuen, Eng. ; and I just before EdgehiU (King
Harper, U.S.A.) ' Charles, &c.).
A. D. Crake
(Mowbray)
W. Bourne Cooke
(Cassell)
John A. Hamilton
(Hutchinson)
I Nottingham and Leicester
I between 1641 and 1645
] (Cromwell prominent).
i
I Tale of Axholme, beginning
! 1642. The hero is a Par-
liament man.
a One of Herbert Stranfs Historical Series.
SUPPLEMENT.
315
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AMD PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
*The Adventures of
Timothy. Juv.
aXRUE Gold. Juv,
bis THE Iron Time
E. C. Kcnyon avil War, 1642-3 : the
(Religious Tract Society) Battle of Edgehill; the
King at Oxford ; and an
interview with Cromwell
(Lincolnshire).
Irene Strickland Taylor
(Marshall Bros.)
J. Wesley Hart
(Robert Culley)
•Amvas Egerton,
Cavalier. Juv.
COURTENAY OF WaL-
REDDON
For Rupert and the
King. Juv.
*Fribnds though
Divided. Juv.
Maurice H. Hervey
(AnowsmithEng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Anna Eliza Bray
(Chapman & Hall)
Herbert Hayens
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(H. Frowde,and Hodder
Eng. ; and Dutton,
U.S.A.)
Story of a Captain in Crom*
well's Horse, 1642-45 (Ric-
hard Baxter introduced).
London and Huntingdon*
but chiefly Cambridgeshire
(Ely, &c.), 1642-47 : Crom-
well and his mother Eliza-
beth Cromwell ; Charles
I.. &c. Battles of Edge-
hUl and Marston Moor.
Civil War, 1642-49: Lord
Capel, &c. Torrington,
Oxford, Worcester, and
Carisbrooke.
Tavistock and district in
X 642 . Contains some good
loK^ colour.
Yorkshire, Hants, Oxford,
&c., 1642-46 : the Battles
of Marston Moor and Nase-
by. Prince Rupert,Charles
I., and Cromwell.
Oxford, 1642 ; also Scotland
Ireland, &c. Covers Mont-
rose and the Covenanters,
Siege of Drogheda, execu-
tion of Charles, and the
Battle of Worcester. Ends
1660.
a it is worthy of note that this taJ« — showiog strong Pniitan sympathies — ^is written by a yoong
lady of sixteen.
b Written from the Cromwellian standpoint.
3i6
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CESTHRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
a*TKE CHANCES OF T. A. Finlay , The War in Ireland, 1646-49:
War I (Fallon, Dublin and Battle of Benburb and
Belfast) j Ireton's advance on Lime-
i I rick. &c. Owen Roe O'Neill
! and others.
The Invaders of
Fairford. Juv,
TttE Siege of Lich-
field. Juv.
♦A Young Oxford
Maid. Juv.
Two Little Cava-
liers. Juv.
The Scholar and
the Trooper
Colonel Stow
(Colonel Great-
Edith £. Cowper
(Christian Knowledge (Cromwell).
Society, £ng. ; and |
Gorham, U.S.A.) 1
Cirencester district in 1642
W. Gresley
(Masters)
»*
heart)
*A Bearer of Des-
patches. Juv.
The Copernican
Convoy (in " Cor-
poral Sam," &c.)
Sarah Tytler
(Religious Tract Society)
W. A. Bettesworth
(T. Nelson & Sons)
W. E. Heygate
(Parker, Oxford)
H. C. BaUey
(Hutchinson, Eng. ; and
Bobbs-Merri]l,U.S.A.)
Emily Loch
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Civil War from 1642 : Lich-
field, Battle of Edgehill,
&c.
Oxford in the Charles I. and
Parliament period : Wil-
liam Prynne, the Plague in
1643, &c.
Civil War, 1643 : Hants and
Oxford {King Charles,
Cromwell, &c.).
Oxford, 1643-6: Charles I.,
the Siege by Fairfax, &c.
Civil War, 1643 onwards
(CromweU prominent).
Deals more witk the man-
ners and typical characters
of the period than with the
War.
The Siege of Lynn, 1643.
Famham and district in the
Civil War, 1643.
a One or two other tales dealing with the Ireland of this exact period are described in " A Reader's
Guide to Irish Fiction," by Stephen J. Brown, S.J. (Longmans).
SUPPLEMENT.
3^7
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
titlb of book.
For King or Parlia-
MBmr
AUTHOR AND PUBLISBBR.
SUBJBCT.
A RosB OF York.
Juv,
The Two Swords.
Juv.
*At Lathom'8 Sibgb.
Juv,
Captain Wyvern's
Advbnturss (in
" Shakespeare's
Chrisimas/' &c.)
Red Velvet (in
"Corporal Sam,"
&c.)
/
One Fair Enbmy
•Maid Molly
Herbert Trbsham.
Juv.
*In thb Smoke of
War
S. Horton
(R. Culley)
A Yorkshire Parliamenta*
rian's adventures: Mars-
ton Moor (1644) and Ponte-
Iract. Cromwell, Andrew
Marvell, Sir Harry Vane,
&c.
Florence Bone York and its surrender to
(Religious Tract Society) I Fairfax in 1644: the
General's saving of the
Minster, &c.
Emma Marshall
(Seeley & Co.)
««
Sarah Tytler "
(Blackie)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng. ;
and Longmans, U.S. A.);
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Bristol, 1644-5 : visit of
Charles II. (as Prince), &c.
Ends with the Bristol of
1662.
Siege of Lathom House (Lady
Derby) by Sir Thomas
Fair^kx in 1644.
Cornwall (Fowey district) in
1644 : the Civil War.
Ditto.
Carlton Dawe
(J. Long)
A. G. Hales
(Treherne)
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Walter Raymond
(Arrowsmith, Eng.; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Civil War* 1645: Naseby,
&c.
Naseby and district in 1645 :
Cromwell, Lord Essex,
Prince Rupert, &c.
Northamptonshire, London,
&c., in 1645 : the Battle
of Naseby. King Charles,
Prince Rupert, &c.
Somerset (Langport, Somer-
ton, ftc.) in 1645: the
Fairfax v. Goring period.
A glimpse of Cromwell.
3i8
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEJUTURY—conHnusd.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb King's Cause
Sweet Rogues
Two GiSLS IN
Siege. Juv.
His Majes ty's
Glove. Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
*The Wreathed
Dagger
♦The Royalist Bro-
thers. Juv.
The Fair Maid of
Grbystones
When Cromwell
CAME TO DrOGHEDA
Captain Latymer
♦Magnus Sinclair
*0f Mistress Eve
(SequeH
Walter E. Grogan
(J. Milne)
Owen Vaughan
(Duckworth)
Edith C. Kenyon
(Religious Tract Society)
G. I. Whitham
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Margaret Young
(Cassell)
E. E. Crake
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorhain, U.S. A.)
Beulah Marie Dix
(Macmillan)
R. McDonnell
(Gill, Dublin)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Cassell)
Howard Pease
(Constable)
SUBJECT.
Pxince Rupert's capture of
Bristol, and his later sur-
render to Fairfax.
Ovil War on the Welsh
Border: one of Prince
Rupert's captains about
1645.
S. Wales (Cardiff). 1643-6.
Charles I. at Raglan ; the
taking of Chepstow Castle
by the Royalists, &c.
Attempted rescue of Charles
I. in 1646 ; later on — -aiter
the King's death — Crom-
well is outwitted^ by a
woman, a girl, and'a lad.
Civil War, 1642, and — almost
entirely — 1648: the siege
of Thirlby House by Crom-
well.
France (Dieppe) and England
in 1648 : the Si^e of Col-
chester (Sir Charles Lucas).
Suffolk in 1648, after the
surrender of Colchester.
A short tale of 1649.
Barbadoes, and Ireland (just
after Drogheda) in the
Civil War time: Prince
Rupert, &c.
(i) Mainly Northumber-
land, 1649-51 : Cromwell,
Charles II., Argyle, Har-
rison, &c.
(2) The Border country in
the period between the
Battle of Worcester and
the Restoration.
SUPPLEMENT.
319
SEVENTEENTH CEiiTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
^Major Weir
*The Red Reaper
t*
K. L. Montgomery '*
(Fisher Unwin)
John A. Steuart
(Hodder & Stoughton)
aCavalier and Cove-
nant
The Safety of the
Honours
Scouting for a King
Juv.
The Tavern Knight
G. Ejrre-Todd
(Routledge)
«(
The Last of the
White Coats. Juv.
Under the Storm.
Juv.
To Horse and Away.
Juv.
•To Plea sure
Madamb(Tbe Sons
OF the Seigneur)
Allan M'Aulay "
(Blackwood)
Ernest Protheroe
(Jarrold)
Rafael Sabatini
(Grant Richards; and
The Amalgamated
Press)
G. I. Whitham
(Seeley, £ng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
Edinburgh, and Weir the
Covenanter. Royalists and
Presbyterians.
Marquis of Montrose and his
rival Argyle. Ends with
Montrose's execution in
1650.
Cromwell's invasion of Soot-
land, 1650.
The hiding of the Scottish
Regalia from Cromwell,
and the Siege of Dunottar
Castle.
England (Midlands), 1646 ;
then 1651 — Battle of Wor-
cester. Charles II.'s flight
(Boscobel, Ac).
Penrith and Worcester, 1651
(Charles II.'s escape) ; then
Norfolk (Sheringham), Stc.
The historical element is
slight.
Hunted Cavaliers and Charles
II. just after Worcester.
Charlotte M. Yonge Bristol and neighbourhood in
(National Society, Eng.; the Civil War ; time of
and Whittaker, U.S.A.) Charles II.'s escape after
Worcester.
Frances Mary Peard , Charles II. after Worcester :
(National Society, Eng.; > the South of England,
and Whittakcr,U.S. A.)
Helen Wallace | Story based on the tradition
(Cassell, Eng.; and Out- of Charles II.'s refuge in
ing Publishing Co., Guernsey.
U.S.A.)
« Oziginally entitled, " Anne of Aigyle ; or Cborch and Covenant."
320
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
A St. Gborge of
KiKG Charles'
Days. Juv,
alJNDBR Puritan
RXJLB. Juv.
aWHBii TRB Puritans
WBRB IN POWBR.
Juv.
TRB King's Signbt
Big John Baldwin
•Ruth Ravblstan.
Juu.
6DIANA POLWARTH.
Juv,
*Scapbgracb Dick.
Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Dorothea Townshend
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Agnes Gibeme
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
£. E. Crake
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
" Morice Gerard "
(Hodder & Stoughton)
Wilson Vance
(Arrowsmith.Eng.; and
Holt. U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Miss J. M. Carter
(Seeley, Eng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
Frances Mary Peard
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
Cromwell in 165 1 : the period
just after Worcester.
English Church and Family
life before, during, and
after the Civil War. Lon-
don and district: Arch-
bishop Laud, Bishop Mor-
ton, &c.
Sussex. London, and New
England. 1645-60 (Crom-
well, Ac).
A Cavalier family from 1651
to the Restoration.
Supposed diary of a Crom-
wellian officer : England in
the Charles I. — Common-
wealth period, and the
Colony of Virginia. Hamp-
den. Pym, &c.
England, 1649-60 : Common-
wealth period. The at-
tempt on Cromwell's life,
&c.
Girl life in the Common-
wealth period (John Eve-
lyn).
Somerset (Taunton) and the
Netherlands in the Com-
monwealth period : Ad-
miral Blake and Van
Tromp.
a Decidedly anti-Puitan. bat InteKsting.
b Like so many well-written juvenile books dealing with the Bngliah Civil War period, this story
reveals an undue pro-Cavalier bias ; it is a pity that the two sides (King and Parliament) are not
more evenly balanced in fiction.
SUPPLEMENT.
321
SEVENTEENTH CESTURY—cotUinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Sba Puritans
Princb Rupert
Buccaneer
Memoirs of a Bug- R. Williams
AUTHOR AND PUBUSBER.
Frank T. Bollen
(Hodder & Stoaghton)
C. T. Cntdiffe Hyne
(Methuen & Co.)
CANEER
The Red Men of
THE Dl79K
The Nest of
Sparrowhawk
A Puritan Knight
Errant. Jmv.
*Weeping Cross
The Judges' Cave.
Juv»
(Mills ft Boon)
John Finnemore
(C. A. Pearson, Eng. ;
and Liiipincott,U.S.A.)
«*
Baroness Orczy '*
(Greening, Eng. ; and
Stokes, U.S.A.)
Edith Robinson
(Jarrold, Eng.;
Page, U.S.A.)
and
Henry L. Stoart
(Chatto, Eng, ; and
Donbleday, U.Sw4.)
««
Margaret Sidney "
(Lofiirop ft Co.)
subject.
Admiral Blake from 1643,
and the period of his fights
with the Dutch, np to his
victory over the Spaniards
at Saoita Cruz in 1657.
Lyme R^^is, ftc, and
Abroad.
W Indies, c. 1651 : Rupert
merdy as hero-adventurer.
Days of Admiral Blake,
1656-65. Cadiz, Santa
Cruz, West Indies, and
England (The Plague).
A Worcestershire man's re-
cord (supposed to be
written in 1660) of his
adventures, some years
before, among the Welsh
hills.
Isle of Thanet in the later
period of the Common-
wealth.
New England (Boston) in the
second quarter of the
Seventeenth Century ; time
of Winthrop, Vane, ftc.
Massacre by the Indians at
Long Meadow, Massachu-
setts, in X652 : the imagi-
naxy record of a Jesuit
priest deported by Crom-
well.
New England (New Haven
Colony)in mid-Seventeenth
Century : hiding-place of
the Judges who tried
Charles I.
322
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— coiUitmed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
♦The Company
Death
OF ! A. Lr. Cotton
(Blackwood)
♦My Sword's Mv Herbert Hayens
Fortune. Jt4V. (Collins)
Beggars' Luck
Nellie K. Blissett
(Chapman & Hall)
♦The Little King. ' Charles Major
Juv. (Macmillan)
Louis of Bourbon i Elbridge S. Brooks
(in "Historic (Blackie, Eng. ; and
Boys "). Juv. Putnam, U.S.A.)
The Lovers of < Rafael Sabatini
Yvonne (Suitors ; (Pearson, Eng. ; and
OF Yvonne) Putnam, U.S.A.)
The Were- Wolf
W. B. Beattie
(Stanley Paul)
Untrue
Trust.
TO His • Henry Johnson
Juv. ' (Religious Tract Society)
SUBJECT.
The Queen's Fa- | Eliza F. Pollard
vouRiTE. Juv, ' (Blackie)
Ns^les in 1647 : MaBanidIo
and Salvator Rosa.
Cardinal Mazarin, 1630-53.
France in the days of
Turenne and Cond6.
Adventure in mid-Seven-
teenth Century France :
Cardinal Mazarm.
Louis XIV. as a child, and
his nurse: various ex-
periences. Mazarin, the
QueenRegent, &c.» 1646-48.
Paris, 1651 : Louis XIV.'s
boyhood, and the Fronde.
Paris and Blois in the time of
Mazarin and the Fronde.
France in mid-Seventeenth
Century : time of Anne of
Austria, Cardinal de Retz,
Ninon de I'Enclos, &c. A
Grand Seigneur's treat-
ment of his peasantry, &c.
London preceding and follow-
ing the Restoration, i.e. in
1660 and 1665. General
Monk, Richard Baxter, &c.
Queen Henrietta Maria
(Charles I.'s widow) at the
Restoration : Holland and
England. Covers the
Plajgue, the Dutdi sea-
fight, and the Fire.
SUPPLEMENT.
323
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Coming of the
King
Prince Rupert's
Namesake. Juo.
A Hero in the
Strife. Juv.
For a Free Con-
science
The Royal Quaker
The Profugates
The King's Guer-
don
•An Affair of Dis-
honour
author and publisher.
subject.
Joseph Hocking
(Ward, Ix>ck» Eng.; and
Little, Brown, U.S.A.)
A Lad of London
Town. Jup.
•Mv Merry Rock-
hurst
Emily Weaver
(OUphant)
Louisa C. Silke
(Religious Tract Society)
L. C. Wood
(Headley)
Mrs. Bertram Tanqueray
(Methuen)
Frida W3mne
(H. J. Drane)
J. Blyth
(Digby, Long & Co.)
Wm. de Morgan
(Heinemann, Eng. ; and
Holt, U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(Pilgrim Press)
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Smith, Elder, Eng.; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
London district, Folkestone,
and Bedford, at the Re-
storation ; the Black Box,
said to contain the mar-
riage contract between
Charles II. and Lucy
Walters. John Bunyan
and various historic
figures.
Restoration days in the
Southern Counties and in
London (Newgate, &c.).
Persecuted Puritans in Re-
storation time, beginning
i66z ; Plague, &c.
Quakers and their troubles in
the Plague and Fire Period
(Charles II.).
Jane Stuart, daughter of
James, Duke of York ;
Penn and Fox, &c.
Charles II.'s Court, &c. ; the
daughter of a Puritan
married to a Cavalier.
Norfolk marshes ; Charles
II., Pepys, Rochester, Ac.
Time of the Plague and the
fighting with the Dutch.
Crime and mystery (Sufiolk,
&c.) in the Restoration
period: the Dutch in
Southwold Bay, &c.
The Great Plague; King
Charles II., &c.
Charles II. and the Plague
period.
324
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CESTURY—cotUinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AlfD PUBLISHBR.
^ThbGoldbm Bucklb.
JU9»
THB GOLOSlfXTB OF
CaBPB. Juv.
Mad Barbaba
MiSTRBSS NaNCISBBL.
Tbb Sign of thb
Rbd Cross. Juv,
Wbbn London
BuRNBD. Juv.
T&B Amazing Dukb
aMONSIBUR THB CAP-
TAIN of thb Cara-
VBL (in Brooks'
"ChivalrlcDays.")
Juv.
MiSTRBSS NbLL
Frederick C. Badrick
(National Sodety, Eng.;
and Wliittaker,U.S. A.)
Tom Bevan
(Religions Tract Society)
Warwick Deqping
(Cassell, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Elsie Jeanette Oxenham
(H.Frowde ; and Hodder)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Sir Wm. Magnay
(Fisher Unwin)
Eng6nie Foa (trans.)
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Pntnam, U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT.
The Plague in London, and
the experiences of a Hoi-
bom hosier and his &mily
on board a Thames vessel
during fourteen months.
London in the Plague
1665.
Plague period,
Hortense Mancini, Pepys,
Titus Oates, &c.
A Quaker girl in the time of
Charles II.; the Dutch
War and Plague scenes
in Wales.
London and the Plague
(Charles IIJ ending with
the Great 1^ in 1666.
London at the time of the
Plague, the sea-fights with
the Dutch, and tiie Great
Fire, 1664-66.
George Villiers, the Second
Duke of Bucking^iam, from
1665.
The Dutch War and De
Ruyter in 1666 (North
Sea).
George C. Haselton, Jun.
(Murray, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Nell Gwynn, the actress ;
introduces Charles II.,
Buckingham, Rochester,
James Duke of York, and
the Duchess of Ports-
mouth.
« Tkmoslated from tbe Fnnch of Madame BngteSe Foa by Blbridfe S. Brooks.
SUPPLEMENT.
325
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK. ' AUTHOR AND PUBUSBBR.
•Yestbrday's To-
morrow
Dora G. McChesoey
(Dent & Co.)
subject.
•The Lady of Lytb
Thb Obliging Hus-
band
Thb Rye Housb
Plot
•David March
Margaret Somerset.
Juv.
Checkmate
Graham Hope
(Methueni
Frank Barrett
(Chatto ft ^^dus)
Geo. W. M. Reynolds
(J. Dicks)
J. S. Fletcher
(Methuen)
Louisa C. Silke
(Religions Tract Society)
Etta Courtney
(E. Arnold)
The Vine of Sibmah
A Lad OF Grit. Juv.
Andrew Macphail
(Macmillan)
Percy F. Westerman
(Blackie)
Mainly London* c, 1670.
Historic figures are pro-
minent, including Charles
II., George Fox, Rupert,
and Monmouth. The
Quakers; a Catholic natu-
ral son of the King, Ac.
The Popish Plot, 1678
(Charles II.).
London in late Charles II.
period; a Fleet Street
draper and his unusual
marriage, ftc.
Hertfordshire and London,
X682-85.
Yorkshire (Wakefield dis-
trict), 1683 ; also London
and the South. Sir Chris-
topher Wren, Charles II.,
&c.
A girl's diary, 1682-85:
Evelyn, Bishop Ken, Sec.
Also the Battle of Sedge-
moor (Monmouth Rebel-
lion).
Legitimate son of Charles II.
who passes into obscurity
(Chanes II. — James II.
period).
Puritan New England in
Charles II.'s time. The
hero is a former captain of
Oliver Cromwell.
West Indies, &c., and Hol-
land : English Restoration
period (Buccaneers, pirates,
Ac.).
326
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
^Carried Off. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
A Little Puritan's
First Christmas.
Juv.
The Knitting of
THE Souls. Juv.
aTbe Cromwell of
Virginia. Juv,
*Stradblla
•I Will Maintain
^Defender of the
Faith (Sequel)
Purple Love
*The Adventures of
AN Equerry
•The Silver Key
Esin6 Stuart
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S. A.)
Edith Robinson
(Jarrold, Eng. ; and
Page, U.S.A.)
Blaude Clark Gay
(Lothrop, Lee & Shep-
ard, U.S.A.)
Edward S. Ellis
(Henry T. Coates & Co.)
F. Marion Crawford
(MacmiUan)
Boy taken captive by Buc-
caneers (Sir Henry Morgan)
in 1670 : West Indies, and
the Spanish Main.
New England in Governor
Bellingham's time.
Boston and King Philip's
War.
Bacon's Rebellion, 1676.
tt
Marjorie Bowen"
(Me^uen)
" Morice Gerard "
(Hodder & Stoughton)
" Morice Gerard "
(Cassell)
NeUie K. Blissett
(Chapman & Hall)
Alessandro Stradella, the
singer and composer :
Venice and Rome in the
time of Clement X., Queen
Christina, Bernini, &c.
i Holland and England : the
De Witts (tragedy of 1672),
William of Orange, Charles
II., Princess Mary's mar-
riage, &c.
William of Orange and Mary
of England : Courtship and
Marriage. Holland, and
(mainly) England, in 1677.
llie early life and marriage
(1678) of John Churchill:
England and Abroad. The
Siege of Maestricht ; the
Prince of Orange at Delft ;
and Louis XIV., Turenne,
Vauban, &c.
The French and English
Courts, 1669-70 : Charles
II. and his sister, the
Duchess of Orleans.
Sequel to the author's " Uncrowning a King *' {vide p. 72) ; there is a third volume, " The
mperor of the Old Dominion," dealing with the Indian War time iC<MUes's CoionUA Series).
Last Emperor
SUPPLEMENT.
327
SEVENTEENTH CENTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
*a dxmoisellb of
France
W. J. Eccott
(Blackwood)
*His Indolence of
Arras
Traitor and True
*TuB Red Neighbour
From the Enemy's
Hand. Juv,
*In the Straits of
Time
A Dragoon's Wife
aTHB Cross and the >
Crown. Juo.
W. J. Eccott
(Blackwood)
J. Bloundelle Barton
(J. Long)
W. J. Eccott
(Blackwood)
H< C. Coape
(Religious Tract Society)
' Christopher Hare "
(CaMD)
_ I
E. Perronet Thompson !
(Greening) |
i
Deborah Alcock
(Religions Tract Society)
SUBJECT.
A French Abb6 (grandnephew
of Richelieu) relates his
adventures during the year
1662: Louis XIV.. Col-
bert, Foucquet, ^ladeUne
and Armande B^jart, Moli-
^re. La Fontaine, &c.
Paris, Fontainebleau. and
the road to Nantes.
Picardy and Paris, 1665-67 :
Louis XIV., the Cardinal
Bishop of Arras, Madame
de Montespan, Turenne,
Louise de la Valli^re,
Ninon de I'Enclos, &c.
Norman plot, under Prince
de Beaurepaire, to depose
Louis XIV. : the King, De
Louvois, &c.
France (Paris, Meaux, Mont-
mirail, &c.), 1675 : De
Louvois and Turenne, end-
ing with the latter's death
at Sassbach, in Germany.
La Fontaine appears.
France (Rhone district)under
Louis XIV. : the De Lou-
vois period, 1683-5. The
Huguenots and the Revoca-
tion of the Edict of Nantes.
Paris and Southern France in
1684 : the Hugenots.
Efiorts to subdue the Hugue-
nots near Fontevrault
(France), 1685-7.
Normandy, 1685 : the Hugue-
nots and the Revocation
of the Edict of Nantes.
Ends in England.
m One of two faidy long stories appe^ng in the same volume ; the other story, " The King's
Serviee," see p. 3x3, supplies the title.
328
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEtiTURY—coniinited.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*The Field of Glory
(On the Field of
Glory)
In Wild Maratha
Battle. Juv.
Tub Princess of
Balkb. Juv.
The Adventures of
Count O'Connor
I
author and publisher.
Under Three Kings
'Beaujeu
Trelawny of Tre-
LAWNE
H. Sienkiewics (trans.)
(J. Lane, £ng. ; and
UtUe, Brown. U.S.A.)
Michael Siacmillan
(Blackie)
Michael Macmillan
(Blackie)
Henry Stace
(Alston Rivers)
William K. Hill
(Routledge)
SUBJECT.
Poland, 1682-3 :
Sid.
John Sobie-
H.C. Bailey
(J. Murray)
Mrs. Anna Eliza Bray
(Chapman ft Hall)
India in the time of Stvaji,
the loonder of the Blah-
ratta Empire.
A Scotsman in the Indian
Wars of Anmngzebe, the
Mogul Emperor : Delhi,
Kabult ftc.
Irish Soldier of Fortone in
India: Anrnngsebe's
Coort. An imaginary me-
England in the Charles II. —
William III. period : Dnke
of Monmonth, Titos Oates,
Churchill, ftc.
Charles II.— William III.
: James II. and the
Seven Champions.
Juv.
Honour Before
Honours {Seqtisl^
(both in " Faith's
First Christmas,"
Sec). Juv.
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Lettice
Juv.
Temple.
Maud Vevcrs
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
Time of James II. : Bishop
Trelawny in London, 1685,
and his relatives in Com-
walL FuH of local know-
ledge.
(i) The Seven Bishops in the
Tower, 1688.
(2) Bishop Ken, 1689.
Bishop Ken in 1686.
SUPPLEMENT.
329
SEVENTEENTH CEHTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSBSR.
SUBJECT.
Tas Oak Staircase. | Mary and Catherine
Juv. i (J. Nisbet & Co.)
♦Martin Hyde. Juv,
John Masefield
(Wells Gardner)
At All Hazards
♦Fairmeadows Farm.
Juv.
^Fortune's Castaway
F. H. Freshfield
(Geo. Allen ft Sons)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, £ng.;
and Whittaker.U.S. A.)
W. J. Eccott
(Blackwood)
My Lady Went- Allen Fea
worth
*The Brown Mask
(Mills & Boon)
Percy J. Brebner
(Caasell)
Mainly Somerset in 1685
the Monmouth Rebellion
period. Judge JefEreys,
the " Maids of Taunton/'
&c. Ends, London and
district, 1695.
England (Dorset and Somer-
set), Holland, and the Sea,
in the Monmouth Rising
period. Boy hero is in the
Duke's service. Mainly
i684'-85.
Kent, Oxford, &c., 1679-90-
Time of the Monmouth
Rebellion and the coming
of William.
HampsUre, 1682-86. Girl
life in time of the
Monmouth Rebellion, and
Judge Jeffreys at Win-
chester.
The Duke of Monmouth and
Lady Henrietta Went;
worth : England and Hol-
land, 1683-85 (time of the
Rye House Plot and the
Monmouth Rebellion).
William of Orange, James
II., the Churchills, Judge
Jefireys, &c.
The love story of the Duke of
Monmouth and Henrietta,
Lady Wentworth.
Hants, Somerset, London,
and Dorchester, 1685 :
the Monmouth Rebellion
period. The mystery of a
highwayman's identity.
330
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*The Red Skal
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
I
' " BIbrice Gerard "
(Cassell)
For the Honour of ; H. Barton Bakier
His House I (Digby, Long & Co.)
Red Cavalier
Beauty Retire
♦Anthony Wilding
(Arms and the
Maid)
The Chariots
the Lord
OF
Galloping Dick
The High Toby
{Sequet)
The King's High-
way {Sequeli
♦Captain Margaret
Lewis Ramsden
(Sisleys, Ltd.)
DoraMelloT
(Greening)
Rafael Sabatini
(Hutchinson/ £ng. ;
Putnam, U.S.A.)
and
Joseph Hocking
(Religious Tract Society,
Eng. ; and Eaton &
Mains, U.S.A.)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(I. J. Lane ;
2. Methuen ;
3. Mills & Boon)
John Masefield
(Grant Richards, Eng. ;
and Lippincott.U.S.A.)
N. Somerset Coast, London,
and Taunton, 1683 : James
II. (good depiction) and
Judge Jeffreys are both
prominent. Monmouth
Rebellion merely as back-
ground.
Monmouth Rebellion (Sedge-
moor), and the period up
to the flight of James II.
Nat Lee, the dramatist, is
introduced.
Monmouth Rebellion and
Judge JeflEreys.
England and Jamaica in
James II. period : Judge
Jeffreys, &c.
Bridgwater, Taunton, Lyme
Regis, &c., in 1685 ; the
Duke of Monmouth and his
followers (Lord Grey.&c).
England (London, Somerset,
&c.), and Holland, 1685-
88 : Battle of Sedgemoor,
the Seven Bishops, and the
coining of William. Duke
of Monmouth, Bishop Tre-
lawny, Richard Baxter.
James II., &c.
A trilogy depicting the ex-
periences of a highway-
man, known as " Galloping
Dick," in the Charles II.—
James II. period.
S. Devon, Cornwall, and the
Spanish Main (islands off
Darien), about 1685-88.
SUPPLEMENT.
331
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
title of book.
♦The Island Provi-
dence
*The Parson's Wood
The Weaving of
GyS^LE ESPINBTTE
(in "Tales of Rye
Town ")
The Broken Sword
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
Check to the King ! " Morice Gerard "
, (Hodder & Stoughton)
For Prince or Pope
♦Bible and Sword
James Gisaingham
(Greening)
P. Hay Hunter
(Hodder & Stonghton)
Frederick Niven
(J. Lane)
Violet A. Simpson
(£. Nash)
Maud Stepney Rawson I
(Constable) I
" Morice Gerard "
(Hoddei: & Stoughton)
aFoR Crown and I Cyril Grey 1
Covenant. Juo, (Religions Tract Society)
♦The Cherry Rib*
BAND
S. R. Crockett
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Barnes, U.S.A.)
N. Devon (Hartland) and the
Spanish Main, about 1685-
88 (Cartagena).
EngUsh village life in 1688 :
Papist and Protestant.
Winchelsea, 1688 (Fugitive
Huguenots) .
London in 1688 : James U/s
Declaration oi Indulgence
and the Bishops. Lady
Russell. Lord Shrewsbury,
&c.
James II. 's downfall and the
coming of William: time
of Lord Churchill (after-
wards Duke of Marl-
borough).
A Devon man in Maldon.
Essex, just before the
landing of William of
Orange, 1688.
Scotland (Charles II. — James
II.). Time of Claverhouse
and WiUiam Cleland. the
Covenanting poet.
Scotland and Holland, x68o-
88 : the Cameronians,
Claverhouse, Duke of Mon-
mouth, Ac.
Scotland (Dumfries and the
Island of the Bass) in
Charles II. — James II.
period. The Covenanters ;
Claverhouse, James II., &c.
a Mr. Grey has written another tale of Scotland and the Covenanters, '* The Lost Earidom "
(Religious Tract Society). Both these romances depict the religloas and political stniggies of the
Revolution (x688) from the Covenanting standpoint.
332
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
•A Little Candle. | Mary H. Debenham | Scotland, 1688-89 (Clavw-
Ju9. i (National Society. Eng.; I bonse); 5«^F™>^JSt.
I and Whittaker,U.S. A.) ! Gcnnainsdistnct). 1689-95.
I
*Thb Knight of the ' Michael Barrington
Golden Sword ' (Chatto & Windns)
*Graham of Claver-
house
" Ian Madaren "
(J. Manay, Eng. ; and
Authors & News-
papers Association,
U.S.A.)
Ronald Lindsay " May Wynne
(J. Long)
f»
•The Glen O' Weep-
ing (The Master
OF Stair)
Love is Life
ff
»»
••Orange and Green.
For Three King-
doms
Cousin Isabel. Juv.
Maxjorie Bowen
(Alston Riven, Eng.;
and McClnie, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Stackpoole Kenny
(Greening)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie. Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
H. C. Crosfield
(EUiot Stock)
Marion Andrews
(Wells Gardner)
John Graham (Oaver house),
1683-89 : ending Kilfie-
cranlde. Charies II., James
II., Waller, Pepys, and
others introduced.
The Low Countries (Battle of
Senefie, 1674) » ^^ S^^~
land, 1684-89. Claverhouse
at Paisley. Dudhope, and
Edinburgh — ending KiUie-
Time of Claverhouse, ending
with the Battle of Killie-
crankie.
The Massacre of Glencoe,
1692 : Sir John Dalrymple,
ist Earl of Stair.
Jacobites in France and Ire-
land at the time of the
Revolution (William of
Orange).
Ireland, 1688-91 : the Si^es
of Deny and Limerick, and
the Battle of the Boyne.
Ireland in the James II. and
William of Orange period :
the Battle of the Boyne.
! Ireland, 1688-91 : the Siege
I of Londonderry.
SUPPLEMENT.
333
SEVENTEENTH CESTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
a*THE FORTUMBS OF
colombl torlogh
O'Brien
AUTHOR AND PUBUSBBR.
J. Sheridan Le Fanu
(Rontledge)
My Sword for Pat-
rick Sarsfibld
*Im Sarsfield's Days
The King's Cham-
pion (in " Histori-
cal Vignettes ")
My Lady of Cleeve
R. McDonnell
(Gill. Dublin)
L. McManas
(Gill, Dublin)
•The King's Spy (The
Girl Who Won)
Bernard Capes
(Fisher Unwin)
Percy J. Hartley
(Stevens, Eng. ; and
Dodd. Mead, U.S.A.)
Beth Ellis
(Blackwood, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
♦My Lady
Juv.
*A Lady of Mbttls
(Sequsl to "My
Lady Bellamy").
Dorothea Moore
(Nisbet)
subject.
Dorothea Moore
(S. W. Partridge)
B^^s London district, x686;
tiien (Chapter II. onwards)
Ireland — ^Munster, Dublin,
ftc, 1 689-9 T, endmg with
Battle of Aughrim. James
IL, Tyrconnel, Sarsfield,
and WiUiam of Orange.
General Sarsfield's struggle
for the Jacobite cause in
Ireland.
The Siege of Limerick, 1690.
Sarsfield, William of
Orange, and other his-
torical figures.
William III. just after his
coronation in 1689 : ^» a
comic episode.
Devonshire in the early part
of William III.'s reign.
Jacobite intrigues in the
early William III. period
(Herefordshire) : John
Churchill and Sarah Jen-
nings.
Jacobite adventure in 1690 :
London, Edinburgh, &c.
William III. and Mary at
Kensington Palace.
Windsor, London, Ac, 1695-
96 : William III., Princess
Anne, Thomas Wluurton,
and others. Jacobite con-
spiracy.
a Oiisiaslly pabUshed anonymously.
334
SUPPLEMENT.
SEVENTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
My Lady Clemsncy
Gobs Down to
Rye (in " Tales of
Rye Town ")
My Lady Clemency
Welcou Es A Guest
(in " Tales of Rye
Town ")
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Maud Stepney Rawson
(Constable)
Maud Stepney Rawson
(Constable)
SUBJECT.
Rye (Sussex) about 1690.
*MyLadyClancartY| M. Imlay Taylor
(Gay & Bird, £ng. ; and
Little. Brown,U.S.A.)
Rye in 1699.
♦The First Light on
THE EdDYSTONE.
Juv.
Robert Cavalier
Marcellb
The Lovers of Lor-
raine
•MONTLIVET
Le Cbibn D'Or (in
" 'Twas in Trafal-
gar's Bay." &c.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley)
W. D. Orcutt
(Heinemann, Eng. ; and
McClurg, U.S.A.)
Hampden Bumham
(Briggs, Toronto)
S. Walkey
(Cassell)
Alice Prescott Smith
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Houghton, MiflSin,
U.S.A.)
Walter Besant and James
Rice
(Chatto, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
Althorpe, Newmarket, Lon-
don, Ac., about 1699.
Lord Clancarty, the Irish
Jacobite, and his girl wife
(n^ Lady Elizabeth Spen-
cer). Lord Sunderland,
ftc, and a glimpse of
William III.
Plymouth, 1696-1703 : the
first Eddystone Lights
house; then (1709) the
second Lighthouse.
The career of La Salle, and
his explorations in North
America.
Quebec in the Governor de
Frontenac period.
Canada in the time of Louis
XIV. and William III. :
Frontenac and Quebec.
Early French settlements in
Caioada, 1695 ' the Hurons,
Iroquois, &c. Time of
Governor de Frontenac.
A brief story of Quebec in
1697, and (last few pages)
in 1727.
SUPPLEMENT.
335
SEVENTEENTH CEmVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
A Haid of Salsm
Town. Juv,
dulcibel
The Galleon Trea-
sure. Juv,
In Lbisler's Times.
Juv.
The Young Hugue-
nots. Jttv.
Done and Dared in
Old France. Juv.
The Conscience op
A King
•Once Bitten Twice
Shy. Juv.
Charles of Sweden
(in "Historic
Boys.") Juv.
author and publisher.
Mrs. Lucy Foster Madison
(Penn Publishing Co.)
H. Peterson
(John C. Winston, Phil.)
Percy K. Fitzhugh
(CroweU, U.S.A.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Lothrop, Lee & She-
pard)
Edith S. Floyer
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Deborah Alcock
(Partridge)
A. C. Gunter
(Ward, Lock, £n^. ; and
Home Pnblishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
F. Whishaw
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Elbridge S.' Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
subject.
Witchcraft mania in Salem
(Massachusetts) .
Ditto.
Salem in the days of Cotton
Mather and Sir William
Phipps. Pirates, Ac.
A story of Knkkerfoocker
New York : time of Jacob
Leisler, the first popular
governor.
France, z686, just after the
Revocation of the Edict of
Nantes; and England in
1692.
Southern France about i690>
98 ; the Protestants after
the Revocation of the
Edict.
French Court mystery, 1697
(Louis XIV.).
N. Russia, and Moscow, in
the 1692-96 period : Peter
the Great introduced as a
young man of twenty.
Stockholm, 1699 (Charles
XII. of Sweden).
336
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
TITLB OF BOOK.
A Maid of Nor-
mandy
AUTBOR AND PUBLXSHXR.
SUBJECT.
Dora M. Jones
(Blackwood)
'TwixT Sword and
Glovb
♦TOLLA THB CotJRTB-
san
A. C. Gunter
(Ward, Lock & Co.)
> Versailles, &c., and London,
I about tiie year 1700 : last
; years of the Seventeenth
Century, and first 3reai8 of
the Eighteenth. Loois
XrV., Madame de Mainte-
non, F6nelon, ftc. Time
of James II. at St. Ger-
mains.
France (Pyrenees district) in
1700.
£. Rodocanachie (trans.) ; Social life in the Rome of
(Heinemann) 1700.
Sword
GiDBON
of
^Humphrey
Juo.
Bold.
ISABBAU'S HbRO.
Louis XIV. (in "His-
torical Vignettes")
*R0SB OF Blbnhbim
Thb Advbnturbs of
Juo.
*Marib Pbtit
J. Bloundelle Burton
(CaaseU)
Herbert Strang
(H. Frowde, and Hod-
der, Engi ; and Bobbs-
Merrill, U.S.A.)
£sm6 Stuart
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorhaxn, U.S.A.)
Bernard Capes
(Fisher Unwin)
" Morice Gerard "
(Hodder ft Stoughton)
Herbert Strang
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
LtoClar^tie
(Librairie Molitee, Paris)
Beginning of the War of the
Spanish Succession, 1702 :
the Netherlands (Li6ge).
Flanders and West Indies —
tale of Land and Sea. Ad-
miral Benbow's pursuit of
Du Casse's fleet, 1702.
Languedoc, 1703-5 : Jean
Cavalier, and the Revcit in
Cevennes district (Marshal
ViHars).
Louis XrV., August 21st,
1704.
Paris (Louis XIV.), and
Marlborough's campaign of
1704 : the Battle of EAen-
heim.
Time of Marlborough and
Prince Eugene. London
and the Low Countries:
the Battle of Blenheim.
Adventures in Firance, Con-
stantinople, &c., 1705.
SUPPLEMENT.
337
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*Thb Last of Hsr
Racb
Trkicb Cafttvb
*Thx Laird's Lbgacy.
Juv.
aWlTH BfARLBOROUGB
TO Malplaqubt.
Juo.
Thb Mistrbss of tbe
ROBBS
Captain Dalling-
TON
author and publishbr.
J. Bloundelle Burton
(J. Milne)
Major Arthur Griffiths
(F. V. White)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
H. Strang and R. Stead
(H. Frowde ; and Hodder)
subjbct.
Madamb, Will You
Walk?
Captain Macartnby
(in " Historical
Vignettes ")
AURIBL Sblwodb
S. H. Burchell
(Hurst ft Blackett)
Katharine S. Macquoid
(Arrowsmith)
Beth Ellis
(Blackwood)
Bernard Capes
(Fisher unwin)
Emily Bowles
(Sands & Co.)
War of the Spanish Succes-
sion, 1705-06: Spain at
the time of Peterborough's
victories over the French.
Peterborough in Spain : the
actions at Barcelona^ont-
juich, and Almansa.
Scottish exiles in Paris and
Cambrai,&c., 1707 to Z709
(Archbishop F^nelon) ; also
Flanders in the time of
Marlborough's Wars.
England and Abroad, 1701-
14 : taking of Gibraltar,
and battles of Blenheim
and Malplaquet, &c. Period
of Queen Anne.
The Duchess of Marlborough,
and Mrs. Masham : Queen
Anne's Court.
English Country life (High-
wayman^ in the time of
Anne and Lady Marl-
borough.
Short stories of London
fashionable life in 1712 :
the Pretender, Boling-
broke, &c.
Highwaymen on Cobham
Heath in 17x2.
France (St. Germains) and
England : Jacobites o.
Hanoverians (Queen Anne,
Wharton, Ac).
m One of Herbert Strani's Historical Series,
338
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aA Lass of Dorches-
ter. Juv.
In the Western
Woods (in "A
Fair Haven." &c.).
The Boy Captive of
Old Debrfibld.
Juv.
♦The Prisoner of
Mademoiselle
•Prisoners of For-
tune
♦Peter and Alexis
(Peter the Great)
Parson Croft
♦In THE Fifteen. Juv.
Sylvia's Romance.
Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Annie M. Barnes
(Lothrop, Lee & Shepard)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
Mary P. Wells Smith
(Little. Brown & Co.)
Chas. G. D. Roberts
(Constable. Eng. ; and
Page, U.S.A.)
Rud Perley Smith
(L. C. Page & Co.)
D. M^rejkowski (trans.)
(Constable. Eng. ; and
Putnam. U.S.A.)
Norman Innes
(Eveleigh Nash)
H. C. Adams
(H. Frowde ; and Hodder)
SUBJECT.
Story of a girl in the Province
of Carolina, 1702.
English Churchpeople in the
0>lony of Virginia, 1703.
Massachusetts in 1704 :
French attack. Adven-
tures among the Indians.
Acadia at the beginning of
the Eighteenth Centary.
Massachusetts Bay Colony at
the beginning of the Eigh-
teenth Century : Cotton
Mather period.
Peter the Great, and his son.
Alexis Petrovitch.
Marion Andrews
(Wells Gardner)
France and England (Devon) ,
1713-15-
! Begins 1689 (Killiecrankie
and Claverhouse) ; then
1 701 onwards to the Re-
bellion of '15. Lord Der-
wentwater, ending with
his death on the scafiold.
A girl's experiences in the
Jacobite period (Anne—
George I.), ending just
after the '15.
a Miss Barnes in another tale of this period, " The Laurel Token " (Lothrop, Lee ft Shepard),
has dealt with the Yemasaee uprising. 2714. Perhaps I ought to add that the neroJne of " A Lass
of Dorchester," is the maiden whose imaginary experiences in the Indiui Land (S. Caiolina) are
recorded in an earlier book, " Little Betty Blew." The last-named romanoe depicts her at a somewhat
yonnger stage.
SUPPLEMENT.
339
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY —continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
A Jacobite Ad-
miral
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
R. H. Forster
(J. Long)
SUBJECT.
An Escape from the | Emma Marshall
Tower. Juv. \ (Sedey)
The Silver Glen
Strained Allegi-
ance
"^The Burning Cres-
set
Mistress Beatrice
Cope. Juv.
The Silver Shoe-
buckle
The Wild Geese
The Boy Bondsman.
Juv,
The Fortunes of
Farthings
The Rose Brocade
Bessie Dill
(Digby, Long & Co.)
R. H. Forster
(J. Long)
Howard Pease
(Constable)
M. £. Le Clerc
(CoUins)
R. Menzies-Fergusson
(Digby, Long & Co.)
Stanley Weyman
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
Kent Carr
(Partridge)
A. J. Dawson
(Harper)
Mrs. Philip C. De Cres-
pigny
(E. Nash)
Northumberland (Tynedale
and the Coast, &c.), in
1714.
The Rebellion of '15 : Scot-
land and London, 17x4-17
(the Countess of Nttht-
dale).
A glen in the Ochils (Soot-
land) : the '15 and tiie
Pretender. The tale is
based on the letters of
Lady Erskine of Alva.
Northumberland in 1715 :
Whig v. Jacobite.
The Earl of Derwentwater,
and the Rising of '15.
Northumberland, 17x5 : the
concealment of a Jacobite.
Scotland (the Ochils) and the
Rebellion of 'X5.
West of Ireland in the early
period of Geoige I. :
Jacobites a year or two
after the '15.
English Jacobite lad trans-
ported to Virginia after the
^15 : plantation experi-
ences, &c.
Begins Dorsetshire in X699 :
then Dorsetshire and Mo-
rocco, X7X5-20. A young
man carried ofE as a slave,
among the Moors.
The Court at Leicester House
in X718.
340
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CEUTVRY— continued.
TTtLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PtTBLISBBR.
SUBJECT.
Captain Love
Murray of tbe
Scots Greys
Theodore Roberts
(L. C. Page & Co.)
Lawrence Clarke
(Janold)
The Ross-Spinnbr
Mary Deane
(J. Murray)
King Colley (in
" Historical Vig-
nettes ")
*Trb Lion's Skin
Bernard Capes
(Fisher unwin)
Rafael Sabatini
(Stanley Paul)
Gborgb I. (in " His-
torical Vignettes")
*Vsronica Playfair.
Juv.
Trb Land of Bond-
age
Bernard Capes
(Fisher Unwin)
Maud Wilder Goodwin
(Wame, £ng. ; and
Little, Brown, U.S.A.)
J. Bloundelle Burton
(F. V. White)
Gamblers, Highwa3nnen, &c.,
in the time of George I.
Scotland, Flanders, London,
&c., in the Anne— George
I. period. A somewhat
melodramatic novel.
' Gloucestershire and the Cots-
I wolds, 1719 ; and London,
; 1720 (the South Sea
] Scheme).
I Colley Cibber and Sir Chris-
j topher Wren in 1721.
I Begins Paris, but mainly
London in 1721 : just
after the Soutii Sea Bubble
disaster. History, however,
forms a mere background
to a domestic drama. The
Duke of Wharton appears.
Death of George I. on the
road to Herrenhansen,
1727.
London district and Bath,
about the third decade of
the Eighteenth Century:
B^iu Nash, Bolingbroke,
Swift, Lady Mary Monta-
gue, &c. The poet Pope
at Twickenham.
Ireland and England in 1 727 ;
then the Colony of Vir-
ginia (James River), 1728.
Adventures with the In-
dians, &c. Last pages
jump many years to 1748.
SUPPLEMENT.
341
EIGHTEENTH CEUTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
«Tbb Convbkt of
Massachusbtts.
Juv.
Vjh Grand Cbagrin»
&c. (in " Contes
Historiques ")
Sbraphica
author and pxjblishbr.
At Odds with the
Rbgbnt
•Lb Chevalier de
puyjalou
The Romance op
Mdlb. Aiss^
•A Little Step-
Dadgrtbr. Juv.
^The Hodsb on
Cherry Street
^Bonnie Prince
Charlie. Juv,
R. King
(Parker, Oxford)
Madame Eogtoie Foa
(Williams St Noigate,
1886 ; and various
French publishers)
Justin H. McCarthy
(Hurst, Eng. ; and Har-
per, U.S.A.)
Burton E. Stevenson
(Lippincott)
H. de Charlieu
(Hachette, Paris)
Mrs. Campbell Praed
(J. Long)
Margaret Roberts
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Amelia E. Barr
(Werner Laurie, Eng. ;
and Dodd, Mead,
U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT.
New England in 1711.
Chateau de Vincennes, 171 5:
Louis XV. as a child of
five.
Artois and Fftris, &c., in the
time of the Regency (Duke
of Orleans): " Little King
Louis," ftc.
A story of adventure in Paris
during ^e Regency. In-
troduces the Regent him-
self, &c.
The Mississippi Bubble and
the Regent (France), 1720.
Ihe " Fair Circassian," from
the time when she was
purchased in the Slave
Market at Constantinople,
1698, to her death in 1733.
Chiefly France, 1718-^2
(the Regent, &c.).
Life in Southern France
(Provence) in the days of
the Regent. A girl carried
of! by gjrpsies.
New York in the time of
George II., 1732.
England, Scotland, and
Abroad, 1728-47: Dettin-
gen, Fontenoy, Preston-
pans, and Culloden.
a Published both separately and in the volume, " America and Our Colonies " (Parker's TaU$
lUmtnUing Chitfek History),
342
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— co«/»n««i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHSR.
SUBJECT.
Mistress Cynthia
*P£ckovbr's Mill.
Juv.
The Lady of Hirta
I .
f«
«»
lONE CHALONER
The Sword of Dun-
dee
^The Two-Handed
Sword
May Wynne
(Greening)
Frederick C. Badrick
(National Society, £ng.;
and Whittaker.U.S. A.)
W. C. Mackenzie
(Alex. Gardner, Paisley)
Earl of Iddesleigh
(J. Murray)
Theodore Peck
(Gay & Hancock, Eng. ;
and Duffield, U.S.A.)
Frank Ormerod
(J. & P. Macdonald,
Rochdale)
That Master of Anonymous
Ours. Juo.
For James or
George. Juv.
The Adventures of
Denis. Juv.
^Fortuna Chance
(Nisbet & Co.)
H. C. Adams
(Frowde ; and Hodder)
Mary Bramston
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
" James Prior
(Constable)
>»
I
Jacobite plots (George II.) in
1739 : Sir Robert Walpole.
Rye and Winchelsea district
in Jacobite times: the
Great Frost of 1739.
Scotland, 1739-45. A story
based on the imprisonment
of Lady Grange in the
Hebrides, 1732-9.
Jacobite times : the Duke of
Newcastle, Young Pre-
tender, &c.
Prince Charles Edward, Flora
Macdonald, &c., 1741-49.
Rochdale (Lancashire) and
district, 1744-46. The
Jacobites and Wesley's
followers.
School life in 1745 (Redruth*
Cornwall).
School life in the Carlisle dis-
trict at the time of the '45
Rebellion.
Derbyshire, 1745: the Re-
bellion, and Charles Ed-
wards' retreat from Derby*
&c.
Sherwood Forest district of
Notts, N. Derbyshire and
S. Yorks, chiefly in the '45
Rebellion period. History
merely as background, but
Wm. Lord Byron (the
poet's grand-uncle) and
Wm. Chawortb appear.
SUPPLEMENT.
343
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— cotUinued.
TlThR OF BOOK.
For Love
Honour
For Love
Loyalty
AND
AND
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
For the White
Cockade
Colonel Kate
William Macleod Raine
(Isbister)
Paul Seaton
(Geo. A. Morton» Edin-
burgh ; and Simpkin,
London)
J. £. Muddock
(J. Long)
The '45 Rebellion : escape of
the Prince from Culloden,
&c. (Flora Macdonald).
Scotland in 1745 : Falkirk,
Culloden, &c.
*The Hearth
HUTTON
OF
Edragil, 1745
A Loyal BCaid
* Under the White
Cockade
*Thb Moon of Bath
(The Fair Moon
OF Bath)
Sandy Carmichael
The Flight
Gborgiana
OF
tt
»»
K. L. Montgomery
(Methnen)
W. J. Eccott
(Blackwood)
L. M. Watt
(Hodder ft Stoughton)
W. G. Tarbet
(Arrowsmitb)
HalUwell Sutdiffe
(Cassell)
Beth Ellis
(Blackwood, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
C. J. Cutcliffe Hyne
(S. Low, Eng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
R. Neilson Stephens
(Nash, Eng. ; and Page,
U.S.A.)
Simon Eraser (Lord Lovat),
and his part in the '45
Rebellion.
Ditto.
Cumberland Squire in the '45
Rebellion : the march to
Derby and back, ending
Falkirk.
The Western Isles (Scotland)
and the Young Pretender.
Galloway, ftc, in the '45
RebelUon period (Prince
Charies Edward).
A Jacobite's adventures in
England and Scotland in
tiie year 1745.
Jacobites in Bath, 1745 :
Beau Nash appears.
Two men in the South Seas,
1745 (after escape from
{ CuUoden).
North of England. 1746, just
after Culloden (Country
manners).
344
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CESTURY—continusd,
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND FUBLISBBR.
Hills of Home
For Charles the
Rover
^iRoGER the Scout.
Juv.
Norman Maclean
(Hodder & Stoughton)
««
Highway Dust. Juv,
Black Mark
" May Wynne
(Greening, Eng. ; and
Fenno, U.S.A.)
H. Strang and Geo. Law-
rence
(H. Frowde; and Hod-
der)
G. G. Sellick
(T. C. & E. C. Jack)
Clementina's High-
wayman
Beau Brocade
It
A White Witch
The Man at Odds
A Whisper"
(Blackwood)
R. NeUson Stephens and
a H. Westley
(Hurst, Eng. ; and Page,
U.S.A.)
" Baroness Orczy "
(Greening, Eng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
subject.
»#
The House with
thbDragonGates.
Juv.
Theo Douglas
(Hurst & Blackett)
Ernest Rhys
(Hurst & Blackett)
Edith E. Cowper
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Scotland, 1746. Begins im-
mediately after Cnlloden :
the Pretender's flight.
Jacobites in Ireland after the
'45 Rebellion: a plan to
avenge Colloden.
Time of Geocge II., x 744*59.
England (the '45) and N.
America (French ir. Eng-
lish).
A treasure hunt in the time
of George II.
Man of Fashion turns high-
wayman (George II.
period.)
Love and adventure in 1742.
A Derbyshire Highwayman
in George II. period (Jaco-
bites).
Oxford and Northumberland,
mid-Eighteenth Century
(witchcraft and alchemy).
Welsh Coast. 1745. Piratical
smugglers in and about the
Bristol Channel.
Chiswick in 1745.
a One of Herbert Strang*s Historicmi Snia.
SUPPLEMENT.
343
EIGHTEENTH CENTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLZSBBR.
Hartland Forest
Sir Richard £s-
COMBE
Mrs. Anna Eliza Bray
(Chapman & Hall)
Strange Adven-
tures IN THE
County of Dor-
set, A.D. 1747
The Moonrakers.
Juv.
The Wayfarers
The Idol of the
King
A Fountain Sealed
Aiax Pemberton
(Cassell, £ng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Emily J. Climenson
(Poynder, Reading)
♦Mistress Phil. Juv.
Edith £. Cowper
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
J. C. Snaith
(Ward, Lock & Co.)
Henry Curties
(Hutchinson)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus)
SUBJECT.
A domestic traf^edy, b^;in-
ging Exeter distnct, 1721,
but mainly concerned with
events at Hfiurtland, N.
Devon, at the time of the
'45 Rebellion.
Warwickshire in 1746: the
doings of the " Hell Fire
Club " at Medmenham
Abbey.
Smugglers in the Isle of
Parbeck(GeorgeII. period).
Smugglers in the New Forest,
1747-
^Incomparable Bel-
lairs
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society,Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Stokes, U.S.A.)
London about 1750 : Henry
Fielding the novelist, &c.
Secret marriage of George
III. as Prince of Wales.
London (last months of
George II.) : how George,
Prince of Wales, fell in love
with a Dartford Quaker
maiden.
Waltham Cross, 1759-60, and
highway adventure in Lon-
don coach, &c.
Bath in mid-Eighteenth Cen-
tury.
• A sequel to " The Bath Comedy " (see p. 85).
346
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CESTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
*ThbMessbngbr(TBe F. Frankfort Moore
Love that Pre-
vailed)
The Morning of To-
day
Bernicia
The Infidel
Peggy Gains-
borough
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Cupples & Leon,
U.S.A.)
Florence Bone
(Eaton & Mains)
Amelia E. Barr
(Melroee, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
M. E. Braddon
(Simpkin & Co.)
SUBJECT
John Wesley as lover.
Emily Baker
(F. Griffiths)
Jemmy Abercraw
My Lady of Aros
Bernard Capes
(Methaen)
John Wesley's period : Jaco-
bites and Wesleyans in
Yorkshire.
George Whitefield and the
M^odists.
Chiefly London and district
in tiie last years of Geoige
II.'s rdgn : the Methodist
I Revival (Wesley and
; Whitefield).
I
I The great painter, Gains-
borough, and his family.
Bath, Sudbury, London,
Richmond, &c., in mid-
Eighteenth Century (the
Sheridans, Garrick, &c.).
University man turned hi^-
wayman, and Jacobites.
&c., 1758-60. Surrey and
London (William Pitt).
««
*In the Shadow of
THE Lord
The Heart of
Washington
John Brandane " , Attempted Jacobite revival
(Sir I. Pitman, Eng. ; in me Western Islands of
and Duffield, U.S.A.) ' Scotland, about 1760.
Mrs. Hugh Eraser
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Holt. U.S.A.)
Dorothea H. Knox
(D. C. Neale, U.S.A.)
A story of George Wash-
ington's parents, covering
his own youth and early
manhood : England and
America about the 1 730-56
period.
The flrst love affair of George
Washington, from 1747.
SUPPLEMENT.
347
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— cantinued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
♦Return
Boys of the Border.
Juv,
Parson Gay's Three
Sermons
With Rogers' Ran-
gers
French and Eng-
lish. Juv.
Cameron of Lochisl
•The Fort in the
Forest. J%tv,
aA Soldier of the
Wilderness. Juv,
Roger the Ranger.
Juv.
♦How Canada was
Won. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Grace MacGowan Cooke
and Alice MacGowan
(Hodder, £ng. ; and
Page. U.S.A.)
Mary P. Wells Smith
(Little, Brown & Co.)
Robert Thaxter Edes. M.D.
(Cochrane, U.S.A.)
G. Waldo Browne
(L. C. Page St Co.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson Sc Sons)
Philippe Aubert de Gasp^
(translated by C.D.G.
Roberts)
(L. C. Page & Co.)
Everett T. Tomlinson
(W. A. WUde Co.)
Everett T. Tomlinson
(W. A. Wilde Co.)
EUza F. Pollard
(Partridge)
SUBJECT.
Georgia, and the Sea Islands,
1739: General Oglethorpe.
N.W. Massachusetts in the
French and Indian War
period. 1746-55.
Massachusetts in the French
and Indian War period.
New England and New York*
1754 : French and Indian
War period.
Canada in the time of Fort
William Henry. Louis-
bourg, and Quebec.
The French Canadians at the
time of theEnglish struggle.
Archibald Cameron, and
Quebec. 1757. &c.
The fall of Fort William
Henry. 1755.
The fall of Fort Frontenac,
1758.
Canadft in the time of Mont-
calm and Wolfe: Ticon-
deroga. and Quebec. The
Indians. &c.
Capt. F. S. Brereton 1 Canada. 1756-59 : the de-
(Blackie. Eng. ; and ; fence of Fort William
Caldwell. U.S.A.) Henry, the attack on
Louisbourg. and the taking
, of Quebec (Wolfe).
« Another stoiy of the Conquest of Canada period, by the same author, b '* The Yomg Rangers '
(Wilde). Mr. Tomlinson's first l>ook in this series of Cokmial teles is. " With FUnUock and Ffle."
348
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CESTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHSR.
*LrrTL]r France (The
QuiBXRON Touch)
^RoB the Ranger.
Juo.
The Head of Iron
•Fort Amity
•With Wolfe
Canada. Juv.
IN
SUBJECT.
Cyru8 T. Brady France and Canada, 1 754-59 ;
(Greening, Eng. ; and i Admiral Hawke at Qui-
Appleton, XJ.S.A.)
Herbert Strang
(H. Frowde, and Hodder,
Eng. ; and Bobbs-
Merrill, U.S.A.)
B. S. Patterson
(Walker. Pittsburg)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(J. Murray)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
The Little Lady Annie M. Barnes
AT THE Fall of ! (Penn Publishing Co.)
Quebec. Juv.
a*LADY Good - for-
NOTHING
•The Royal Ameri-
cans
60n the Trail of
Pontiac. Juv.
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Nelson, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Aiary Hallock Foote
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin,
U.S.A.)
Edward Stratemeyer
(Lothrop,Lee &Shepard)
beron, and Wolfe
Quebec.
at
C4uiada and the Indians in
1757: time of Montcalm
and Wolfe.
Pennsylvania in the days of
General Braddock, and
General John Forbes
("The Head of Iron").
Fort Duquesne, 1758.
C>anada, 1758 : the storming
of Ticonderoga, &c, Brit-
ish, French, and Indians.
French v. English period,
coveringBraddock's def ea t ,
Fort William Henry, Ti-
conderoga, and Quebec.
Quebec, 1759: a girl gives
information which enables
Wolfe to take the City.
Boston (Mass.) in the Second
Quarter of the Eighteenth
Century ; then Lisbon (the
Earthquake, 1755) ,* lastly
(Epilogue) Bath, England,
in 1775.
N. American colonies during
the period, 1756-77. The
Schuyler family and the
Revolution (Quakers).
Colonial America (the Ohio
pioneers) in the last French
and Indian War.
• Hals novel is founded, in part, on the tnie stocy of Sir Hairy FranUand and Agnes Soniage.
b Like the autlior's ** With Washington in the Weat " {vitU p. 87), this tate Is one of the ▼olames
in bis Cphnial 5«Kcf (Lothrop, Lee ft Shepard).
SUPPLEMENT.
349
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— contintied.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHSR.
A Sword of tbs Old
Frontisr
PONTIAC CHIBF of
THE OtTAWAS. JuV,
•The Amulet
The Strawberry
Handkerchief
The Impostor
•Prisoners ofChance
•One of Cuve's
Heroes (In Clivb's
Command). Juv.
The Prince's Valet
Randall Parrish
(Putnam, Eng. ; and
McClurg, U.S.A.)
Edward S. Ellis
(Cassell, Eng. ; and
Winston, U.S.A.)
subject.
tl
Charles EgbertCraddock"
(MacmiUan)
Amelia £. Barr
(Dodd, Mead & Co.)
John Reed Scott
(Lippincott)
Randall Parrish
(Putnam, Eng. ; and
McClurg. U.S.A.)
Herbert Strang
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Bobbs-MerriU, U.S.A.)
J. Bamett
(Smith, Eider A Co.)
•Sir John Constan-
tine
The Red Cravat
The Little Marquis
of Brandenburg
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng.;
and Scribner, U.S.A.)
Alfred T. Sheppard
(Macmillan)
W. R. H. Trowbridge
(Hurst ft Blackett)
Fort Chartres and Detroit at
the time oi Pontiac's con-
spiracy, 1763.
The Siege of Detroit by the
Ottawa Indians in 1763.
The British at Fort Prince
George in 1763, and the
Cherokee Indians.
New York in the Stamp Act
period, 1765.
Maryland (Annapolis) in the
time of Governor Horatio
Sharpe, 1766.
Louisiana and Arkansas in
1769.
India, 1754-57: the Battle
of Plassey, the Black Hole,
&c.
The Young Pretender's ad-
ventures in France, Ger-
many, and England, after
the '45 Rebellion.
Adventures in Corsica, 1756.
Prussia and Saxony, 1730 :
Frederick William I. and
his " Giants."
The youth of Frederick the
Great.
350
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
•A Gentle Knight
OF Old Branden-
burg
Charles Major
(MacmiUan)
The Lonely Guard
*A Gendarme of the
King
Norman Innes
(Ward, Lock. Eng. ; and
Jacobs. U.S.Ai)
P. L. Stevenson
(Hurst & Blackett)
SUBJECT.
The Surge of War
The Life Perilous
Jean-Baptiste Gre-
uzE, Peintrs (in
•' Contes Histori-
ques "). Juv,
Andr]&-£rnest-
MODESTE GRETRY,
MusiciEN (in "Con-
tes Historiques").
Juv.
♦A Fair Martyr
Norman Innes
(£. Nash)
Carlton Dawe
(Hutchinson)
Mdme. £ug6nie Foa
(Williams & Norgate.
1886 ; and various
French publishers)
Mdme. Eug6nie Foa
(Williams & Norgate.
1886 ; and various
French publishers)
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Everett)
Number One Hun-
dred AND One
Wymond Carey
(Blackwood. Eng. ; and
Putnam. U.S.A.)
Court of Frederick William I .
of Prussia, about 1731 :
Wilhelmina. sister of Fred-
erick the Great, and the
latter as a youth.
Maria Theresa. 1743 : War
of the Austrian Succession
period. A young Scots-
man in Bavaria.
Experiences of a Scotsman
in the Seven Years' War
(good picture of Frederick
the Great).
Silesia in the period, x 756-61 :
Frederick the Great and
the Seven Years' War.
Spanish Inquisition. 1750.
Greuze. the artist, at Tour-
nus. in 1738.
Li6ge, 1752 :
composer.
Gr6try, the
Begins Marseilles (Plague) in
1720 ; then — ^twenty years
later — ^social life under
Louis XV. An English-
man in Paris.
A spy at Louis XV. 's Court
about the time of the War
of the Austrian Succession.
SUPPLEMENT.
351
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Pbtticoat Govern-
ment (Petticoat
Rule)
author and publisher.
tf
>*
The Palace
Danger
OF
The Hand of Leo- H. Noel Williams
Baroness Orczy
(Hutchinson, Eng. ;
and Doran, U.S.A.)
Mabel Wagnalls
(J. Long, Eng.; and
Funk & Wagnalls,
U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
NORE
I
Under the Pompa-
dour
*Le Jardinibr db la
Pompadour
•A Flood Tide
Innocent Masque-
' RADERS
Bristol Diamonds.
Juv.
(Harper)
Edward W. Jennings
(Unwin, Eng. ; and
Brentano's, U.S.A.)
Eugene Demolder
(Soci6t6 du Mercure de
France, Paris)
Mary H. Debenham
(Edward Arnold)
" Sarah Tytler "
(J. Long)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley)
Life's Anchor. Juv.
Harriet E. Colville
(Religious Tract Society)
French Court in 1745 (Jaco-
bites) . Time of Louis XV.,
Mdme. de Pompadour, and
the Young Pretender.
The Marquise de Pompa-
dour : Versailles, &c.
France in the time of the
Pompadour : ends with
Rosbach, 1757.
Dorset coast and London ;
then France and Louis
XV. *s Court in 1756.
Louis XV. and the Pompa-.
dour, &c. The tale passes
at the end, from 1764 to
1789 and 1792.
London, &c. (semi-French
atmosphere), c. 1765-70;
also glimpses of Paris and
Provence.
Kent (Blackheath, &c.) and
London district at the
beginning of George III.'s
rei^ : Newgate and Old
Bailey scenes. Time of
Dr. Johnson.
The Bristol Hot Wells in
1773. Hannah More and
Edmund Burke appear :
also Chandler, Prince Bis-
hop of Durham.
London, Bristol, Streatham,
Ac, 1773-86: Dr. John-
son and his friends ; also
Hannah More.
352
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Knights of ths
Road. Juo.
•My God-Daughter.
Juv,
Starwood Hall.
Juv.
•Castle Meadow.
Juv.
** 1779." A Story
of Old Shore-
ham. Juv,
Held Fast for Eng-
land. Juv,
The Defence of the
Rock. Juv.
Pamela's Hero.
Juv,
Glsnith
In Four Reigns.
Juv.
author and publisher.
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson d Sons)
Maxy H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker, U.S.A.)
Frederick C. Badrick
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley)
SUBJECT.
The Cunning Wo-
man's Grandson.
Juv.
Frederick Harrison
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Dorothea Moore
(Blackie)
M. H. Abraham-Jewell
(J. Ooseley)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley, Eng. ; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S. A.)
John Howard, the philan-
thropist : London (New-
gate), Bath, &c.
England, 1774-80 : village
IHe, and London at the
time of the Gordon Riots.
A lad's adventures on his
way to and in the London
of George III.
Norwich in 1777-8 ; and in
1788. John Crome, the
landscape painter, and
Wm. Crotch, the musician
(early years of both).
Boys in an old Manor House,
near Shoreham. French
sailors land on the Sussex
coast, &c.
England (Putney, &c.) I778- ;
and Gibraltar (the Si^e)
1779-83.
The Siege of Gibraltar.
Hampstead in the time of the
Gordon Riots.
Life in Kingston-on-Thame8«
London, &c., 1785-6: a
duel, and an election.
Windsor, Sidmouth, Brigh-
ton, &c., in the period,
1 785-1842 (George III.,
George IV., William IV.,
and Victoria).
Cheddar in 1789 : Hannah
More.
SUPPLEMENT.
353
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb Pobt and His
Guardian Angbl
On thb Banks of
TBB OUSB
•Nancy Stair
Highland Mary
A Prophbt's Rb-
WARD
aHARTLBY HOUSB,
Calcutta
Thb Silvbr Hand.
Juo.
*Thb Grbat Procon-
sul
*As It Happbnbd
6Thb Italian
author and publisher.
<<
Sarah Tytlcr "
(Chatto & Windus)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley, £ng. ; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
Elinor Macartney Lane
(Heinemaan, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
Clayton Mackenzie Legge
(C. M. Clark, U.S.A.)
Mrs. E. H. Strain
(Blackwood)
Anonymous
(Thacker, Calcutta)
Eliza F. Pollard
(Blackie)
" Sydney C. Grier "
(Blackwood)
" Ashton HilUers "
(Hutchinson, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Ann Radcliffe
(Routledge)
SUBJECT.
Cowper at Olney : Mrs.
Unwin.
Cowper at Olney, and his
friendship with John New-
ton (ends 1795).
Time of Robert Bums,
covering the period 1768-
88.
Robert Bums and his love
affairs.
Scotland (Glasgow district)
in the period 1778-93 ;
political ideals before and
during the French Revolu-
tion.
India in the time of Warren
Hastings.
India and the Mahratta
Wars: Warren Hastings,
Hyder Ah. Tippoo, Stc,
An apology for Warren
Hastings under the form
of an imaginary diary by a
lady in his family. The
period, 1777-85 (India) is
covered. Ends, Bath, a
few months after Hastings'
death, 1818.
India, England, and (in large
part) Gibraltar, 1778-79,
Quaker element.
Naples and district about
Z760 : the Inquisition.
• A new editkm of this old work (originally poblished in 1789) was brought out by Thacker
in Z909.
b CoDsldnBd Mcs. RadcUffs's best novel by competent critics,
2 A
354
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— i;oH/»»iM«i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Beyond the Wall I J. H. Yoxall
(Hutchinson)
An Empress in Love j F. Whishaw
I (Stanley Paul)
♦Shoes of Gold
Hamilton Drummond
(Stanley Paul)
♦The Reiuniscbncbs
OF Sir Barring-
ton Beaumont,
Bart.
M. Barrington
(Blackwood)
•The Strange Story
OF Rab Raby
M. J6kai (trans.)
(Jarrold)
♦The Eagle's Nest | •« Allan McAulay "
(J. Lane)
The Red Sultan
J. Maclaren Cobban
(Chatto, £ng. ; and
Rand McNally &, Co..
U.S.A.)
GuiLLAUME DuPUY- . Mdme. Eug6iue Foa
TREN (in ** Contes
Historiques").
Juv,
The Road to Paris
(Williams & Norgate,
1886 ; and various
French publisheis)
R. N. Stephens
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
Page, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Romantic adventure in Nor-
thern Italy, 1 761.
Russia: Catherine the Great,
Peter III., and Gregory
Orloff. The assassination
of Peter.
Paris (Louis XV. and Choi-
seul) ; then St. Petersburg
(Catiierine and Peter III.),
1762. Ends with the
murder of the Czar.
Imaginary autobiography,
1756-1812 (chiefly between
1778 and 1798) : London,
Paris (largely), Stockholm,
&c. Count Axel Fersen is
specially prominent ; there
are, also, pictures of Horace
WaJpole, Marie Antoinette
and her Court, the Revolu-
tion, &c.
Hungary in the time of the
Emperor Joseph II., 1780-
90.
Napoleon as a youth in
Corsica.
Adventures among the Moors
in Western Barbary, 1789.
La Haute — Vienne, 1785
boyhood of the great sur-
geon, Dupu3rtren.
Adventures in America and
Europe in the American
Revolution period.
SUPPLEMENT.
355
EIGHTEENTH CEHTVRY—cofainued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
The Scarlet Cloak { Audrey de Haven
(Blackwood)
a* In the Days of
Jefferson. Juv.
Hezekiah Butterworth
(Appleton)
The King's Mark.
Juv.
WooDHULL. Juv.
6The Musket Boys
OF Old Boston.
Juv.
The Musket Boys
UNDER Washing-
ton. Juv.
The Young Conti-
nentals AT Lex-
ington. Juv.
The Young Conti-
nentals at Bun-
KRRHjUL(Sequel) .
Juv.
•A Little Maid of
Boston Town.
Juv.
Ella M. Bangs
(C. M. Clark, U.S.A.)
Pliny B. Seymour
(C. M. Clark. U.S.A.)
C. £. Warren
(Cupples & Leon, U.S.A.)
John T. Mclntyre
(Penn, U.S.A.)
Margaret Sidney
(Lothrop)
*•
subject.
Begins Glasgow, 1752 ; then
Virginia during the Ameri-
can Revolution.
A semi-fictional biography of
Thomas Jefferson, Quiet-
ing his early home life in
Virginia, &c. Mainly in
the period X75o-z8oo« but
ends with the Louisiana
Purchase (1803) and after.
Portland (Maine) at the
beginning of the Revolu-
tion.
South Carolina ; England ;
and the American Revolu-
tion.
The Revolution :
(i) In Boston (early stages) ;
and
(2) In New York.
Philadelphia and Boston in
the Revolution: various
historic scenes and char-
acters are introduced.
Begins Boston, England ;
&en Boston, Mass., 1772-
75.
a I have chosen this and one other tale hy the same author (*' In the Boyhood of Lfnoola/' witU
p. 3S6) at interastJng ezamplea of a osefol seriea of aemi-flctioDal studies in American history. Other
volumes (Appleton & Co.) deal with early Colonial and mote reoent times, iUustratbig the lives of such
men as Penn, Washin«:ton, Lafayette, &c, down to President McKintoy.
b Two volumes in The Rwoiittionary Stri€S (Cupples ft Leon).
356
SUPPLEMENT.
CEKrURY—amtimmed.
TtTtM, €9 900K»
SUBJECT.
MSVOTOICY
Maxgaret L. Sean
(JEL G. Badger, Bostoo)
CCfHCCKD TOWW.
^Tmm Camp Fikx of
Mab Axtbomt.
ft
(Lotluop)
period (*' Meootooiy " =^
AxitBgtoo. Maaa.).
O»oord in the eaiiy stages
of the Re^'olotioii.
I
I
X. Xomlinaoii
(Houston, Mifflin)
*Mad Ahthovy's
YouHG Scout.
Ju9.
Won m Warfare.
Juv.
Peggy Owen. /iw.
True to the Old
Flag. Juo.
The Green Mouk-
tazm Boys (Lib-
erty OR Death)
My Lady Laughter
The Pennsylvania troops
under Wayne (" Mad An-
thony ") in the
1774-76.
Everett T. T<
(Hongfaton, Mifflin)
Charles R. Kenyon
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Mrs. Lucy Foster Biadison
(Penn Pnbg.Co.,U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
EUza F. Pollard
(Partridge, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
Dwight Tilton
(Dean, Eng. ; and C. M.
Clark, U.S.A.)
Valley Forge, and the n<
bonxhood of Phi]adel{rfiia,
1777-8 (General Wayne.
Washington, Lafayette,
Ac).
Young Englishman in East-
em Tennessee and Ken-
tucky, just before and
during the Revolation.
Battle of King's Monntain.
A Philadelphia Quaker
maiden during the Revolu-
tion : Washington's camp,
&c. Introduces Clinton,
Tarleton, Arnold, and
others.
The American Revolution,
1774-81 : covers Bunker
Hill, Saratoga, &c., down
to Comwallis' surrender at
Yorktown.
America in early Revolution
period : ends with Carleton
and Montgomery at Que-
bec, 1775.
Siege of Boston, 1775 : Wash-
ington, Hancock, Adams,
Paul Revere, &c.
SUPPLEMENT.
357
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY—cotOitimd.
TITLE OF BOOK.
a* Dan Monrob. Juv,
♦Two Cadets with
Washington (Se-
quel). Juv.
Marching with
Morgan. Juv.
^Scouting for
Washington. Juv,
Morgan's Men.
Juv.
Patriot and Tory.
Juv.
Nancy Hart.'JJ'/mi;.
Anne Nelson. Juo.
Dorothy's Spy. Juv.
Gaylb Langford.
Juv.
A Struggle for
Freedom. Juv.
An Express of '76.
Juv.
author and publisher.
W. O. Stoddard
(Lothrop)
John V. Lane
(L. C. Page & Co.)
John Preston True
(Little, Brown ft Co.)
Edward S. Ellis
(Estes & Co.)
Robert Louis Frear
(C. M. Clark)
Alice Turner Curtis
(Fenno)
" James Otis "
(Crowell)
Harold M. Kramer
(Lothrop & Co.)
" James Otis "
(A. L. Burt)
Lindley Murray Hubbard
(Little, Brown ft Co.)
subject.
The Battle of Bunker Hill,
and the Si^e of Boston, in
1775.
Kennebec River region, 1775*
American Revolution period,
introducing General
Thomas Sumter, and other
Revolutionary leaders (as
the titles show).
Two brothers on opposite
sides in the American
Revolution.
The Revolutionary War in
Georgia.
A little girl in Province Town
during the Revolution.
New York just after the
Declaration of Indepen-
dence.
American Revolution in the
Declaration period.
The Whaleboat Navy in
1776 (American Revolu-
tion).
George Washington, Frank-
lin, Hamilton, Burr, and
Hubbard.
a The fixst two volumes of The RevohOiotmry Series (Lotiuop).
b The flnt two volmnes In The StMmtrt SchtnUf Serin (LSttle, Bcown & Co.). *' On Guard 1
Against Tory and Tarleton,*' the third volume of the series, apfwaza on p. 93-
358
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AKD PUBUSHBR.
aBoYS AND Girls op
'77- /w.
Thb Fight for thb
Valley. Juv.
6The Minute Boys
OF Long Island.
Juv.
Thb Ridbr of thb
Black Horse. Juv,
Maid of the Mo-
hawk. Juv.
•A Venture in 1777.
Juv.
Van Rensselaer of
Rbnssblabrswyck
(in "Historic
Bojrs"). Juv.
♦The Van Rensse-
LAERS OF Old
Manhattan
The Red Chibf. Juv.
Mrs. Mary P. Wells Smith
(Little, Brown & Co.y
W. O. Stoddard
(Appleton)
<<
James Otis "
(Estes & Co.)
Everett T. Tomlinson
(Houghton, Mifflin)
F. A. Ray
(C. M. Clark)
S. Weir MitcheU
(Jacobs & Co.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Weymer Jay Mills
(F. A. Stokes)
Everett T. Tomlinson
(Houghton, Mifflin)
subject.
The farming families in
Northern Massachusetts
during the Revolution :
the campaign ending in
Burgoyne's surrender.
Siege of Fort Schuyler, and
Battle of Oriskany : Gene-
ral Burgoyne, 1777.
New York in 1776 : the first
reading of the Declaration
of Independence, the de-
fence of New York, and the
Battle of Long Island.
One of Washington's couriers
in 1777.
Mohawk Valley during the
Revolution.
Story of three boys in Phila-
delphia : Geo. Washington
at Valley Forge, &c.
New York, 1777 : Van Rens-
selaer's boyhood.
New York in the Revolution
period, and under " Presi-
dent " Washington.
Cherry Valley Massacre,
1778.
• This is the loarCh and last volume of Mis. Wells Smith's Old DurfieU Series ; three out of the
four volomes appear in my lists. I may add that this series is a continuation of another (dealing
with the Seventeenth Century) entitled, The Yount Puritans Series. The two series cover the
history of Western Massachusetts from King Philip's war down to the Revolution.
b One of the volumes in The Mimtte Boys Series (American Revolution) ; the other stories deal
respectively with the " Minute Boys " of South Carolina, Wyoming Valley, Mohawk Valley, Green
Mountains, New York Qty, Boston, Bunker Hill, and Lexington. The two last-named are by Edward
Stratemeyer. I have alreadyjp. 86) allndsd to another serws of twelve short tales by " James Otis,*'
Stories of Americem History (Estea & Co.). These stories illnstrate mainly the z745--8o period, but
one has for subject Cttaco Bay in 1676.
SUPPLEMENT.
359
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— coniinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Continxntal
Dragoon
•Long Knives. Juv.
Marching Against
THE Iroquois.
Juv.
The Pathfinders of
The Revolution.
Juv.
Arnold's Tempter
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
A New England
Maid. Juv.
•The Spy of York-
town. Juu.
•On the Old Fron-
tier. Juv.
Fighting King
George. Juv.
a*THE Reckoning
The Little Lord of
the Manor (in
"ChivalricDays").
Juv.
R. Neilson Stephens
(Ward, Lock, £ng. ; and
Page, U.S.A.)
G. Gary Eggleston
(Lothrop & Co.)
Everett T. Tomlinson
(Houghton, Mifflin)
Wm. Elliot Griffis
(W. A. wade)
B. Comfort
(C. M. Clark)
Eliza F. Pollard
(Blackie)
W. O. Stoddard
(Appleton)
W. O. Stoddard
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.).
John T. Mclntjrre
(Penn Pnblishing Co.)
Robert W. Chambers
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
Elbridge S. Brooks
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Putnam. U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
American Revolution in 1778
(Philipse Manor House) :
neutral territory.
District north of the Ohio :
Clark's Conquest. Based
largely on the author's own
family records.
General Sullivan's expedition
in the Iroquois country,
1779.
Lake region of New York,
&c., 1779 : General Sulli-
van.
Benedict Arnold and Major
Andr6 : the Andr6 Con-
spiracy, 1780.
West Point and Benedict
Arnold: George Washing-
ton, Major Andre, &c.
George Washington and
Benedict Arnold.
Last raid of the Iroquois :
Onandaga Valley, &c.
(American Revolution).
' Time of Lord Cornwallis'
' surrender, 1781.
American Revolution : the
end of the struggle ini78i .
The Evacuation of New York,
1783.
a The fourth ol this author's special series of novels dealing with the War of Independence.
" Cardigan," and "The Maid at Arms " (vids p. 91), are 1. and fl. respectivel]^ ; No. III. has stUl
29 10) to appear.
36o
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— am/»f»«««.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AHD PUBUSHSR.
The Loyalists of James H. Stark
Massacbusstts
Daniel Boone
The Blue Ocean's
Daughter
The Story of Paul
Jones
(W. B. Clarke, Boston)
C. H. Forbes-Lindsay
(Lippincott)
Cyrus T. Brady
(Greening, £ng. ; and
Moffat, Yard, U.S.A.)
Alfred H. Lewis
(DilUnghaxn Co.)
With Paul Jones. J. T. Mclntvre
Juv. (Penn Publishing Co.)
My Lady's Slipper
My Sword for La-
fayette
A Blot on
Scutcheon
the
Cyrus T. Brady
(Dodd, Mead & Co.)
Max Pemberton
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
(<
May Wynne "
(Mills & Boon)
The Little Blue
Lady. Juv.
Elizabeth Harcourt Mit-
chell
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
American Revofaition period :
Franklin, Adams, and
otben. Written from Tory
standpoint.
Experiences of Boone, the
American Pioneer.
An American merchant sea-
captain's daughter in 1 780 :
fight with the English, and
the adventures ensuing.
Ends in England.
The career of Paul Jones
presented under the form
of historical romance.
Philadelphiaafter Burgoy ne's
surrender, &c.
Paris (largely) in the time of
Paul Jones.
France and America, 1777-B ;
then Eng., 1788 ; lastly,
France and Germany
during the Revolution
period (Lafavette's im-
prisonment by the Aus-
trians).
England and Brittany in the
last two decades of the
Eighteenth Century :
French Revolution period.
The Prince of Wales at
Brighton, &c.
Young girl from Nonnandy
in Pans and Versailles, just
before the Revolution
(Louis XVI. and Marie
Antoinette).
SUPPLEMENT.
361
EIGHTEENTH CESTURY—cafMnued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*The Trampling of
THB LiLISS
The Last Duchess
OF Belgardb
Lb Sbrvitbur du
LlOJI DB LA MeR.
Juv,
Tbb Lady of thb
Mount
The Marquis' Heir.
Juv,
author and pubushbr.
Monsieur de Paris
A Rogue's Tragedy
'^La Chanoinbssb
Valiant and True
•Little Count Paul.
Juv,
Rafael Sabatini
(Hutchinson)
M. £. Seawell
(Appleton)
Louis Rousselet
(Hachette)
Frederick S. labam
(Stead's Pabliahing
House, Eng. ; and
Bobbe-Me^U.S.A.)
A. H. Bi^s
(Chiistiaji Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorhaxn, U.S.A.)
Mary C. Rowsell
(Chatto A Windus)
Bernard Capes
(Methuen)
Andr6 Theuriet
(Armand Colin, Paris)
SUBJBCT.
J. Spillmann
(Sands & Co.)
Mis. £. M. Field
(Wells, Gardner)
France (Picardy) just before
the Revolution, 1789 ; then
Picardy, Belgium^ and
Paris in 1793 (Robespierre).
Begins Court of Louis XVI. ;
then the Terror (husband
and wife reconciled as
prisoners in the Temple).
French Revolution in the
early period.
Coast of France (Mont St.
Michel) in early Revolution
days.
Earlier stages of the French
Revolution: the Marquis
de Bouill^, &c.
Paris, 1789-93 : begins just
before the Revolution.
France (Savoy) on the eve of
the Revolution.
Eastern France (Meuse),
1789, and 1 791-3 : Bar-le-
Duc, Verdun, and Valmy.
Prussian War, and glimpse
of Goethe.
Adventures of a Swiss Guards
officer in the Revolution,
Z789-92: Veisaillesp The
BastiUe, Tuileries, Ac.
Brittanv and Paris in the
Revolution period, 1791-
94-
36^
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aM ADBMOISELLE
Celeste
The Red Cap. Juv.
author and publisher.
Inthb Lion's Mouth.
The Path of Honor
•Lb Roman D'une
Versaillaise
♦The Loser Pays
Adele Ferguson Knight
(G. W. Jacobs & Co.,
U.S.A.)
Edward S. Tylee
(T. Ndson & Sons)
Eleanor C. Price
(Macmillan)
♦The Scarlet Pim-
pernel
♦I Will Repay
♦The Elusive Pim-
pernel
When Terror
Ruled
In the Reign of
Terror. Juv.
Burton E. Stevenson
(Lippincott)
Augnstin Billot
(Soci6t6 d'Edition Fran-
^ise et Etrang^re,
Feiris)
Mary Openshaw
(Werner Laurie)
" Baroness Orczy "
(x. Greening, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A. ;
2. Greening, Eng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A. ;
3. Hutchinson, also
Greening, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
f»
" May Wynne
(Greening)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
A love story of the French
Revolution.
An English lad's adventures
in Normandy and Paris
during the Revolution,
1789-93-
Two English children in
France during the Revolu-
tion, 1789-93 : the Ven-
deans, &c. Last chapter,
England in 1800.
The war in the Bocage (West
France) : love and ad-
venture.
French Revolution period,
178^7.
France, 1791-93 *• Rougetde
Lisle (his son tells the
story). The youthful
Napoleon.
A connected series dealing
with Paris, England,
Calais, &c., in the 17S2-3
period. Robespierre pro-
minent in the last.
Avignon district in 1792-
England (Chelsea), and
France, 1790-3- ^ West-
minster boy in Paris during
the Terror (Robespierre).
a Owing to this book's late appearance, I am unable to verify it.
SUPPLEMENT.
363
EIGHTEENTH CEUTVRY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
The Year One
A Dbspbratb Ven-
ture. Juv,
In the Days of the
Giromde. Juv.
^Nicole CIn the
Name of Libbrty)
author and fublisher.
SUBJECT.
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Methuen, £ng. ; an
Dodd, Mead. U.S.A.)
A. L. Haydon
(Sunday School Union)
«t
Thekla"
(Religious Tract Society)
A Gentleman of
Virginia
a* A MaRRIAGB UN-
DER THE Terror
*Sr£pHANix's Chil-
dren. Juv,
The Red Caps of
Lyons. Juv.
•Golden Trust
For King and Home.
JuVt
The King's Cockade.
JtiV.
Owen Johnson
(Macmillan, Eng. ; and
Century Co., U.S.A.)
Percy J. Brebner
(Macmillan)
Patricia Wentworth
(MeLx>se, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Margaret Roberts
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Herbert Hayens
(Chambers, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
" Theo Doufflas "
I, £1<
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker. U.S.A.)
H. Rende]
(WeUs, Gardner)
Brittany and Paris in 1792 :
the Prison of La Force.
Last chapter, 1802.
Paris in the Reign of Terror :
Camille Desmoulins.
Girl in S. France and Paris :
Camille Desmoulins, Dan-
ton, Robespierre, &c.
Paris, 1792 and 1793. Taking
of the Tuileries* Massacre
of the Prisons, &c., up to
the end of the Terror
(Moderates v. Jacobites).
A young Virginian in the
Terror.
Hubert and Danton; also
Fouquier Tinville.
France and the Revolution,
1792 ; then London and
the French Jmigrh.
Lyons, 1792-93 : Fouch^, &ci
England (Northumberland),
and Paris, 1792 : Robe-
spierre.
Western France, 1792-3 • ^^
Rising in La Vend^.
Marquis de Lescure, &c.
Paris and La Vendue, i79«-3-
A glimpse of Wordsworth
the poet.
a Miss Wentworth tells of En^and and France, 179a (the September massacres, &c.), in her novel
entitled, *' A Uttle More than ^1," in England (Mebose), and " M(
(Putnam).
More than Kin," in America
364
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— «m«fw«i.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Two Gallant
Rbbbls. Juv.
*La Vendsb aux
Gbn£ts
Storm and Treasure
DnCHENIBR. Juv,
No Surrender. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHER.
Edgar Pickering
(Blackie)
Marcel Batilliat
(Mercure de France,
Paris)
H. C. Bailey
(Methuen, £ng. ; and
Brentano's, U.S.A.)
J. M. Neale
(Christian Knowledge
Society. Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie. Eng. ; and
Scribner. U.S.A.)
Dangerous Jewels. | Mary Bramston
Juv, (National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker. U.S.A.)
*A Woman from the
Sea
*Sous La Hache
♦Le Petit Roi
D'Ombre
The Shadow of a
Throne
J. Bloundelle Burton
(Eveleigh Nash)
El^mir Bourges
(Annand Colin, Paris)
Victor Margueritte
(Librairie des Annales,
Paris)
F. W. Hayes
(Hutchinson)
SUBJECT.
English youths in La Vendee
(La Rochejaquelein). Eng^
Holland, and France.
The Chouans: Cathelineau
and La Rochejaquelein.
La Vendue, 1793 • Nantes,
ftc, and the chief Vendean
leaders.
La Vend^, Paris, and Lon-
don, 1793-4. William Pitt
the younger, Danton. and
Robespierre.
England and France, 1791-6 :
the Risinff in La Vendee
under Cauelineau and La
Rochejaquelein.
Brittany in Revolution time,
1793; and England (life on
tfae^Devon moors).
England (Dorset) and Lon-
don; also France (Arras)
in 1793. Time of the
National Convention.
Later French Revolution
period, from November.
1793-
Paris, 1793-5 ' the chief fig-
ures of tiie period, and the
mystery of the Dauphin.
The supposed life of the
Dauphm from 1 794-1 800
(his death). Time of
Bonaparte in Italy. Robe-
spierre and Barra.s. Pro-
logue, 1793 ; Epilogue.
1 8 10 and later.
SUPPLEMENT.
365
EIGHTEENTH CEblTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Thb Lost King
A Fair Rbfugbx
The Rbfugbb
Sowing and Har-
vesting. Juo.
Noblesse Obugb
Paths Perilous
The God of Clay.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
Henry Shackelford
(Brentano's, U.S.A.)
A Pawn in the Game
" Morice Gerard "
(Hodder & Stoughton)
C. Gibson
(Centary Co.)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker.U.S.A.)
" M E. Franda "
(J. Long)
Sidney Pickering
(Chapman St Hall)
H. C. Bailey
(Hutchinson, Eng. ; and
Brentano's, U.S.A.)
W. H. Fitchett
(Smith, Elder, Enjg. ;
and Eaton & Mams,
U.S.A.)
The Danphin's supposed
story : Revolution and
after. Marie Antoinette,
Count of Fersen, Marat,
and Barras. Napoleon :
firstly as young officer,
lastly as about to become
Empeior.
Young Viscountess escapes
from Paris (Revolution
time) and takes refuge in a
Cornish village.
A tale of East Anglia, and an
unprincipled French Vi-
comte (a " refugee " in
Revolution time). John
Constable, the painter, as
a lad.
English girl in France just
before the Revolution, but
mainly London and pro-
vinces c, 1790-93. Prin-
cesse de Lamballe, Burke,
Crabbe the poet, &c.
French /migr/ in London,
1794-
Paris, London, Jersey and
Brittany (the Chouans),
1794-^5-
Napoleon from his youthful
officer days up to his
First Consul penod.
The rise of Napoleon, dealing
specially wim the Egyptian
campaign, and endii^ in
the First Consul period.
366
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CESTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJBCT.
Thb Two Captains | Cyrus T. Brady
(Macmillan)
♦Leroux
*Thb Lost Empire.
Ji4V.
His Eminence
•Beatrice op Venice
Phantasma
♦Sons of Victory.
Juv,
*By Conduct and
Courage. Juv.
The Commander of
THE
DELLE.
«i
f«
HlRON-
Hon. Mrs. Walter R. D.
Forbes
(Greening)
Capt. C. Gilson
(H. Frowde ; and Hod-
der)
Lady Helen Forbes
(Eveleigh Nash)
Max Pemberton
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
A. C. Inchbold
(Blackwood)
O. V. Caine
(J. Nisbet)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
W. H. Fitchett
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
I Bonaparte and Nelson, 1793-
. 98 : Toulon, the Mediter-
ranean, and Egypt (Battle
of the Nile).
France, 1783 (Prologue), and
1794 : Bonaparte and Bu--
ras. Also Italy (Mass6na.
&c.), and Switzerland.
Paris under the Directoire ;
the Blockade of Genoa ;
Battle of the Nile; and
the Siege of Seringapatam.
The Nelson - Bonaparte
period, 1795^.
A small State in Northern
Italy during the early
Napoleonic period.
Venice and Verona in 1797 :
Bonaparte in Italy.
Napoleon in Egypt and
Syria.
Earlier Napoleonic period,
ending with Marengo, June
14th, 1800.
Adventures of a Yorkshire
lad — on sea and land — in
the early Nelson period,
about 1790-98 (Cape St.
Vincent, and Camper-
down).
Chiefly Mediterranean and
W. Indies, 1 796-1 800 : Sir
John lervis (Lord St.
Vincent), Nelson, &c. The
Battle of Cape St. Vincent ;
capture of Treasure, Ac.
SUPPLEMENT.
367
EIGHTEENTH CESTURY-^^OfUitused.
title of book.
♦In the Days of
Nelson. Juv,
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Capt. Frank H. Shaw
(Cassell)
As We Sweep
through the
Deep. Juv,
Chris Cunningham.
Juv,
The Extraordinary
Confessions of
Diana Please
At Aboukir
Acre. Juv.
and
Gordon Stables
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Gordon Stables
(J. F. Shaw)
Bernard Capes
(Methuen)
♦Ben Brace
Tre, Pol and Pen.
Juv,
Fags and the King.
Juv,
G, A. Henty
(Blackie/ Eng. ; and
Scribner. U.S.A.)
Frederick Chamier
(Rontledge)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Christian Knowledge
(Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Charles J. Mansford
(Jarrold)
SUBJECT.
Boy among pirates and his
rescue by one of Nelson's
ships: the Battle of the
Nile, X798.
Early Nelson period, 1793-99
(Camperdown and the
Battle of the NUe).
The Battle of Cape St. Vin-
cent, &c. (Nelson).
An adventuress relates her
experiences (Brighton,
Dulwich, &c,). Mainly in
the 1780-90 period. Last
few chapters deal with
Naples, 1798-9 : Lady
Hamilton and Nelson.
Egypt from 1 798-1 801 :
Napoleon, Sir Sidney
Smith, Abercrombie, &c.
Battle of the Nile ; Acre ;
and Alexandria.
A sailor's experiences from
1770 through the whole of
the Nelson period, and up
to the bombardment of
Algiers by Lord Exmouth
in 1816.
Cornwall (smugglers, &c.)
about 1 798-1800 : time of
Nelson's victories.
A schoolboy's adventures at
the time of Nelson's early
victories : King George
III. introduced promi-
nently.
368
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
The Advsnturss of
Lady Susan
•A GlKL OF TBB
ElGaTBBMTH CXN-
TURY. Jw.
Up and Down the
Pantiles. Juu.
God's Providence
House
•Sylvia's Lovers
A Romance of the
Undbrcliff. Juv,
•Memoirs of a
Person of Quality
(Fanshawe of the
Fifth)
A Romance of Old
FOLKBSTONB
author and publisher.
Cyras T. Brady
(Greening, Eng. : and
Mofiat, Yard, U.S.A.)
Eliza F. PdUard
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley)
Mrs. G. Limueus Banks
(Kegan Paul)
Elizabeth C. GaskeU
(Smith, Elder ; Geo.
Bell; H.Frowde. &c.)
Emma Marshall
(Seeley)
" Ashton HilUers
(Heinemann)
>»
Frances Marsh
(A. C. Fifield)
SUBJBCT.
Tale of " High Life " (Ports-
month, &c.) at the end of
the Eighteenth Century.
George IIL appears m
concluding part.
England and France in 1790-
98 period : Nelson, Jdtut
Weuey, &c. Ends with
news of the Nile victory.
»
Hampstead and Tunbridge
Wells about the last decade
of the Eighteenth Century :
Mrs. Piozzi ; Quakers ; ftc.
Chester and district in 1791.
Yorkshire (" Monkshaven "
s Whitby) in the period,
1 796-1 800. The whaling
trade and the press-gang ;
Quaker shopkeepers, &c.
Isle of Wight in 1799.
Escape of a French
prisoner, &c.
Suffolk, Yorkshire (largely),
London, dc, 1797-99 ;
then — ^towards the end —
1805. The life of the
period is vividly depicted
(Quakers, Military men,
the Fa^onable world,
Methodists, ftc).
France and England, end
Eighteenth Century and
beginning Nineteenth :
Ndson, Lady Hfluxdlton,
Romney, Talleyrand. Ac,
SUPPLEMENT.
369
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY— con/fw^.
TITLB OF BOOK.
a*THB History of
Margaret Catch-
POLS
To My King Evsr
Faithful
Lord Edward Fitz
gbrald
frTHE ODONOOBUB
CTUK Fostbr-Bro-
thbrs of Doon.
Juu,
Ballinvallby. Juo,
AUTHOR AMD PUBLISHER.
Richard Cobbold
(H. Fxowde— World's
Classics)
George Gilbert
(Eveleigh Nash)
M. McDonnell Bodkin
(Ward, Lock & Co.)
Charles Lever
(Roatledge)
E. H. Walshe
(Religions Tract Society)
G. Robert Wynne. D.D.
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Suffolk in late Eighteenth
Century.
Mrs. Fitzherbert's love story.
Prologue, 1782 ; Part I.,
1783-84 ; Part II.. 1785-
89 ; Part III.. 1792-1800 ;
Part IV., 1805-12 ; and
Part v.. 1827-37.
Begins America (Revolution)^
but mainly Ireland about
1780-95 : Fitzgerald, the
Irish leader. Time of
Grattan and Curran.
S. Ireland (Glenfiesk) at the
time of the French invasion
scheme. The tale virtu-
ally ends with the Bantry
Bay disaster (French fleet)
in 1796.
Ireland. 1793-98 : time of
Wolfe Tone. Lord Edward
Fitsgexald. Grattan. Ac.
The scenes at Wexford in
1798.
Ireland (Wicklow) in 1796.
and in 1798.
a The fmnfaathre Uogzaphy ol a real woman, who liyed Z773 to 1841. Stealing a hone in
1797. she was put in gaol. Irat escaped in x8oo. She was then tfansported to Anstnlia, zSox ;
eventoally she manied, and lived in Sydney from z8s8 to Z84Z.
b Another tale showing; stronc Izish sympathies and dealinc with a slightly later period, is the
same antboc's "The Knight of Cwsmne." Many of Charles Lever's novels are historic or semi-
historie, hot I have purposely inchided only one or two of his best exam^es in my lists. Professor
Hngh walbar, ■iiw^fag to the fact that many Bngikhmen derive their idea of Irish character from
Lever's " fardcal caiicatnres." remarks that " by blood he [Lover] was more Bnglish than Irish.
His father migrated from Manchester to Ireland, and his mother too was of a family orimnaUy BngUsh."
Two of the most dssorvedty poealar of Lever's worin are " Tom Burlce of ' Oan '^* and '* Charles
O'MaUey " (see pp. zoz and loa m this voinme).
ley " <see pp. zoz and ibaln this voinme).
# Written from a decidedly Protestant standpoint.
2 B
370
SUPPLEMENT.
EIGHTEENTH CESTURY—cotitinusd.
TITLE OF BOOK.
A Prisoner of His
Word
The Northern Iron
aWolfingham. Juv,
The Tiger of My-
sore. Juv.
A Royal Rascal
A Roving Commis-
sion. Juv.
♦The Wilderness
Road
A ♦The Prairie Bird
^♦The Red City
author and pubushbr.
Louie Bennett
(Maunsel, DubUn)
" Geo. A. Birmingham "
(Maunsel, Dublm)
F. Ward
(Parker, Oxford)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie; Kng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Major Arthur Griffiths
(Fisher Unwin)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
J. A. Altsheler
(Lawrence & Bullen,
Eng. ; and Appleton,
U.S.A.)
Hon. Charles A. Murray
(F. Wame & Co.)
S. Weir MitcheU
(MacmiUan, Eng. ; and
Century Co., U.S.A.)
SUBJBCT.
The Irish Rebellion of '98 :
an Englishman joins the
United Irishmen.
Northern Ireland in 1798.
New South Wales about
1795-1812 : Convicts at
Sydney.
Southern India, 1790-99 '
the war with Xippoo Sahib
(Lord Comwallis and
Seringapatam).
India (Tippoo Sahib) ; and
Europe (Peninsular War,
and Waterloo).
Hayti in the last decade of
I the Eighteenth Century :
the Negro Rising of 1791.
&c., and Toussaint
L'Ouverture.
Kentucky, &c. The Indian
Wars; St Clair's defeat
in 1 79 1, and Wayne's
victory in 1794.
The North American Indians
about 1798, four years
after they had been routed
by General Wayne.
Philadelphia, 1792-95. Time
of Jefierson, Hamilton, &c.:
Washington's Second Ad-
ministration.
a Published both separately and in the volome, " Amerioa and Our Colonlas " (Parker's T4d€S
IttuttriUing Church HisUnr^.
b 1 hope that my indnsion of this old faimiiite, at the raggestioii of " C. R. S." In the Sphere,
tBvill do something to revive interest in a book which so fraplucally depkts life under the unusual
conditions of a decidedly stirring period.
c Sequel to " Hugh Wynne " {vide p. 91).
SUPPLEMENT.
371
EIGHTEENTH CEHTURY—coniimed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
MisTRBSS Joy
Grace MacGowan Cooke
and Annie Booth
McKinney
(Centniy Co.)
SUBJXCT.
Misaissipi and New Orleans
in 1798 : time of Aaron
Burr.
NINETEENTH CENTURY.
TITLE OF BOOK.
^Carbttb of Saek
(A Man of Sarx)
The Glassmaker of
Yarmouth
With Nelson in
Command. Juv,
•His Majesty's Sloop
Diamond Rock
Diamond Rock. Juv.
♦In Nelson's Day.
Juv.
'TWAS IN Trafal-
gar's Bay
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
John Oxenham
(Hodder & Stoughton)
K. M. Guthrie
{English IttustraUd
Magtuine, October,
1905)
Robert Leighton
(Melrose)
H. S. Huntington
(Houghton. Mifflin)
J. Macdonald Oxley
(T. Nelson & Sons)
George Hewett
(Wells Gardner)
Walter Besant and James
Rice
(Chatto» Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Sark in the year 1800.
The landing of Nelson at
Yarmouth on Nov. 6,
1800 ; and the second
landing on July i, iSox.
The Battle of the Baltic,
1801.
An islet near Martinique
armed by the British as a
sloop of war, 1802-3
(Nelson).
Diamond Rock, and Trafal-
gar, ending with the latter.
The press-gang : a lad carried
off to serve in the 1802--05
wars (Nelson and Trafal-
gar).
Lyme Regis and district in
1803 (chiefljr), and in 1805 :
smuggling m the Ftench
War and Nelson period.
372
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*T&B Gbntlbman
England Expects.
Juv.
*TBs Yarn of Old
Harbottr Town
In Nelson's Day
The Young Days of
AdmiralL Quilliam
Nelson's Yankee
Boy. Juv,
^Andrew Good-
fellow. Juv,
Nellie of the Eight
Bells
HoLBORN Hill
The Child of the
Lighthouse. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
A Hazardous Woo-
ing
Alfred OUivant
(Murray, Eng. ; and
MacmiUan, U.S.A.)
Frederick Harrison
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
W. Clark Russell
(Unwin, Eng. ; and
Jacobs, U.S.A.)
G. Rowe
(W.Scott)
" F. Norreys Conndl "
(Blackwood)
F. H. Costello
(Henry Holt & Co.)
BArs. Herbert Watson
(Macmillan)
Archer Philip Crouch
(J. Long)
Christian Tearle
(Mills & Boon)
Marion Andrews
(Wells Gardner)
James Blyth
(Ward, Lock ft Co.)
SUBJECT.
Attempt of Napoleon to kid-
nap Nebon. Sussex coast
(Eastbourne district) in
1805, a few weeks before
Trafalgar.
The end of the Nelsonian
period : Trafalgar.
Naval life in the year of
Trafalgar, 1805 (Nelson).
Cromer in the time of Nelson ;
Trafalgar, &c.
Adventures in the Napoleon
and Nelson period : Tra-
falgar.
Nelson at Trafalgar, and —
later — ^the American War
of 1812.
Plymouth in 1805.
Portsmouth in Nelson's day :
Trafalgar.
The London of Nelson's day.
Southampton, The Needles,
and Normandy, in the
Nelson and Napoleon
period (chiefly iSoi-a),
Yarmouth and district just
before and during the
Christmas of 1803.
SUPPLEMENT.
373
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Rogue of Rye
•T»E Witch BIaid
Jack Hardy. Juv.
T&E Adventures of
Dick Trevanion.
Jhv.
Tbb Sentinel of
Wbssbx
♦The Trumpet-Major
•A Gentleman of
London
author and pubushsr.
W. Willmott Dixon
(Chatto & Windus)
L. T. Meade
(J. Nisbct)
Herbert Strang
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Bobbs-MerrDl. U.S.A.)
subject.
Herbert Strang
(H.Frowde ; and Hodder)
C. King Warry
(Fisher Unwin)
Thomas Hardy
(MacmiUan)
" Moricc Gerard "
(Eveleigh Nash)
The Sovereign
Power
The Luck of Ledge
Point. Juv,
Lady Fabia
Violet A. Simpson
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Dorothea Moore
(Blackie)
Edith E. Cowper
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham. U.S.A.)
Rye and Winchelsea, and the
French fortress of Verdun,
1803.
The Quakers in 1803 : Eliza-
beSiFiy.
English South Coast in the
Nelson and Napoleon
period; smugglers, Ac,
about 1804.
Smuggling in Cornwall, dur-
ing the year 1804.
Isle of Portland : Napoleonic
invasion scare, and the
Methodist Revival.
Dorsetshire coast in time of
Napoleonic invasion scare :
the Weymouth of George
ni.
Opens West Indies, 1802 ;
then coast of Normandy.
1805 (Muiat, &c.). Time
of Napoleon's threatened
invasion of England*
Sussex coast in 1805 : a
French invasion plot. The
Prince of Wales appears
somewhat prominently.
Two girls at Ledge Point,
Cornwall, during the inva-
sion scare, 1805.
Smuggling and adventure on
the EngUsh South Coast,
1805.
374
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEUTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Infamous John
FftlBMD
TBe Second Bloom
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Mrs. R. S. Gamett
(Duckworth, £ng. ; and
Holt, U.S.A.)
Helen Porter
(Greening)
I
SUBJECT.
The Spanish
Prisonbr
Mrs. Philip C. De Cres-
Trub Han and
Traitor
* Robert Emmet
aAt the Point of
the Bayonet. Juv.
*Pandurang Hari
(Eveleigh Kasb)
M. McDonnell Bodkin
(Fisher Unwin)
St^hen Gwynn
(Macmillan)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Anonymous
(Chatto & Windus)
Jones of the 64TB.
Juv,
The Ark of 1803
Capt. F. S. Brereton
(blackie, £ng. ; and
Caldwell, U.S.A.)
C. A. Stephens
(A. S. Barnes, U.S.A.)
Brighton, London, Hythe,
&c., about 1805 : WiUiam
Pitt and Napoleon.
Begins Venice, 1 788 ; then
beickwards and forwards
between London, Scotland
(Perth, &c.), and Italy,
1 801-5 ; supposed son of
the Young Pretender.
Spain (Valladolid), 1805, and
England (Portsmouth) :
begins with the news of
Trafalgar.
Emmet, the Irish patriot, in
1803.
Ditto.
India in the period, 1779-
1804. The JV&hrattas, and
their leaders, Holkar and
Scindia: the Battles of
Assaye and Laswari, in
1803.
Supposed memoirs of a
Hmdoo, relating to life
among the Mahrattas in
the troublous period, 1801
onwards ; last years of the
Peeshwas' rule.
Sir Arthur Wellesley and the
Mahrattas, 1803 : Battles
of Assaye and Laswari.
The Louisiana Purchase,
1803.
a The sole instance of repetition in theie lists. This book has already appeared on p. 99, but a
much f utter description of it is given hsttt
SUPPLEMENT.
375
NINETEENTH CEfJTVRY— continued.
TITLB OP BOOK.
Thb Rosb of Old
St. Louis
aXHB Boy Couribr of
Napolbon. Juv,
Clotildb. Juv.
Thb Codb of Victor
Jaixot
^Hbarts Triumphant
*Lbwis Rand
A VOLUNTBBR WITH
PiXB
c^Dbcatur and
sombrs. juv,
AUTHOR AND FUBLISHBR.
Mary Dillon
(Century Co.)
William C. Sprague
(Lothrop,Lee &Shepard).
Marguerite Boavet
(A. C. McQurg)
Edward Cbilds Carpenter
(G. W. Jacobs, U.S.A.)
Edith Sessions Tnpper
(Appleton)
Mary Johnston
(Ocn»table, £ng. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin,
U.S.A.)
Robert Ames Bennet
(A. C. McClurg)
Molly E. Seawell
(Appleton)
SUBJBCT.
America in the Louisiana
Purchase period (Thomas
Jefferson) ; and France
(Napoleon,Talleyrand, &c.) .
Europe (French Wars ; Ho-
henlinden, &c.), and
America (the Louisiana
Purchase) in the period
1 800-1803.
A little girl in New Orleans
just before the Louisiana
Purchase.
New Orleans, about 1803.
Manhattan at the beginning
of the Nineteenth Century ;
Aaron Burr, and Prince
Jerome Bonaparte.
Richmond, Virginia, in the
first decade of the Nine-
teenth Century ; period of
Hamilton, Aaron Burr,
JefEerson, &c.
America, 1805. Time of
Zebulon Pike, Aaron Burr,
and Thomas Jefferson.
Stephen Decatur, the Ameri-
can naval commander, in
the Mediterranean ; the
war with Tripoli. Covers
the period, 1798-1804 (last
few pages 18 10).
a One of two votames in Tkg MoMm of Our Natum Stria.
b In connftctkm with Aaron Buzr andiiis times, Wairen Wood's handsome volume, " The Tragedy
of the Deserted Isle *' (C. M. Claxic. Boston), has been descdbed as '* an American Historical Novel ** ;
this book is not a work ol iiction, but — as its author sUtes — a careful cknmieU or history of the Burr
and Blennerhaasett Conspiracy at the bednning of the Nineteenth Centurv.
c One of the volumes in the Young Heroes of Our Navy Series. In this series are Miss Sea well's
" Little Jarvis " {vide p. 98). and " Midshipman Paulding " (p. 380} ; James Barnes's *' Midshii>man
Farragut " (p. 370) ; and a lew more tales of Paul Jones. &c., by the above-named and other writers.
They ars Imrgtij based on fact, but with a considerable fictional element.
376
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEVITURY -^conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Imprisoned
Midshipman
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
SUBJECT.
Rezanov
aThe Timely Baron
(in ''A Feast of
Stories from
Foreign Lands ").
Juv-
*By Neva's Waters
Molly £. Seawell
(Appleton)
Gertrude Atherton
(J. Murray)
James F. Cobb
(Wells Gardner)
*The Black Pilgrim
John R. Carling
(Ward, Lock, £ng. ; and
Little, Brown, U.S.A.)
Michal Czajkowski (trans.)
(Digby, Long St Co.)
•The Serfs (in "A
Feast of Stories
from Foreign
Lands "). Juv.
Two Royal Foes.
Juv.
•Deutsche Manner
Napoleon's Love
Story
The Cross of
Honour
James F. Cobb
(Wells Gardner)
Eva Madden
(McQure, U.S.A.)
W. Jensen
(Grethlein, Berlin)
Waclaw Gasiorowski
(trans.)
(Duckworth)
Mary Openshaw
(Werner Laurie)
Capture of the American
mgate, Philadelphia, in
the war with Tripoli.
Russian diplomat in Cali-
fornia, z8o6.
Moravia in 1800, just after
Maroigo.
Murder of the Emperor Paul
(Russia) in 1801 : Eliza-
beth of Baden, Alexander
I.'s wife, plays an impor-
tant part.
The Slavs' struggle for free-
dom in the Danube dis-
trict (Balkans), about 1806.
Time of Alexander I. of
Russia.
Prussia, 1807 : the Aboli-
tion of Serfage by Baron
von Stein.
Napoleon's invasion of
Prussia: Queen Louisa.
Germany in the Napoleonic
period, especially 1809.
Warsaw in 1806: Madame
Walewska.
Paris (I'rologue), but chiefly
Warsaw in 1806: Marie
Walewska and Napoleon.
Also the Dauphin, ac.
a An exceedingly brief tale, bat a most unusual subject.
SUPPLEMENT.
377
NINETEENTH CENTURY— canUnued.
TITLB OV BOOK.
AUTHOR AMI> P0BLISHBR.
JULIBTTB
*La Sorci^b DU
VisuvB
oLa Forcb
L'Enfant D'Aus-
TBRLITZ
*Flbur-db-Camp
6TBb Dubl (in "A
Set of Six")
♦Thb Czar. Juv.
Edoardo Calandra
(Societii Tipografica—
Editrice Nazionale,
Turin)
Gnstave et Georges Ton-
donze
(Hachette et Cie)
Paul Adam
(Ollendorff Paris)
A. Godric Campbell
mpi
Vfh
(Chatto & Windus)
Joseph Conrad
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
McQure. U.S.A.)
Deborah Alcock
(T. Nelson A Sons)
'Lauristons
John Oxenham
(Methuen)
* Against tbb Stream
Juv.
Mrs. Rundle Charles
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead. U.S.A.)
8UBJBCT.
Turin in 1807 : Napoleonic
period.
Resistance of the Calabrians
to the French in x8o8.
(i) France, 1 797-1 809 : Di-
rectoire — Empire period.
(2) France, 1810-22 : Em-
piro— Restoration period.
Napoleon, 1805-15 : Auster-
htz, Eylau, and Waterloo.
Two French officers in the
Napoleonic period, 1801-
15.
Russia in the Napoleonic War
period and after (Moscow
district, St. Petersburg,
&c.) ; Alexander I. from
z8o6-^5 (death).
England (London and dis*
trict), and France, in the
1800-15 period : a London
Banking House. Glimpses
of Burke, Fox, Pitt, Duke
of Kent, Bonaparte, Talley-
rand, Ac. Ends Waterloo,
and first conveyance of the
news to London.
Religious and Anti-Slavery
movements in the 1800-15
period ; time of William
Wilberforce, Pitt, Fox, &c.
• Then two novals, covnigkg the Napoleonic period, an in the eeiiet to which the anthor has
given the CMwral title, "Le Tempt etUVfe: histotae d^in idtel ^ traven let riteies."
b In thit ahort atbry hiitoik eventa flonn the meiett hackgnmnd, bat there it
of the Moscow Retreat.
brilliant iketch
378
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEUTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Sons of the Vikings.
Through ths Fray.
Juv.
Hi-Spy-HiI (in
" The Merry Gar-
den»" Ac)
*Thb Stooping Lady
*TwiST£D Eglantine
The Shadow of
Evil
AUTHOR AMD PUBLISHER.
a* Weir of Hermis-
TON
Poison Island
The Light of Scar-
THEY
John Gunn
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Bla^lde, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Meuinen)
SUBJECT.
Two young Orcadians in the
time of the Napoleonic
Wars.
Yorkshire, 1807-13 :
Luddite movement.
the
Maurice Hewlett
(Macmillan, Eng. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
H. B. Marriott Watson
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
<<
Dick Donovan "
(Everett)
R. L. Stevenson
(Chatto, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder. Eng. :
and Scribner, U.S.A.)
Egerton Castle
l^lacmillan ; and Collins)
Cornwall (Looe and Fal-
mouth), 1808 : local " vol-
unteer artillery " in Napo-
leonic War time. An
amn.*ang little sketch.
London, 1809-10 : attitude
of the Classes to the
Common Folk.
Hants about 1809. Period
of the " Beaux " (Prince
George).
Based on the adventures of
an early Nineteenth Cen-
tury rogue, James Mac-
koull, Tmo died in Edin-
burgh jail.
The hero of this unfiinished
romance was suggested by
the celebrated £>cottish
judge. Lord Braxfield
(1722-99) ; Stevenson fixes
his imaginary events some
fifteen years after the date
of the actual judge's death.
Falmouth and the West
Indies, i8i3-i4«
" Gold-smuggling " in the
French War time, 181 4-
15 : Lancashire coast.
» Prol«Mor Hufdi Walker cooilden that this mere fragment has " a gxaiideux which few com'
plete novels possess.'*
SUPPLEMENT.
379
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLR OF BOOK.
*Th£ American Pri-
SONBR
*OUT OF TBB CyPSBSS
Swamp
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
Eden PhiUpotis
(Methuen)
Edith Rickert
(Methuen)
By the Eternal
Midshipman Farra-
GUT. JUV,
a* A Loyal Traitor.
Juv.
Opie Read
(Laird ft Lee, U.S.A.)
James Barnes
(Appleton)
James Barnes
(Harper)
War prison on Dartmoor at
the time of the 1812 War
with America.
Louisiana, 1808 ; then the
War Period, 1812-15
(General Andrew Jackson,
and the Battle of New
Orleans).
General Andrew Jackson as
hero.
David Glasgow Farragut (the
American Admiral) as a
lad.
The hero starts as a Connecti-
cut village waif, 1809 ;
then goes through various
experiences on board a
pnvateer, and as prisoner
m England, &c. (War of
1812).
6Thb War of 1812. > Everett T. Tomlinaon ! Semi-fictional stories of the
Juv,
cA Yankee Ship and
A Yankee Crew.
Juv.
The Young Priva-
TEBRSMAN. JuV.
(Silver, Bnrdett & Co.. ; War.
New York) j
John de Morgan
(McLonghlin, New York)
The War of 1812,
W. O. Stevens and Barclay i Three Baltimore youths in
McKee the War of 1812 ; their
(Appleton) capture by the English,
and their escape from
Dartmoor prison, &c.
a Mr. Barnes — who has wcittaa a oon-fictJonal woric on the Naval Actk>ns of this particiiUr
American period— Is the author of another Jnvanlle vomanoe, " For Kln^ or Conntxy" (Harper) ;
this Utter Is a Revolvtion story.
b Mr. TomUnson has also written sevecal stories under the feneral title, The Wm 0/ x8x3 Strm
(Lothxop, Lee ft ShefMtfA.
c One in a series of historical tales hy the same anthoc.
38o
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEHTURY^-coniinued.
title of book.
The Boy Tars of
1812. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSBBR.
J. T. Mclntyrc
(Penn, U.S.A.)
^Midshipman Pauld- i Molly £. Seawell
INC. Juv. \ (Appleton)
Midshipman Stuart.
Juu,
A Midshipman in
THE Pacific. Juv.
In the Wasp's Nest.
Juv,
By Wild Waves
Tossed Juv.
Kirk Munioe
(Scribner)
Cyrus T. Brady
(Scribner)
Cyrus T. Brady
(Scribner)
Captain Jack Brand
(McClure)
The Treasure. Juv. Paul W. Eaton
(Fenno)
When Wilderness
WAS King
Black Partridge.
aAmerican Patty.
Juv.
A Beautiful Rebel
Randall Parrish
(A. C. McQurg)
Col. H. R. Gordon
(W. & R. Chambers)
Adele E. Thompson
(Lothrop)
Wilfrid CampbeU
(Hodder, Eng. ;
Doran, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
and
Two lads in the " Constitu-
tion " and "Guerri^re"
conflict; also the Battle of
New Orleans (General
Jackson).
Lieut. Hiram Paulding <m
land and sea, 181 3-14.
Ends with full description
of the Battle of Lake
Champlain, September 11.
X814.
The last cruise of the Essex
(War of z8x2).
Ditto.
«t
Astoryof theSeaWoU "in
the War of i8z2.
Naval en>eriences during the
War ot 1812.
Finding of Captain Kidd's
Treasure (War of 1812).
The Fall of Fort Dearborn
(now Chicago) in 18x2.
Ditto.
A young American girl's ex-
periences in Canada during
the War of 18x2.
Upper Canada in 18x2 : the
Battle of Queenstown, and
Sir Isaac Srock.
• Tlie ftfth and last of the anthoc's Brmcs Hmrt Strits ; other volamet deal with the American
Revolution, Scotland and the '49 (Flora llaodonald). ftc.
SUPPLEMENT.
381
NINETEENTH CENTURY— c(m/»wt^.
TITLBOFBOOX.
The Bbxxb of Bowl-
ing Grbbn
Bronson of
Rabblb
In thb Dictator's
Grip. Juo,
If Youth But Knbw
*The King's Rbvokb
AUTHOR AMD PUBUSHBR.
Amelia £. Barr
(J. Long, £ng. ; and
Dodd, Mead. U.S.A.)
Albert £. Hancock
(Lippincott)
John Samaon
(Blaclde)
SUBJECT.
'Tbntion ! /tfo.
Corporal Sam
The Young Buglers.
Lads of the Light
Division. /«».
*Boys of the Light
Brigade (Light
Brigade in
Spain). Juv,
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Smith, Elder, £ng. ;
and Macmil]an,U.S.A.)
Biargaret L. Woods
(Smith, £lder, £ng. ;
and Dutton, U.S.A.)
G. lAanville Fenn
(Chambers, £ng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, £lder & Co.)
G. A. Henty
(H. Frowde ; and Hodder)
Lieat.-CQlonel A. F. Mock-
ler-Fenyman
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Herbert Strang
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Pntnam, U.S.A.)
Dutch families in New York
period of the 181 2 War.
Philadelphia during the
period 1812-28.
B^pbs W. England, x8o6;
then S. America (the
Pampas and Paraguay)
maimy in the period, 1807-
14. The end of Spsmish
rule, and the rise of Dr.
Franda.
Westphalia in the time of
Jerome Bonaparte (about
X812).
Spain under Joseph Bona-
parte: attempted rescue
of Ferdinand VII. when
confined at Valen^ay.
Adventures of two English
lads in Spain during the
Peninsular War (King Fer-
dinand, ftc).
A short story of the Penin-
sular War (San Sabastian).
The Peninsular War — cover-
ing all the great battles
from Talavera to Vittoria
and Toulouse, 1809-14.
(Begins Eton, 1808.)
Battles of Talavera, Torres
Vedras, and Ciudad Rod-
rigo.
A tale of the Peninsular War :
Corunna, Saragossa, ftc.
382
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBUSHBR.
Firelock and Steel
Juv.
Rain of Dollars
(in " Shakespeare's
Christmas/' Ac.)
The Spy : A Story
OF THE Penin-
sular War. Juv.
The Lamp and the
Guitar (in "Shake-
speare's Christ-
mas," &c.)
Strong Mac
A Young Man
Married
The Fighters
Harold Avery
(T. Nelson & Sons)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng. ;
and Longmans,
U.S.A.)
Captain Charles Gilson
(H. Frowde; and Hod-
der)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng. ;
and Longmans,
U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
Dodd. Mead, U.S.A.)
«*
" Sydney C. Grier
(Hutchinson)
Lady Violet Greville
(Chapman & Hall)
The Watcher on
THE Tower
For THE Emperor.
Juv,
♦Moscow
aCAPTAIN KiRKE
Webbe
A. G. Hales
(Fisher Unwin)
Eliza F. PoUaxd
(T. Nelson & Sons)
F. Whishaw
(Longmans & Co.)
F. W. Hayes
(Hutchmson)
SUBJECT.
Sir John Moore's campaign,
ending in Corunna.
Sir John Moore's army, and
the retreat upon Corunna,
1809.
The Battle of Talavera, 1809,
and the storming of Bada-
joz, 1812.
Wellington and the Battle of
Salamanca, 1811-12.
Scotland and Spain, 1812-13
(Peninsular War).
Spain, 1812-13 • Battle of
Vittoria.
Begins Paris, 1809 (Napo-
leon) ; then England
(H3rthe) and Spain, 1810-
14; Wellington and the
Peninsular War.
Russia during the Napoleonic
invasion.
A girl's experiences in Russia
during tiie French invasion
(Moscow Retreat, &c.).
Napoleon's Russian cam-
paign, 1812: Paris, Mos-
cow, and St. Petersburg.
A tale of mystery and adven-
ture, 1814 : Brittany, and
Normandy. A privateer
captain.
Based on the unfinished story of " Kifke Webbe." by Wm. RttveU (" W«t«s ••).
SUPPLEMENT.
383
NINETEENTH CEHTURY—conUnued.
TITUt OF BOOK.
'*'Tbe Hundred Days
From Playground
TO Battlbfibld.
With Wellington
TO Waterloo. Juv,
St. Dunstans Fair.
Juv.
•Brown. Juv.
author and publisher.
SUBJECT.
I
Napoleon's Young
Neighbour. Juv.
The Heart of
Bosnia (in " Th«
Flower of Destiny. ' '
&c.)
The Second Answer
*Thb Knights of
Liberty. Juv,
Max Pemberton
(Cassell)
Frederick Harrison
(Christian Knowledge
Society, £ng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Harold Avery
(Wells Gardner)
Mary and Catherine Lee
(National Society, £ng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Dorothea Moore
I (Nisbet, £ng. ; and
, Eaton & Mains.
U.S.A.)
I Helen Leah Reed
(Little, Brown & Co.)
Margaret Mordecai
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
aFoR Love and Ran-
som. Juo,
Captain Rowan Hamilton
(F. V. White)
Eliza F. Pollard
(T. Nelson & Sons)
£sm6 Stuart
(Jarrold)
Napoleon, from Elba to
Waterloo.
England, 1815 (School life) ;
then tiie Battles of Qnatre
Bras and Waterloo.
Wellington's army, June 14
to June x8, 1815.
Kent village life in 1815 : war
rumours culminating in the
news of Waterloo.
A small boy in Cambridge,
1815 : smuggling in the
Fenlands. The Duke of
Wellington. *
Napoleon's friendship for a
UtUe girl; St. Helena,
1815.
Bosnia in 1815.
The allies in Paris, &c.,
1815-18.
France under the Bourbons
from 1815 (Paris just after
Waterloo). General Lafa-
yette ; the " Carbonari,"
&c.
S. Italy (Apulia and Naples).
1814-15. Murat's over-
throw by the Austrians ;
his flight ; lastly his cap-
ture, and death, m October
1 81 5. Last chapter, Eng
land, x8i6.
« This intereftfaig tale mav be read advantaceonsly as a pMhide to CRickett'a " The Silver Skull
<8eelp. 385) • the latter book atah with Apulia in the five yean after MoraVs death.
It
384
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CESTUKY—cottHnued.
\
TZTLB OF BOOK.
•A Royal Ward
Sir David's Visitors
Flowbr o'
Oraxgs
Wroth
♦Running
Inn
HORSB
♦Starvecrow Farm
<^ *Thb Apprbnticb
North Ovbrland
WITH Franklin.
Juv.
The Last of thb
Pbshwas. Juv,
aTHB Catbchumens
OF thb Coroman-
DBL Coast. Juv.
subject.
Percy J. Brebner
(Cassell, £ng. ; and
Little, Brown, U.S.A.)
" Saxah T3rtler "
(Chatto & Windus)
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Methnen, Eng. ; and
MacmiUan, U.S.A.)
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Smith, Elder, Eng.; and
MacmiUan, U.S.A.)
A. T. Sheppard
(Macmillan, Eng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
Stanley Weyman
(Hutchinson, Eng. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
fifaud Stepney Rawson
(Hntchmson)
J. Macdonald Oxley
(CroweU, U.S.A.)
M. Macmillan
(Blackie)
F.Ward
(Parker, Oxford)
S. Devon (smugglers, &c.),
and London, in the days of
the Prince Regent.
Kensington in R^ency days :
Sir David Willde, Sir
Thomas Lawrence, and
Mrs. Siddons.
The Galloway Coast in 1816 .
Loveand adventure, 18 16-17 '
Kent (Tunbridge Wells),
Compi^^e, Florence, Ac,
Kent (Heme Bay) and Lon-
don, in the years after
Waterloo ; the Spa Fields
Riot in i8z6.
England's poverty in 1819 :
me Lake District.
Sussex (Rye district) in 1820.
Hudson Bay Company's
quarters in Canada: Sir
John Franklin as R.N.
Lieutenant.
The Third Mahratta War,
181 7-18: Elphinstone and
Baji Rao.
India about Z817-18, at the
time of the Maiuatta War.
« PabUibed both sepantely and in tbe voiume, " America and Oar Cokmfes " (Parker's Taltt
SUPPLEMENT.
385
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
t { *Thb Silver Sxmx
*A Captain of Irrsg-
X7LARS. Juv.
. r^ ♦In the Grip of thb
^ Spaniard. Juv.
*WiTH Cochranb the
Dauntless. Juo,
He Loved But One
i^
The Castaway
I Lj The Maid of Athens
r
. ^In Greek Waters.
. V) ♦Glbnanaar
author and publisher.
S. R. Crockett
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
*A Middy of the
Slave Squadron.
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Eveleigh Nash)
H. Erminie Rives
(Collier, Eng. ; and
Bobbs-MernU. U.S.A.)
Emily Lafayette McLaws
(Little, Brown & Co.)
G.A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
P. A. Sheehan
(Longmans)
" H. Collingwood
(Blackie)
»»
SUBJECT.
S. Italy (Apulia), mainly in
the 1815-20 period. Bri-
gands, and their final sup-
pression by the English-
man, Richard Church,
acting as General in the
Neapolitan service (Ferdi-
nand I.).
Chili, and the struggle with
the Spaniards, 1816-18.
Bolivar, the liberator, in
1 818-21 : Venezuela and
New Grenada.
Lord Cochrane in S. America,
1819-^5 : the securing of
independence for Chili,
Peru, and Brazil.
Lord Byron and Mary Cha-
worth.
Lord B3rron and his contem-
poraries; Shelley, Moore,
Mary Godwin, &c.
Lord Byron and Greece.
Greece, 1821^23 : the first
two years of the War of
Independence.
The Whiteboys in Ireland,
i82i-<s2: Daniel O'Con-
nell as advocate in a trial ;
then, 1837 to the Irish-
American period.
W. Africa, 1822 : adventures
of a British midshipman
on sea and land. Slavers,
savages, &c.
a~C
386
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CETHTURY—contitnud.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISBXR.
1
*On thb Irhawaddy.
Juv,
♦The Tiger of the
Pampas. Juv.
♦The Honour of
Henri ds Valois
Dromina
V
'i
Captain Swing. Juv.
♦Chippingb (Chip-
pings Borough)
A Nest of Royal-
ists. Juv.
♦In the Boyhood of
Lincoln. Juv.
♦The Patience of
John Morland
The Lady of the
Spur
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson A Sons)
David M. Beddoe
(Dent & Co.)
John Ayscough
(Arrowsmith, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Harold Avery
(T. Nelson A Sons)
Stanley Wejrman
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Esm6 Stuart
(National Society, Eng. ;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Hezeidab Butterworth
(Appleton)
Mary Dillon
(Eveleigh Nash, Eng. ;
and Doubleday,
U.S.A.)
David Potter
(Lippincott)
subject.
India and Burmah, 1822-26 :
Sir Archibald Campbell
and the Burmese War.
Argentina in 1829 : the
Gauchos
Egypt: Mehemet Ali and
Ibrahim Pasha, from 1828
(Syrian campaign, Ac),
The Dauphin (son of Louis
XVI.) represented as a
gypsy ; S. Ireland; Italy.
France, Spain, and the
West Indies. Begins 1820 ;
then 1830.
Agricultural labourers in S.
England during the Machi-
nery Riots of 1830.
England in the Reform
period ; the Bristol Riots»
&c
France (Blois) in 1832 : the
Duchesse de Berri.
Abraham Lincoln and the
early settlers of Illinois
(Inmans, &c.), from about
1816 onwards. " A true
picture in a framework of
fiction."
American political life about
Z830 : Andrew Jackson,
Monroe, Daniel Webster,
&c.
South-west New Jersey in the
1 820-30 period.
SUPPLEMENT.
387
NINETEENTH CESTVRY—cotUinited.
TITLE OF BOOK.
A KmOHT OF THB
WiLDBRNSSS
T&B Ravbn
The Dreamer
Tbb Lonb Star
*In Texas with Davy
Crockett. Juu,
*'VivA Christina."
Juv.
Tbb British Legion.
^With the British
Legion. Juv.
Antonio
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Oliver Marble Gale and
Harriet Wheeler
(ReiUy & Britton, Chi-
cago)
George C. Hazelton, Jun.
(Appleton)
In Treaty with
Honor
Mary Newton Stanard
(Bell Book & Stationery
Company, Richmond,
U.S.A.)
Engene P. Lyle, Jun.
(Donbleday, Page & Co.)
Everett McNeil
(Chambers, Eng. ; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
Edith E. Cowper
(Chambers, Eng. ; and
Lippincott, U.S.A.)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Ernest J. Oldmeadow
(Grant Richards, Eng. ;
and Century Co.,
U.S.A.)
Mary Catherine Crowlev
(Little, Brown & Co.)
SUBJBCT.
America (Middle West) in
183X : settlers and Indians.
Lincoln and Jefierson Davis
in early penod*
Edgar Allan Poe's love story.
The poet's childhood and
youth at Richmond ; Uni-
versity of Vii:^;inia» &c.
Ends with his death.
Period 181 1-49.
A romance of Edgar Allan
Poe.
Sam Houston and Bowie in
the Thirties, and the Re-
volt against Mexican rule.
Texas War of Independence,
1836.
Spain, and the Carlist Rising
of 1835.
Spain. 1835-37 : the Carlist
War.
Spain, 1835-37 : the British
Legion under Sir George
de Lacey in the Carlist
War (Queen Christina, Ac).
A Portuguese monk after
the sup^ession of the
monasteries in Portugal,
1834. Semi-English, early
Victorian atmosphere.
Quebec, and French Canada's
struggle for independence,
1837-38.
388
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
aRoSB AND MlNNIB.
Juv.
•Clevbly Sahib. Juv.
In Dbwisland
RosB Mervyn. Juv.
♦John Goodchiu>
Through the Sikh
War. Juv,
The Path to Honour
*Thb Last Hope
author and publisher.
F.Ward
(Parker, Oxford)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
S. Baring Gould
(Methuen)
Anne Beale
(Griffith, Farran)
R. W. Wright-Henderson
(J. Murray)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
" Sydney C. Grier "
(Blackwood)
" H. S. Merriman "
(Smith, Elder, Eng. ;
and Scribner, U.S.A.)
SUBJECT.
Canada in 1837 : time of the
Rebellion.
First Afghan War, 1838-42.
Ends with the massacre of
British troops in the
Khoord-Cabul Pass.
Pembrokeshire at the time of
the Rebecca Riots, 1843.
A tale of the Rebecca Riots
in Wales.
The Railway mania of 1845.
India, 1845-49 : conquest of
the Punjaub in the two Sikh
Wars. Hardinge, Sir Henry
Lawrence, &c.
India about 1850.
Sufiolk in 1850 : a supposed
son of the Dauphin (time
of Napoleon III!).
T&E Mantle of the
Emperor
Ladbroke Black and Ro-
bert Lynd
(F Griffiths)
Louis Napoleon (afterwards
Napoleon III.)in the period
1830-46. Itsdy, &c., end-
ing with the escape fzx>m
the fortress of Ham.
Beyond Man's
Strength
M. Hartley
(Heinemann)
Piedmontese rising, 1821 ;
then the rising in 1848-49.
Battle of Novara, and
Carlo Alberto.
The Sword in the
Air
A. C. Gunter
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
Home Publishing Co.,
U.S.A.)
Rising of the Milanese in
1848.
c Published both separately and in the volume, " Amedca and Our Colonies " (Parker's TaUs
JUusirating Church History).
SUPPLEMENT.
389
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
*Adria : A Talb of
VsmcB
^Dix Vbrtbidigung
Rons
*Tbb Lamb English-
man
*Tbb Patriot
GiGi, THB Hbro of
Sicily. Juo.
aRBD, White, and
Grebn. Juv.
A •ThbStrongbrWings
Kedar Kross
Thb Man of Destiny
The Issue
Alex. Nelson Hood
(J. Murray)
RicardaHuch
(Deutsche Verlags - An-
Shalt, Stuttgart)
Warwick Deeping
(Cassell)
Antonio Fogazzaro (trans.)
(Hodder & Stoughton)
Felicia B. Clark
(Eaton & Mains, U.S.A.)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
A. Jeans
(Elliot Stock)
J. Van der Veer Shurts
(R. G. Badger, Boston)
T. G. Frost
(Gramercy Publishing
Co., New York)
George Morgan
(Lippincott)
SUBJECT.
The Venetian struggle against
Austria, 184&-49.
Garibaldi and Mazzini, 1848-
49 ; an " imaginative his*
tory."
Rome in 1849 : Biazzini,
Garibaldi, &c., and the
defence of the City against
the French.
The struggle for a United
Italy, mid-Nineteenth Cen-
tury.
Slight tale of a drummer-boy
in Italian liberation days
(Garibaldi).
Hungarian Revolution, 1848-
49; Vienna, Pesth, &c.
Ends with the crowning of
Francis Joseph as King of
Hungary.
Prince Mettemich in the
second quarter of the Nine-
teenth Century : Win-
dischgr&tz and the Hun-
garians in 1848.
America : the Adirondack
country, 1837 and later.
General U. S. Grant (under
a fictitious name) ; his
youth and career through
the Mexican War and the
avilWar.
America (Slavery in Southern
States). Time of Clay.
Webster, Calhoun, and
Lincoln ; 1831 to the Civil
War.
m Mr. Havens has wdtten mnother good mId-Nliieteenth Century tale, deaUng with Italy and
Gailteldl in i860, *< One of the Red Shirts " (Nlshet).
390
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEHTJJRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
♦CONISTON
50 — 40 OR Fight
Winston Churchill
(Maximilian)
Emerson Hough
(Bobbs-Merrill Co.)
subject.
aFoR THE Liberty of
Texas. Juv.
With Taylor on the
Rio Grande. Juv.
Under Scott in
Mexico. Juv.
The Eleventh Hour
Political and Social life in the
States, mid - Nineteenth
Coitury; the period be-
tween the Thirties and the
Seventies.
Washington, Montreal, &c*,
during the dispute between
America and England over
Oregon, in 184^-46, when
Tyler was President. In*
troduces Tyler and various
figures of the period.
E. Stratemeyer
(Lothrop)
The Spy Company
Carlota^ Juv.
♦Fighting with Fre-
mont. Juv.
Captain Courtesy
David Potter
(Dodd, Mead & Co.)
A. C. Gunter
(Ward, Lock, "Enf. ;
and Home Publishing
Co., U.S.A.)
Frances Margaret Fox
(L. C. Page & Co.)
A series of tales depicting the
Mexican War period.
America in the Forties : time
of General Taylor and the
Mexican War.
Mexican War of 1846.
Everett McNeil
(E. P. Dutton & Co.)
E. Childs Carpenter
(G. W. Jacobs & Co.)
A little Spanish girl and her
friend in Los Angeles
(Mexican War time). The
San Gabriel Mission.
Conquest of California, 1846 :
John Charles Fremont, the
explorer.
California in the Forties.
a These three volumes constitute the Mtxicim War Series (Lothxop).
SUPPLEMENT.
391
NINETEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Thb Emigrant Trail
Ths City of Six
THb Boy Forty-
NlMBRS. Juv,
Indian and Scout.
Juv.
Thb Shadow of a
Great Rock
Thb Couragb of
Captain Plxtm
a*UNDER THB LONB
Star. Juu.
•Thb Coil of Carne
•True Unto Death.
Juv.
author AND PUBUSHBR.
;
V.C. : A Chronicle
OF Castle Bar-
field
Geraldine Bonner
(Hutchinson, £ng. ; and
Duffield, U.S.A.)
C. L. Canfidd
(A. C McClnrg & Co.)
Everett McNeil
(McClure Co.)
Captain F. S. Brereton
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
CaldweU, U.S.A.)
W. Rheem Lighton
(O. P. Putnam's Sons)
J. Oliver Curwood
(Bobbs-MerriU Co.)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
John Oxenham
(Methuen & Co.)
Eliza F. Pollard
(Partridge & Co.)
D. Christie Murray
(Chatto & Windus)
SUBJECT.
Missouri frontier at the time
of the emigration to Cali-
fornia in 1848.
" Placer mining " in Cali-
fornia, 1849.
California on the first dis-
covery of gold in 1849.
The gold rush in Calif omia*
mid-Nineteenth Century ;
the Redskins, brigands,
&c.
Nebraska, 1854 : the Sioux,
&c.
Shores of Lake Michigan,
1856 (Mormons).
S. America, 185^-57: the
Revolution in Nicaragua.
N.W. England (Coast), Lon-
don, &c,, mainly in the
Forties and Fifties; also
the Crimea during the War
(Alma, Balaclava, Inker-
man, and Sevastopol).
Young English girl in Russia
(St. Petersbu^ and Mos-
cow) in the period, z85X~55.
Ends in the Crimea during
the War.
England and the Crimea,
1854-56; Sevastopol and
Scutan.
« I have specially fecommended Md4 Preface to fourth edition) Mr. Hayens* tales of Soath
America, and may mention heze that he has written a capital romance of the Chilian RevolatioD,
2891, " The President's Sconts " (Collins). My list ends with the late Seventies, bat as this book—
flnt pabUshed Z904 — ^has been omitted from other bibUogrtphies pnrporting to cover the entire
Nineteenth Centiuy, I make this ban allusion to it.
392
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CENTURY— C(m/»»i««J
TITLE OF BOOK.
^
AUTHOR AND PUBLZSHBR.
8UBJ3BCT*
In thb Trbnchbs.
Juo.
With Sword and
Pen
The Young Rajah.
Juv.
* Barclay ov the
Guides* Juu»
♦A Hero of Lucknow.
Juv.
•The White Dove of
Amritzer. Juv,
Love Besieged
Bryda. Juv.
*A Fighter in Green.
Juv.
aO GORLANNAU Y
Defaid
♦The Spanish Jade
A Diplomatic Ad-
venture
John Fixmemore
(T. Nelson & Sons)
H. C. Irwin
(Fisher Unwin)
W. H. G. Kingston
(T. Nelson A Sons)
Herbert Strang
(H.Frowde, and Hodder ;
and Doian, U.S.A.)
Captain F. S. Brereton
(Blackie)
Eliza F. PoUard
(Partridge & Co.)
Charles E. Pearce
(Stanley Panl, Eng. ; and
McClurg, U.S.A.)
Mrs. E. M. Field
(Wells Gardner)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Gw3meth Vanghan
(D. Nutt)
Maurice Hewlett
(Cassell, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
S. Weir Mitchell
(Century Co.)
The Crimean War : siege of
Sevastopol.
N. India, 1854-58 : the
Mutiny, &c.
Calcutta during the Mutiny.
The Indian Mutiny : siege of
Delhi.
Cawnpore, Lucknow. and
iwnpoi
Delhi.
Delhi in 1857: the Indian
Mutinv. General John
Nicholson.
India in the Mutiny period :
siege of Lucknow as back-
ground.
An English girl's adventures
in India at the time of the
Mutiny.
A young Englishman fighting
for the French in Aijgeria,
1857 ; the Kabyles.
Religious Revival in Wales,
1859.
Adventures in Spain, x86o.
Paris in 1862 : supposed
narrative by the Secretary
to the American L^^ation.
a Written in the oxisinal Webh. My descriptive note is, in thii case, noi based on peisonsl
knowledge ! Mr. Hany Fair, of Cardiff libiary, is my authority.
SUPPLEMENT.
393
NINETEENTH CEHTURY—conUnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND FUBLISBBR.
A Knight of Poland M. £. Carr
(Smith, Elder ft Co.)
In thb Grip of thb
Hawk. Juv.
*Maori and Sbttlbr.
Juv.
Under the Stars
«Xhs Missourian
•A Vanished Nation.
JU9.
Diane
Before the Crisis
John Rigdon
*Two Gentlemen of
Virginia
Dareford
R^^inald Horaley
(T. C. & E. C. Jack)
G. A. Henty
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Scribner^ U.S.A.)
G. YoUand
(F. V. White)
Eugene P. Lyie, Jan.
(Heinemann, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
Herbert Hayens
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Katharine H. Brown
(Heinemann, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
F. B. Mott
(J. Lane)
C. P. Plant
(Sonnenschein)
SUBJECT.
G. Cary Eg^eston
(LothroplLee & Shepard)
Herbert £. Bogue
(C. M. Clark)
Begins Oxford and London,
z86i ; then — a year or two
later — ^Poland(Revolution),
Russia, and Siberia ; end-
ing California and New
York.
New Zealand and the Maori
War.
New Zealand in the late
Sixties ; second period of
the Maori struggle. The
Massacre of Poverty Bay.
Jamaica Outbreak, 1865.
Mexico and the Emperor
Maximilian.
Paraguay, 1866-68: Fran-
cisco Lopez.
A French Communal settle-
ment on the Mississippi,
1856; time of the Aboli-
tion struggle.
Kansas Border in the days of
John Brown.
Kansas and the Southern
States, 1858-59 ; time of
John Brown and the Aboli-
tionists.
Virginia in 1857 : the Slave
question.
Abraham Lincoln, &c., from
1859 : Civil War period.
394
SUPPLEBIENT.
NINETEENTH CENTVRY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
The Patriots of the
South (The Pat-
riots)
Rhoda of the
Undergrouhds
*The Weldikg
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
LoKG Bridge Boys.
Juv.
Manassas
*Kincaid's Battery
The Honor of a
Lbs. Juv.
The Storm Centre
Serena
*AiLSA Paige
Cyras T. Brady
(Casaell, Eog. ; and
Dodd, Mead, U.S.A.)
Florence F. Kelly
(Gay & Hancock)
Lafayette McLaws
(Little, Brown & Co.)
SUBJECT.
W. O. Stoddard
(Lothrop)
Upton Sinclair
(Macmillan)
George W. Cable
(Hodder, £ng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Libbie Miller Travera
(Cochrane Publishing
Co.)
f<
Charles Egbert Crad-
dock"
(Macmillan)
Virginia Frazer Boyle
(A. S. Barnes & Co.)
Robert W. Chambers
(Appleton)
General Lee and his Conf ede>
rate Army.
The Slave question (America)
just before the Civil War.
American politics in mid-
Nineteenth Century : the
" weMing " of North and
South. Henry Clay, J. C
Calhoun, John Brown,
Jefferson Davis, Greeley,
Lee, and Lincoln (besides
other historic figures).
The beginning of the Ameri-
can Civil war.
Beginning of American Civil
War: the first Battle of
Manassas, Ac
New Orleans at the beginning
of the Civil War, 1861.
Tennessee in the Civil War
period : General Bragg.
Tennessee and the Civil War.
A tale of the South before
and during the American
avilWar.
A New York character study.
Civil War time — ^the Valley
Campaign and General
Philip Stuarf s cavalry
raid.
SUPPLEMENT.
395
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
aGbneral Nelson's
Scout. Juv.
*Thb Sword in the
Mountains
*In Old Bellaire
A Lincoln Conscript
*In Circling Camps
Where the Red
Volleys Poured
Running the Gaunt-
let
On the Old Kear-
sage. Juv.
Blub and Grey.
Juv.
Byron A. Dunn
(A. €. McClurg & Co.)
Alice MacGowan
(G. P. Putnam's Sons)
BCary Dillon
(Century Co.)
Homer Greene
(Houghton, MifiOin)
J. A. Altsheler
(Appleton)
Chas. W. Dahlinger
(G. W. Dillingham)
Jessie Peabody Frothing-
ham
(Appleton)
Cyrus T. Brady
(Scribner)
*t
Harry Collingwood
(Cassell)
It
A Kentucky lad in the Civil
War.
Border States (Cumberland
Mountain region) mainly
in period, 1861-65 : Chat-
tanooga and the Civil War.
Southern Pennsylvania just
before and during the Civil
War, 1860-63 : Gettjrs-
burg.
Pennsylvania in the time of
Abiaham Lincoln and the
avil War (Gettysburg).
American Civil War period*
from Lincoln's election up
to General Lee's surrender :
full description of Gettys-
burg, &c.
A German exile in the Ameri-
can Civil War: Gettys-
burg, 1863.
American Civil War period,
1857 onwards (based on
lieut. William B. Cush-
ing's life).
Naval adventures in Ameri-
can Civil War, from the
sinking of the Cumberland
up to the Alabama and
Kearsage fight.
American Civil War from
1 861 : the sea-fight between
the Alabama and the
Kearsage,
a The first of five stories foaiiing The Young Kgntuehians Stfms. The other foar votames in
the series axe, *' On General Thomas's Staff " ; ** Battling ior Atlanta " : " From Atlanta to the Sea " ;
and " Raiding with Morgan.*' The chief stages of the war are depicted in these stories.
396
SUPPLEMENT,
NINETEENTH CENTURY— co«/*w^^.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
•Terry's Trials and
Trixtmphs. Juv.
A Little Traitor to
the South
Traitor or Loyal-
ist ?
aFoR the Stars and
Stripes. Juv,
The Young Block-
aders. Juv»
The Victory
The Last op the
houghtons
&Ths Long Roll
•The Warrens of
Virginia
Cleburne and His
Command
Comrades Four
J. M. Oxley
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Cyrus T. Brady
(Macmillan)
Henry K. Webster
(Macmillan)
Everett T. Tomlinson
(Lothrop)
M. £. Seawell
(Appleton)
R. Wallace Buckley
(D. C. Neale)
Mary Johnston
(Constable, £ng. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin^
U.S.A.)
G. Cary Eggleston
(G. W. Dillingham)
Irving Ashby Buck
(D. C. Neale)
E. R. Rich
(D. C. Neale)
American Civil War, about
i86i~62 : naval engage-
ments (the Cumberland^
&c.).
Attempted sinking of the
Wabash by the torpedo
boat David (American
avil War).
North Carolina, &c., 1861.
The Blockade and tiie
Cotton Traders.
(i) A Union soldier-lad
capes from a Southern
prison, &c. Based on iajct*
(2) The Blockading Fleet in
the American Civil War:
blockader versus blockade-
runner.
Virginian Plantation life
during the Civil War.
Virginian father and son
divided in the Civil War ;
from i860.
Virginia, z86z : Stonewall
Jackson, &c.
The Civil War and after.
Battles of Shiloh, Richmond.
&c. ; a soldier on the
Southern side.
Maryland and the Civil War.
a The flnt two volomet In the W^r for tks Union Sprits.
b Appeals too late for verification ; my brief descriptive note is baaed on the pabUtben*
annoonoement. ""
SUPPLEMENT,
397
NINETEENTH CEHTURY'-^ontinued.
TITLX OF BOOK.
•Captain Phil. Juu,
Dbfbnding His
Flag. Juv.
Thb Battle of New
York. Juv.
The Counterpart
The Student Cava-
liers. Juv,
A Daughter of the
Confederacy
War Children. Juv.
Special Messenger
The Rock of Chica-
MAUGA
My Lady, of the
South
author and publisher.
Biartha McCannon Thomas
(Henry Holt & Co.)
K. Stratemeyer
(Lothrop)
W. O. Stoddard
(Appleton)
H. Cotes
(The Macaulay Co.,
New York)
Joshua Rhodes Forrest
(R. F. Fenno)
Phoebe H. Seabrook
(D. C. Neale)
J. Tyler Wheelwright
(Dodd, Mead & Co.)
Robert W. Chambers
(Werner Laurie, Eng. ;
and Appleton, U.S.A.)
General Charles King
(G. W. DiUinghanO
Randall Parrish
(Putnam, Eng. ; and
McQurg, U.S.A.)
SX7BJBCT.
A youth's adventures during
theavilWar; the West-
em Army.
American Civil War; the
earlier period beginning
with the first Battle of
Bull Run. Two youths in
opposite camps.
The scenes in New York
during the Civil War
Abraham Lincoln, McClellan«
&c., in the Civil War
period.
Southern lads in College, and
in the Confederate Army
(American Civil War).
Home life in the South
during the American Civil
War.
Two lads at home in their
soldier-father's absence ;
the war in the North.
A girl volunteers her services
as a'" special messenger "
in the American Civil War.
General George H. Thomas*
The Battles of Chicka-
mauga (1862) and Nash-
ville (X864).
A Federal artilleryman's
strange marriage with a
Southern girl during the
war. Historic incidents
are quite in the back-
ground.
398
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CEHTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
•My Lady of the
North
Csag-Nest
With Grant at
ViCKSBURC. Juv,
*Thb Heart of Hope
♦A Little Union
Scout
A Daughter of the
South
Southern Buds and
Sons of War
•The Carlyles
•The Clansman
*The Leopard's
Spots
*Ths Traitor
With Sully into
THE Sioux Land.
Juv,
The Iron Way
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Randall P&rrish
(Putnam, £ng. ; and
McClurg, U.S.A.)
T. Cooper De Leon
(G. W. Dillingham)
>>
" James Otis
(Burt, U.S.A.)
Norval Richardson
(Dodd, Mead & Co.)
Joel Chandler Harris
(Duckworth, Eng. ; and
McClure, U.S.A.)
G. Cary Eggleston
(Lotiirop)
W. H. Winslow
(C. M. Clark)
Constance Cary Harrison
(Appleton)
Thomas Dixon, Jun.
(Heinemann, £ng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
Joseph Mills Hanson
(A. C. McClurg)
Sarah Pratt Carr
(A. C. McClurg)
SUBJECT.
Virginia, 186^-65. Confede-
rate captam's adventures
as bearer of a despatch
from General Lee. The
Shenandoah Valley (Sheri-
dan).
General Sheridan in the
Shenandoah Valley.
The Siege of Vicksburg,
1863-64.
American Civil War: the
Siege of Vicksburg.
N. Alabama towards the end
of the Civil War ; General
Forrest*
Lower Mississippi River at
the end of the Civil War.
S. Carolina, 1864 (Southern
standpoint).
Richmond (Virginia) and
neighbourhood in 1865,
just before the surrender of
General Lee.
A trilogy dealing with the
Reconstruction Period in
the Southern States, from
the time of Lincoln's assas-
sination in Z865 down to
the dissolution of the Ku
Klux Klan in 1870.
The Dakota Indians in 1864 :
General SuUy.
California in 1867, when the
Central Pacific Railway
was being completed.
SUPPLEMENT.
399
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
HTLBOVBOOK.
1
Shibusawa
Thb Flower of
Destiny
Eleanor Dayton
Black Friday
author and publisbbr.
T. William Adams
(G. P. Patnam's Sons)
Wm. Dana Orcutt
(A. C. McClurg)
N. Stephenson
(J. Lane)
The Drums of War
The Iron Game
A Lindsay's Love
The Wisdom of the
Serpent
Josephine's Trou*
*L£ Drapeau Ou La
Foi?
Frederic S. Isham
(Bobbs-Merrill Co.)
H. de Vere Stacpoole
(J. Murray, £ng. ; and
Duffield, U.S.A.)
Frances Marsh
(Fifield)
Charles Lowe
(Werner Laurie)
Constantine Ralli
(F. Griffiths)
Percy H. Fitzgerald
(Bums & Oates)
A. Aderer
(Calmann L^vy, Paris)
subject.
Japan about 1867 : the fall
of the Shogeon.
Napoleon III. and the Em-
press £ug6nie.
Ohio district and Cincinnati
in the Fifties ; Paris under
Napoleon III. ; the Ameri-
can Civil War; and, lastly,
a glimpse of Napoleon III.
at Chiselhurst in 1872.
New York after the Gvil
War : the Comer in Gold.
Also Paris and the Com-
mune.
Germany and France, i860-
70 : Bismarck and Napo-
leon III. Ends with the
scenes in Paris on war
being declared.
France v. Germany in the
period 1860-79 (Franco-
German War, ftc).
The Court of Napoleon III.,
and the Siege of Paris.
Begins Harrow in the Forties,
but chiefly conconed with
the Franco-German War in
1870, up to Metz.
Versailles just before and
during the war, 1870-71 :
the German occupation.
Versailles during the German
occupation (Franco-Ger-
man War).
^ I
400
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITUS OF BOOK.
Tbb Bblfry of St.
JUDB. JUO,
A Grbat Mistaxb.
Juo.
*Tm Frbnch Pri-
SONBRS. JUV,
Thb Young Franc-
TIRBURS, JuV.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
£sm6 Stuart
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
T. S. MilUngton
(Religions Tract Society)
£. Bertz (trans.)
(Macmillan)
G. A. Henty
(H.Ftowde; and Hodder)
aRXNGBD BY FiRB.
Juv.
•JORN UhL
*Thb Thrbb Com-
RADBS
A Hbro of Sbdan.
Juv.
*Grbat Hbart Gil-
lian
A Bid for Loyalty
E. Everett Green
(T. Nelson ft Sons)
Gustav Frenssen (trans.)
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Estes, U.S.A.)
Gustav Frenssen (trans.)
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Estes, U.S.A.)
Captain F. S. Brereton
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Caldwell, U.S.A.)
John Oxenham
(Hodder ft Stoughton)
J. Blyth
(Ward, Lock ft Co.)
subjbct.
French country town before
and during the Franco-
German War. A fugitive
during the Prussian occu-
pation, 1870-71.
English boys in Paris, 1870-
71 : the Siege, &c.
A tale of German schoolboys
and French prisoners,
during the Franco-German
War.
Franco-German War : the
FrancHreurs in the Vosges
district, &c. Ends with
the fighting round Orleans.
General Chanzy.
The Battle of Gravelotte, and
the Siege of Metz (Franco-
German War).
Franco-German War period :
^e Battle of Gravdotte.
Coast of Schleswig Holstein
just after Gravdotte, and
during Metz, ftc
Battle of Sedan, and the
Si^e of Paris, 1870-71.
Coast of Brittany, Paris, ftc,
during the Franco-German
War ; Napoleon III. after
Sedan.
Bazaine at Metz (somewhat
anti-German in tendency).
t Sequel to " The Castle of the White Flag " (see p. Z14).
SUPPLEMENT.
401
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBZJSBBR.
SUBJECT.
*Xbb Attack on the
Mixx (L'Attaqux
Du Mouun)
Thb Mbn of thb
Mountain
*Thb Dream of
Peace
a*LE Mariage D'Ag-
NES
£mile Zola (txans.)
(Heinemazm, Es^. ; and
Stokes, U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Religious Tract Society,
Eng. ; and Harper,
U.S.A.)
F. Gribble
(Chapman & Hall) .
Jules Clar^tie
(Eug^e Fasquelle,
Paris)
*Paris at Bay. Juv. Herbert Hayens
(Blackie)
The Tyranny of
Honour
&In Tims of War.
JW).
*Thb American in
Paris
Hostage for a King-
dom. Jvo.
Cache La Poudrb
Constantine Ralli
(Chapman & Hall)
James F. Cobb
(H.Frowde; andHodder)
E. Cdeman Savidge
(Lippincott)
F. B. Forester
(T. Nelson & Sons)
Herbert Myzick
(Kegan Paul, Eng. ; and
Orange Judd Co.,
U.S.A.)
The Prussians in Lorraine,
1870.
The Franco-Swiss frontier,
1871.
General Bourbaki's Retreat
to Switzerland (end of
Eranco-GermanWar), 1 871 .
The Siege of Paris.
Battle of Sedan; Siege of
Paris; and The Commune,
1870-71.
Sedan, and the Germans in
Paris, 1870-71 ; Xhea,
London and Cornwall — a
mystery case.
Brittany and Paris, 1870-71
the Siege and Commune.
Paris in the Franco-German
War period: the Siege,
and Commune.
English lad's adventures in
Spain at the time of the
Carlist War of 1872-76.
N. Colorad€y Wyomingi and
Montana in the Seventies :
time of General Custer.
a Has been translated into English, bat very inadequately.
b An interesting tale originally published nnder the title ** Workman and Soldier " (Griffith &
Farran).
2 D
402
SUPPLEMENT.
NINETEENTH CESTJJRY—conHnued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
*The Horsemen of
THE Plains. Juv.
•The Last of the
Chiefs. Juv.
Winding Waters.
Juo-
Bob Hampton of
Placer. Juv.
Watchers of
Plains
The Spirit Trail
The Pioneer
By Sheer Pluck.
Juv.
J. A. Altsheler
(Macmillan)
•With Wolseley to
KuMASi. Juv.
J. A. Altahder
(Appleton)
Frances Parker
(C. M. Clark)
Randall Parrish
(A. C. McOurg)
Ridgwell Cnllnm
(Chapman & Hall, Eng.;
and Jacobs, U.S.A.}
Kate and Virgil D. Boyles
(A. C. McClorg)
Geraldine Bonner
(Bobbs-Merrill)
G. A. Henty
(Blaclde, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Captain F. S. Brereton
^lackie)
Rocky Mountains in the
late Sixties: Cheyenne War
and General Custer (Battle
of the Washita).
Montana, &c. ; the Sionx
Indians and General
Custer.
A tale of the Indians in the
West (America), and Gene-
ral Custer.
The destruction of Custer and
his men by the Sioux in
1876.
Indian Rising in the Seven-
ties ; Dakota and S. Ne-
braska.
Dakota in the Seventies ; the
Indians.
Nevada and California in the
Seventies.
A youth's English upbring-
ing; his adventures in
Central Africa ; and —
second half of tale — ^his
part in the Ashanti War
(Wolseley) up to the cap-
ture of Coomassie in 1874.
The first Ashanti War. A
young Englishman, ap-
pointed manager of a gold
mine near Kumasi, escapes
and f aUs in with the British
expedition under Wolseley;
capture of Kumasi, 1874.
SUPPLEMENT.
403
NINETEENTH CENTURY— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
With Shield and
Assegai. Juv.
For Name and Fame.
Juv,
Captain F. S. Brereton
(Blackie)
G. A. Henty
(Blackie, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
With Roberts to
Candahar. Juv,
INA (in " The Little
Blue Lady," ftc).
Juv.
*Under the Chilian
Flag. Juo.
Captain F. S. Brereton
CBlackie)
Mrs. £. Harcourt Mitchell
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S. A.)
«<
Harry CoUingwood "
(Blackie)
SUBJECT.
Zololand (Cetewayo) in the
Seventies, and the War in
1879; Isandnla, Rorke's
Drift, and Ulundi. Lord
Chelmsford, Ac.
Begins England and the
Eastern Seas (Malays) ;
bat chiefly Afghanistan,
1878-80. British army in
the Khyber Pass. &c. ;
later, the advance on
Cabal; and the faunous
march to Candahar (G^ie-
ral Roberts).
The Third Afghan War, x88o:
the Siege of Cabal, and the
Relief of Candahar.
St. Petersburg at the time of
the Rasso-Turkish War
(late Seventies).
War between Chili and Peru
1879-81 : Battle of Anga-
mos, and Bombardment of
Callao.
Note. — I have extended m^r lists so as to include the late Seventies. As
already implied (vide p. X15), an interval of thirty years between events and their
narration is about the time needed, in my opinion, for genuine historical per-
spective.
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES.
'^ Manv corresponding circnmstances are detected by readers,
of which the author did not suspect the existence. He must,
however, regard it as a great compliment, that in detailing
incidents purely imaginary, he has been so fortunate in
approximating reality, as to remind his readers of actual
occurrences."
Sir Walter Scott in /tis "Additional Note to
* Guy Mannering^^
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES
besides those given on pp. 11^127.
TITLB OF BOOK.
a*THs Master Girl
♦Thb Story of Ab.
Juv.
^Children of the
Cliff. Juv.
*LoDRix, THE Little
Lake Dweller.
Juv,
The Iron Star. Juv.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
" Ashton Hilliers "
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Putnam, U.S.A.)
Stanley Waterloo
(A. & C. Black, Eng. ;
and Doubleday*
U.S.A.)
Belle Wiley and Grace W.
Edick
(Appleton)
Belle Wiley and Grace W.
Edick
(Appleton)
John P. True
(Little, Brown & Co.)
Days before
TORY. Juv,
His- H. R. HaU
(Harrap, Eng. ; and
Crowell, U.S.A.)
i
SUBJECT.
Primitive man and woman in
the Stone Age.
A vivid tale of the Stone Age
and the Cave-men.
The primitive Cliff-people.
A charmingly illustrated
tale for quite young chil-
dren.
A little boy's adventures in
the time of the Lake-
dwellers. Like the pre-
vious short tale, this one is
well illustrated.
What a meteor " saw in its
journey through the ages,"
from its fall m the GEive-
dweUers' period to the
time of the Pilgrim Fathers.
Semi-fictional history (Vi-
kings, English, &c.).
An excellent little semi-fic-
tional story-book for chil-
dren, telling of a boy's life
among the primitive in-
habitants of Britain.
a Stiictly speakiiig, ol coQzve, a novel of this kind is not even " semi " historical : the people
whom Mr. Hillien has, with such power of imagination, tried to reproduce for us, lived in the far-off
unrecorded periods of our planet. At the same time it must be borne in mind that, through the study
of Sdenoe, we are able to trace, if not the detailed history of bygone races, at least the general outline
of their manner of living : hence it may be said that even romances dealing with Primitive Life, are
based — as regards their framework— on cert^ by tone facts which Nature has recorded for us.
4o8
SUPPLEMENT.
SEMI-fflSTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— corOinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHBR.
SUBJECT.
The Car of Phoebus
aMoRNiNG Star
Robert James Lees
(W. Rider & Son)
H. Rider Haggard
(Cassell, Eng. ; and
Longmans, U.S.A.)
•Thais
(<
•Sir Marrok. Juv.
♦The Clutch of Cir-
cumstance
•A Lady of King
Arthur's Court
Harold the Boy-
Earl. Juv.
•Eric Brighteyes
Hilda Brave-Heart
(in " The Whisper-
ing Winds "). Juv.
The Cn> Cahpeador
Anatole France " (trans.)
(J.Lane; and Greening)
Allen French
(Century Co.)
Dorothy Senior
(A. & C. Black, Eng. ;
andMacmillan^U.S.A.)
Sara Hawks Sterling
(Chatto, Eng. ; and
Jacobs, U.S.A.)
J. F. Hodgetts
(Religious Tract Society)
H. Rider Haggard
(Longmans)
Mary H. Debenham
(Blackie)
The Aryan nomadic tribes in
Central Asia.
Ancient Egypt: the Mys-
teries.
The early Christians of
Thebes; a pssrchological
study, from the standpoint
of a modem sceptic.
Forest of Bedegraine (Sher*
wood) in the time of King
Uther; then in the time of
King Arthur.
Britain in the time of King
Arthur and the Round
Table: Cormac King of
Leinster, &c. An adap-
tion of Malory.
Love story of " Anguish
Prince of Ireland " and a
waiting-woman of Queen
Guenever.
Briton and Saxon, about the
middle of the Sixth Cen-
tury (Wales, &c.).
Iceland and the Norsemen
between a.d. 900 and a.d.
IIOO.
A very slight but charming
tale (semi-fairy) of early
Norse life.
D. Antonio De Trueba The "Cid." late Eleventh
(trans.)
(Longmans)
Century : Spanish tradi-
tionary hero.
xomance is neither original nor satisfactory.
SUPPLEMENT.
409
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— cotUinued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND FUBLISHBR«
SUBJECT.
Earl Osric's Itof-
strbl. juv,
Engsl thb Fearless.
Juv.
Thb Sbvbn Streams
LovB Among thb
Ruins
*Xhe King's Fool
A Little Shepherd
OF Provence, /mv.
Prince Madog
Black Magic
•THb Merry Adven-
tures OF Robin
Hood. Juv.
Robin Hood: His
Book. Juv,
Buondelmonte's
Saga (in "Fond
Adventures ")
A. Mary R. Dobson
(Religious Tract Society)
Mrs. £. Harcourt Mitchell
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Warwick Deeping
(Eveleigh Nash, Eng. ;
and Fenno, U.S.A.)
Warwick Deeping
(CasseU)
M. Barrington
(Blackwood)
Evaleen Stein
(L. C. Page &
U.S.A.)
Joan Dane
(EUiot Stock)
Co.,
t»
If
Marjoxie Bowen
(Alston Rivers)
Howard Pyle
(Newnes, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Eva March Tappan
(Little* Brown & Co.)
Maurice Hewlett
(Macmillan, Eng. ; and
Harper, 17.S.A.)
A tale of late Saxon England.
Child life in mediaeval Eng-
land.
Mediaeval life : the Saracens,
&c. Vague time and place
allusions.
England in early mediaeval
days.
A decidedly moving story of
Troubadour days.
Tells of a crq»pled lad in
Mediaeval Provence.
N. Wales (Carnarvon) mid to
late Twelfth Century :
Mado^'s discovery of
America. Ends Columbus
and the Spain of Ferdinand
V.
A som^hat indefinite story
of n\ediaev^ magic and
Mediaeval Nottinghamshire:
an excellent adaptation of
the Robin Hood legends.
Another good adaptation of
the old legends concemiog
Robin Hood and his Merry
Men.
Italy (Florence) in the pre-
r^te period.
410
SUPPLEMENT.
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES^^continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
oA Mbdlsval Oak-
land
Dbclinbd with
Thanks
The Crowning Houe
Fortune
*GoLDBN Hawk
Lazy Rudolph (in
" The Little Blue
Lady/' &c.). Juv,
^The Swordmaker
^Springtime (Under
Castle Walls)
The Love Chase (in
" Fond Adven-
tures ")
Warriors of Old
Japan, and Other
Stories
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
SUBJECT.
Madame James Danneste-
ter
(Lawrence & Bullen)
Una L. Silberrad
(Constable & Co.)
Rupert Lance
(Blackwood)
J. C. Snaith
(Nelson, Eng. ;
MofiEat. U.S.A.)
Edith Rickert
(Arnold, Eng. ;
Baker, U.S.A.)
and
and
Mrs. E. Haicourt Mitchell
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Robert Barr
(Mills &Boon, Eng.; and
F. A. Stokes, U.S.A.)
H. C. Bailey
(Murray, Eng. ; and
Appleton, U.S.A.)
Maurice Hewlett
(MacmiUan, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Yei Theodora Ozaki
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Houghton, Mifliin,
U.S.A.)
Life in Italy and France, from
the late Thirteenth Cen-
tury to the late Sixteenth.
Eight psychologic tales (three
of some length) ranging
from Z260-1775. England
— ^East Country, Wiltshire,
Ac — furnishes the back-
ground almost throughout.
Mediaeval Italy
An English Soldier of Fortune
in mediaeval Spain and
France.
Fourteenth Century
vence : time of the Popes
at Avignon.
Oermany in the Fourteenth
Century.
Frankfort and the Robber
Barons of the Rhine in late
Fourteenth Century.
Lombardy in the Early Re-
naissance period.
Italy (Mantua) in the time of
the Sf orzas.
Stories of Mediaeval Japan,
containing an element of
history as well as myth.
They cover a wide penod,
from legendary days up to
a more or less recent tmie.
a A volume of short but lUumi]iatixi|[ tales, having as background the life of such cities as Assisi
(1290), Cherbourg (1439), Chalons (x44d)» Milan (1496), Met£ (15x8), and Fexrara (1535 and 1595).
The stories appeared oxiginally in French, 1892.
SUPPLEMENT.
411
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Tales of Old Japan
Bhotbbss of Pbsil
*Thb Grby Man
Will of thb Dalbs.
Juv,
Tub Jbwel of Ynys
Galon
Thb O'Flynn
^Sampson Ridbout,
QUAXBR
Lost Endbavour
Yo-Ho I For the
Spanish BIain.
Juv.
Sir Rogbr's Hbir
•The Fool Errant
author and fubuskbr.
Algemoa Bertz&m
man-Mitford
(Macxnillan)
Free-
Theodore Roberts
(Nash, Eng. ; and Page,
U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Unwin, Eng. ; and
Harper, U.S.A.)
R. Stead
(Blackie)
<<
Owen Rhoscomyl "
(Longmans)
Justin H. McCarthy
(Hurst & Blackett,Enff.;
and Harper, U.S.A.)
Una L. Silberrad
(Nelson)
John Masefield
(Nelson)
S. Walkey
(Cassell)
F. Frankfort Moore
(Hodder & Stoaghton)
Maurice Hewlett
(Heinemann)
SUBJECT.
Semi-historical pictures of
bygone life, dealing with
the Japan of more than a
thousand years ago, as well
as with that country in
much later centuries.
Newfoundland (the Beothics)
in mid-Sixteenth Century.
An Ayrshire feud at the end
of the Sixteenth Century ;
based on the records of an
actual tragedy.
Derbyshire in Elizabeth —
James I. period.
Welsh pirates about the time
of James IL
An Irish Soldier of Fortune
in 1689.
South-west England (Salis-
bury, Shaftesbury, &c.)
rather more than two
hundred years ago.
An English schoolmaster and
schoolboy are kidnapped
(1692) and sold into slavery
— Jamaica, Virginia, &c.
An adventure story of the
Spanish Main, c, 1700 :
pirates, treasure-galleon,&c
English country life in the
tune of Queen Anne.
An Englishman in Padua,
early Eighteenth Century.
Italian maimers.
4X2
SUPPLEHENT.
SEMI-fflSTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES-conUmed.
TITLE OF BOOK.
«At the Sign of the
Queen Pbdavque
*Jacob and John
Tax Portrait
Gabrislls Trans-
gressor
A Cavauer of Vir-
ginia
The O'Ruddy
♦Sophia
*Starbracb
*OiL OF Spikenard
♦The Lady of Lynn
No Other Way
AUTHOR AND PUBUSBBR.
f<
Anatole France " (trans.)
(J. Lane ; and Gibbings)
Walter Raymond
(Hodder & Stoughton)
Ford Madox Haeffer
(Methuen)
Harris Dickson
(Lippincott)
Theodore Roberts
(L. C. Page & Co.)
Stephen Crane and Robert
Barr
(Methuen, Eng. ; and
Stokes, U.S.A.)
Stanley We3rman
(Longmans)
Sheila Kaye-Smith
(Geo. Bell & Sons)
£. M. Smith-Dampier
(A. Melrose)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus)
Walter Besant
(Chatto & Windus)
SUBJECT.
French life and manners in
the first half of the Eight-
eenth Century.
Somersetshire village life in
the first quarter of the
Eighteenth Century.
Fashionable life (London and
Kent) in the time of Sir
Robert Walpole and the
Methodists.
New Orleans in the first half
of the Eighteenth Century.
An adventure story of Vir-
ginia and the Sea, in
Georgian days.
An Irishman's adventures in
Eighteenth Century Eng-
land : Bristol, London,
Rye, &c
Social life and adventure,
1742 : London and Sussex.
Sussex (Rye district) about
the 1740-50 period.
Norfolk and London, 1752-
53, and 1756 : a character
dcetch.
King's Lynn, Norfolk, about
X750 : the manners and
life of the time.
The London of 1750-53:
King's Bench Prison,
Newgate, St. James's
Square, Vauxhall, &c.
a A critical stadv rather than romance proper 1 the author sketches, with keen satire, the life of
an unprincipled Eighteenth Century Abbtf.
SUPPLEMENT.
413
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES^-cofUinued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
Frbnch Nan
Tbb Taming of thb
BBSS OF THB Woods
Pbnblopb
LING
Brand-
AtTTHOR AND FUBUSBBR.
SUBJBCT.
Tbb Frontibrsmbn
Agnes and Egerton Castle
(Smith. Elder & Co.)
" Frances Harrod "
(Methuen)
Warwick Deeping
(Harper)
" Vernon Lee "
(Fisher Unwin)
Dban's Hall
Back o' thb Moon
*Thb Coplbstonb
Cousins. Juv.
"CharlesEgbertCraddock"
(Houghton, Mifflin &
Co.)
Mande Goldring
(J. Murray)
" OUver Onions "
(Hurst & Blackett)
ROGBR TftBWINION
Caroline
Mrs. Henry Clarke
(Christian Knowledge
Society, Eng. ; and
Gorham, U.S.A.)
Joseph Hocking
(Ward. Lock & Co.)
Clementina Black
(J. Murray)
A Versailles Court Beauty
married to an English
Squire, mid -Eighteenth
Century.
A young Welsh Squire in
mid-Eighteenth Ccaitury.
English country life (squire.
&C.) in mid-Eighteenth
Century.
Imaginary diary of a young
French lady married to a
Welsh Baionet; her ex-
periences on ^e Welsh
Coast, 1 772-73 . Edited in
Switzerland fifty years
later.
Early North American pion-
eers in the part tiuit is
now Tennessee.
Yorkshire in the second half
of the Eighteentii Century :
the Quakers.
' Late Eighteenth Century life
in the West Riding of York-
shire : weavers, coiners.
&c.
Dartmoor district in 1779 :
the press-gang.
Cornwall (Truro district in
late Eighteenth Century.
Life in Sussex. 1783 (Pro-
logue, 1774).
414
SUPPLEMENT.
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES^-H^ontinued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
*Miss Caxolimb
Tnz Romantic Road
My Lady Nan
♦The Watchers on
THE Long Ships.
Juv.
The Orangery
•The Lost Land
The Chosen
A Turnpike Lady
The Key op Para-
dise
♦The Tramping
Methodist
aWASTB Not, Want
Not (in " For -
gotten Tales of
Long Ago"). Juv.
AUTHOR and PUBUSHER.
ft
Theo. Douglas "
(£. Am<dd)
Guy Rawlence
(Fisher Unwin)
Bessie Dill
(Hurst & Blackett)
James F. Cobb
(Wells Gardner)
Mabel Dearmer
(Smith, Elder & Co.)
Julia M. Crottie
(Fisher Unwin)
J. T. Findlay
(Hodder & Stoughton
Sarah N. Cleghom
(Henry Holt & Co.)
Sidney Pickering
(Arnold, Eng. ; and
Macmillan, U.S.A.)
Sheila Kaye-Smith
(Geo. Bell & Sons)
Maria Edgeworth
(Wells Gardner)
SUBJECT.
Life and manners in the
Geor^lian period : Worces-
tershire and London.
Salisbury and Fordingbridge
district in Georgian days :
young lady as " highway-
man."
Gloucestershire, Dieppe,
Bath, &c. ; late Eighteenth
Century maimers.
Life in the Land's End dis-
trict in the last decade of
the Eighteenth Century :
Coast , and Lighthouse
scenes. '
Hertfordshire (High Life),
1796.
An imaginary autobiography,
depicting an Irish town
(Munster), 1780^7.
A tale of Love and Religion
in an Aberdeenshire village^
1796.
American village life (Ver*
mont), 1768-96.
Rome and Italy in 1797.
Kent and Sussex about 1799.
Family life in the Bristol dis-
trict over a hundred years
ago.
« Origixially published in Miss Edgeworth's The Pofent's Assistani. Mr. E. V. Lucas' ezoeUent
volame ot*' Forgotten Tales," ftc, gives the story in charming company.
SUPPLEMENT,
415
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— continued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
^Thb Lifb and Ad-
VBNTUSBS OF LaDY
ANint (in ''For-
gotten Tales of
Long Ago "). Juv.
*T&B Young Trail-
Juv.
♦Thb Forest Run-
Juv,
*T&eFrbb Rangbrs«
Juv.
*Tbz Riflemen of
THE Ohio. Juv.,
•Dick o' the Fens.
JiiV.
♦ King's Ferry. Juv ,
•KiTWYK
The Interloper
The Vanishing
Smuggler
T&B Dew of Their
Youth
aCHLOE Finds a Con-
science (in " The
Stairway of Hon-
our")
author and publisher.
Anonymous
(Wells Gardner)
J. A. Altsheler
(Appleton)
G. ManviUe Fenn
(Blackie, £ng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Frederick C. Badiick
(National Society, £ng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
Mrs. J. Lane
(J. Lane)
Violet Jacob
(Heinemann)
Stephen Chalmers
Mills & Boon, Eng. ; and
E. J. Clode, U.S.A.)
S. R. Crockett
(Hodder & Stonghton)
Maud Stepney Rawson
(Mills & Boon)
subject.
The ex]^eriences of a stolen
child m the London, &c., of
a century ago.
An interesting series dealing
with the first settlers in
Kentucky; the great War
trail, &c.
The Eastern Counties of Eng-
land in Georgian days,
before the draining of the
fens.
Weymouth and district in
press-gang days.
Dutch village life about a
hundred years ago.
Life on the Coast of Scotland
(Eastern Lowlands), 1800-
03.
Village of Morag (Clyde
estuary), early Nineteenth
Century.
Galloway and Edinburgh
about a century ago.
London Society at the begin-
ning of the Nineteenth
Century : Almack's, Stc.
m Perhaps the best of seTeral 8eml-hist(»ic short stories in the same volume. One other — dealing
with the London of 18x4 — may be mentioned, via. " Delia at a Disadvantage.*'
4i6
SUPPLEMENT.
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES—cotiHniued.
TITLB OF BOOK.
Frenchman's Crbbk
(in " Shakespeare's
Christmas," ftc.)
Tbb Two Lady Las-
CSLLBS
Cousin Hugh
The Longshoremen
Two Men o' Mbndip
Perfidious Lydia
Ye Sexes Give Ear 1
(in " Shakespeare's
Christxnas," &c.)
*The Shirra
♦Tom Cringle's Log.
Juv,
a * The Waterloo
Lass. Juo.
AUTHOR and publisher.
A. T. QuiUer Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng. ;
and Longmans.U.S. A.)
*t
Sarah Tytler "
(Digby, Long & Co.)
f<
Theo. Douglas
(Methuen)
•f
George Bartram
(E. Arnold)
Walter Ra3aDond
(Longmans, Eng. ; and
Doubleday, U.S.A.)
Frank Barrett
(Chatto & Windus)
A. T. Quiller Couch
(Smith, Elder, Eng. ;
and Longinans,U.S. A. )
W. C. Mackenzie
(A. Gardner, Paisley)
Michael Scott
(Routledge and others)
Mary H. Debenham
(National Society, Eng.;
and Whittaker,U.S.A.)
subject.
Falmouth district about the
1 800-10 period.
English social life (London
and Lincolnshire) in
Napoleonic days: French
refugee's daughter, &c.
Traffic in the escape of
French prisoners, and the
importation of false coin,
&c., English South Coast
c, 1809.
Sussex in 181 1 : smugglers.
Rustic life in the Cheddar
district, X813.
Social life (Gretna Green,
&c.) ; 1809 and 1814.
Plymouth and Saltash dis-
trict in Napoleonic days.
Western Islands of Scotland
about the second and
tiiird decades of the Nine-
teenth Century: smugglers,
French and American pri-
vateers, &c.
Jamaica, Cuba, and the West
Indies in the second decade
of the Nineteenth Century.
English North Coimtry life
(Tees district) in 181 6 and
in 1825. last chapter, 1838.
a Thoagh primanly intended for the young, only a mature reader will fully appreciate the
real lotce and humour of this simple tale.
SUPPLEMENT.
417
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES-^continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Tb£ Broad Highway
Tbe Carbombls.
Jt4V.
ISIDRO
*Tbe Lead of Honour
The Doomswomam
The Gorgeous Isle
Marcia Schuyler
The Girl I Left
Behind Mb
^Nathan Burke
Schoolboy
Outlaws. Jho,
A Daughter of the
Manse
•The History of
Aythan Waring
author and publisher.
Jeffery Famol
(S. Low, £&g. ; and
Little, Brown, U.S.A.)
Charlotte M. Yonge
(National Society, Eng.;
and WhittakBr,U.S.A.)
Mrs. Mary Hunter Austin
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Houghton, MiflBin,
U.S.A.)
Norval Richardson
(Sir I. Pitman, Eng. ;
and L. C. Page,U.S. A.)
Gertrude Atherton
(J. Lane)
Gertrude Atherton
(Doubleday, Page & Co.)
Grace Livingston Hill
Lutz
(Lippinoott)
subject.
Weymer J. Blills
(Dodd, Mead ft Co.)
Mary S. Watts
(Macmillan)
H. Elrington
(Simpkin ft Co.)
Kent in the R^ency period :
a tale of love and adven-
ture.
Village life (England), 1822-
30 period.
The Spanish Missions of
Southern California, early
Nineteenth Century.
Natches, Mississippi, about
1830.
California in 1840.
Life at an English Health
Resort (Nevis) in the West
Indies, 1842.
New England village life in
the second quarter of the
Nineteenth Century.
*>
" Sarah Tytler
(J. Long)
Violet Jacob
(Heinemann, Eng. ; and
Dutton, U.S.A.)
New York in the second
quarter of the Nineteenth
Century.
Ohio in the Mexican War
time (1846) : a study of
social life and of character.
School life in S. Ireland in the
Thirties.
Scottish village life in the
Thirties and Forties : the
Disruption of 1843.
Breconshire and Hereford-
shire (Valley of the Wye)
in the second quarter of the
Nineteenth Century.
_
4i8
SUPPLEMENT.
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— continued.
TITLE OF BOOK.
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHSR.
SUBJECT.
* Early Victorian
(Basset; A
Village Chro-
nicle)
•A Suffolk CouRr-
SBIP
a* Joseph Vance
The Weavers
Gianella
The Railway Sig-
nalman (in "A
Feast of Stories
from Foreign
Lands "). Juv,
Benbondna
♦The Old Peabody
Pew
The White River
Raft
Hecla Sandwith
The Vigilante Girl
»»
" S. G. Tallentyre
(Smith, £lder« £ng. ;
and Mofiat. Yud,
U.S.A.)
M. Betham Edwards
(Hurst A Blackett)
Wm. De Morgan
(Heincmann, £ng. ; and
Holt, U.S.A.)
Gilbert Parker
(Heinemann, £ng. : and
Harper, U.S.A.)
Mrs. Hugh Fraser
(Methuen)
James F. Cobb
(Wells Gardner)
English village life in the
second quarter of the Nine-
teenth Century (the late
Thirties).
East Anglian life in the
middle of the Nineteenth
Century.
Victorian life and manneis.
Rural England, London, and
Cairo, m mid-Nineteenlii
Century.
Rome in the early period of
Pope Pius IX.
Life in a Flemish vills^e, 1852.
R. Bruce
(J. Long)
Kate Douglas Wiggin
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Houghton, Mifflin,
U.S.A.)
Lewis B. Miller
(Dana Estes & Co.)
(Harper, Eng. ; and
Bobbs-Men^l, U.S.A.)
Jerome Hart
(A. C. McClurg & Co.)
South Australian Bush life ia
tiie Fifties.
New England village Ufe,
mid-Nineteenth Century.
The Mississippi Valley, mid-
Nineteenth Century ; river
life (raft voyage, &c.).
EdwardUfi&ngtonValentine Central Pennsylvania in
1856 : the Quakers, &c.
California in the Fifties.
« The fiist, and probably the best, of the author's vivid romances.
SUPPLEMENT.
419
SEHI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— cotUinued.
TITLBOFBOOX.
*T&B Blazbd Tbail
*Thr Rivbkman
*Thb Twms of Barnb-
OAT
Ite Wat ov a Um»
Tbs Nswbix For-
TUNB
WS3TOVBR OF WANA-
*^CB Kbmtuckiaivs
Qp
AUTHOR AND FUBLISHBR.
SUBJECT.
Tbm Glory of His
COUMTSY
aEVBLYN Byrd
rubl durkbb,
BCastbr of Mbn
COMSTANCB T^IBSCOT
LovB IS TBB Sum of
It All
Stewart Edward White
(Constable, Eng. ; and
McQnre. U.S.A.)
F. Hopkinson Smith
(Hodder, Eng. ; and
Scribner, U.S.A.)
Emerson Hough
(The Outing Publishing
Co., New York)
Mansfield Brooks
(J. Lane)
G. Cary Eggleston
(Lothrop,Lee & Shepard)
J. BaU Naylor
(C. M. Clark)
" Biax Adder "
(Ward, Lock, Eng. ; and
J. C. Winston. U.S.A.)
Frederick Landis
(Scribner)
G. Cary Eggleston
(Lothrop)
G. Waldo Browne
(Badger, Boston,U.S.A.)
S. Weir Mitchell
(Century Co.)
G. Cary Eggleston
(Lotiuop)
Pioneer life in the Eastern
portion of Michigan, mid-
Nineteenth Century.
Fisher life on the New Jersey
shore, in mid-Nsaeteenta
Century.
Virginia, the Platte, ftc, in
Ae Fifties and Shcties:
the Western Movement
(Indians).
New England life before the
Civil War.
Virginia, mid-Nineteenth
Century, before the Civil
War.
Ohio in the early Sixties :
domestic scenes apart from
the War.
Eastern Pennsylvania, 1861-
62 : the " Friends " during
the Civil War.
Indiana village life in the
American Civil War period.
Virginia in the later period of
&e CivU War.
New Hampshire life at the
end of the Civil War.
The South just after the
American Civil War.
The Reconstruction period in
Virginia.
« This novel is the tUrd vohuM in the Ci9a Wuf Smss, of which " Dorothy Soath *' and '* The
Mast«r of Wadock " (we p. 127) w«ce the Ant two volumes.
420
SUPPLEMENT.
SEMI-HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES— conHtuted.
TITLE OF BOOK.
*Thb Prince of Lis-
NOVBR
♦When Wb Were
Boys
AUTHOR AND PUBLISHER.
Grace Rhys
(Methuen)
William O'Brien
(Longmans)
SUBJECT.
Married in India Constance Howell
i (J. Onseley)
Irelan^f in the early Sixties.
The Fenian movement (Ire-
land) about 1866-67.
An Anglo-Indian tale of the
♦Fire, Snow and
Water. Juv.
Raw Gold
£. S.Ellis
(Cassell, £ng. ;
Winston. U.S.A.)
and
♦Growth
Bertrand W. Sinclair
(Geo. W. Dillingham)
•* Graham Travers "
(Constable, Eng. ; and
Holt. U.S.A.)
Hudson Bay Territory duiing
the Company's latter days,
Z860-70.
Adventures in N. W. America,
1874.
Divinity students in Edin-
bnxjgh, and the mid- Vic-
torian intellectual influ-
ences.
NOTES ON JUVENILE LITERATURE
'' My own view is that English History should be an inheritance
of childhood ; that its legends and its romance should grow into
our thoughts from very earl)r years, and should expand themselves
with the expansion of our minds ; that we should reel History and
dream of it rather than learn it as a lesson. **
C /?. Z. Fletcher in the Preface to his
" Introductory History of England:'
NOTES ON JUVENILE LITERATURE.
Besides the many novels and tales which make appeal to
the young as Historical Fiction proper, there are certain
books of the *' true story/' l^endary, and semi-fictional
type, which may be recommended for children's reading.
"The Red Book of Heroes," and other volomes in
Mr. Andrew Tung's series of story-books (Longmans ft Co.),
are well-known examples of the kind. Another deservedly
popular series is that entitled. Told through the Ages
(George G. Harrap, Eng. ; and D. C. Heath, U.S.A.) ;
I woidd specially mention the volume, ** Britain Long Ago,
stories from Old English and Celtic Sources. Retold by
E. M. Wilmot-Buxton," which contains stories of King
Alfred, King Arthur, ftc, based on Saxon Chronicles and
Celtic poems — ^Ireland, Wales, and England. The same
publishers have brought out several larger volumes in their
admirable " Myths " series, embodying Gredc, Roman,
Norse, British, and Mediaeval l^ends; again, in their
recently pubHshed " The High Deeds of Finn " (T. W.
RoUeston), and in " Cuchulain the Hound of Ulster "
(Eleanor Hull), the early Irish myths are delightfully
presented. An excellent little book of semi-historic and
mythical stories is " Tales from Chaucer," retold by
J. Walker McSpadden in the series. All Time Tales
(George G. Harrap, Eng. ; and D. C. Heath, U.S. A.).
Similarly, Messrs. T. C. ft E. C. Jack have issued a number
424 SUPPLEMENT.
of dainty little story-books based on Chaucer, &c., in their
Told to the Children Series ; the same firm have published a
series of Famous Historical Romances, retold for children
by Alice F. Jackson (" Hereward the Wake," " The Tower
of London," " The Last of the Barons," " Westward Ho ! "
&c.) ; while in The Children's ScoU Series (T. C. & E. C.
Jack), Miss Jackson has retold several of Scott's novels.
These last-named series are also pubUshed in America by
Messxs. Jacobs & Co., Philadelphia. Another series of
retold passages from the Waverley Novels has been
published by A. & C. Black, Eng., and Macmillan, U.S.A.,
under the title, " Red Cap Tales from Scott, stolen from
the Treasure Chest of the Wizard of the North," by S. R.
Crockett ("Waverley," "Guy Mannering," " Ivanhoe,"
" Queatin Durward," &c.). A handsome volume, delight-
fully illustrated by Hugh Thomson, is "Tales of the
Canterbury Pilgrims," retold from Chaucer and other
writers, by F. J. Harvey Darton (Wells Gardner) ; and
Henry Newbolt's " Stories from Froissart " (Wells Gardner)
is another attractive book, illustrated by Gordon Browne.
Besides the many interesting romances of Professor A. J.
Church, which appear in my lists, there are several books
by the same writer which may be recommended as specially
good examples of the true story, semi-fictional, and mythical
t3rpe ; they illustrate — as the title in each case sufficiently
indicates — ancient Greek and Roman life and tradition ;
Charlemagne ; the Crusades ; &c. Messrs. Seeley are
the publishers. The same English firm, and Messrs.
Lippincott, U.S.A., have recently issued "A Knight
Errant and his Doughty Deeds : the story of Amadis of
Gaul," edited by N. J. Davidson. Ireland in the Heroic
period is well depicted in Standish O'Grady's " Gates of
the North " (Sealy, Bryers & Walker, new edition, 1908).
SUPPLEMENT. 425
Some thrilling short romances of Anglo-Saxon, Norman,
and later Britain^ as well as of mediaeval and modem Europe,
are presented in Mr. Douglas Stedman's volume, " For
Love and Honour " (T. Nelson & Sons). Excellent semi-
fictional tales dealing with the Days of Alfred, of William
the Conqueror, of Queen Elizabeth, and of the late Queen
Victoria, are to be found in Eva March Tappan's Makers of
England Series (Hutchinson, Eng. ; and Lothrop, U.S.A.)-
In Methuen & Co/s Stories from Old Romance, edited by
E. M. Wilmot-Buxton, the " romantic epics " of various
countries (France^ Italy, &c.) are well represented. I
have already alluded (see p. 343) to Mr. G. P. Upton's
biographical sketches in Life Stories for Young People
(A. C. McClurg & Co., U.S.A.). For children of 7 to 9,
Hugh Laurence's small volume, '' Tales of an Old Yew Tree "
(Blackie), ofiers simple stories of British Histoiy . A delight-
ful little book — coveriog many times and peoples — ^is Miss
Mabel Quiller-Couch's "Children in History" (Frowde
and Hodder's Oxford History Readers).
So far I have been alluding, especially, to tales of
European and British History. For those who desire to
find illustration of American History, Harper's Strange
Stories Series may be recommended; there are four
volumes in this series, dealing respectively with Colonial
Days, the Revolution^ the War of 1812, and the Civil War —
the stories being written by such favourite authors as
Howard Pyle, M. E. Seawell, &c. Again, a large selection
is offered in the Civil War, Colonial, and Indian volumes
published by the Century Company in their Stories retold
from St. Nicholas; in this same series there are further
volumes dealing with General History and Legend (Greece,
Rome, &c.). Studies of such American heroes as George
Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Lafayette, Lincoln, &c
426 SUPPLEMENT.
will be found in Elbridge S. Brooks's The True Story
Series (Lothrop). Turning, for a moment, to a series in
which fiction laiigely predominates, the numerous volumes
in The Boys of Liberty Library (David McKay, Philadelphia)
cover the American Revolution, the French and Indian
Wars, and the Naval Fights of 1812 ; they are written by
John De Morgan, T. C. Harbaugh, and others. In the
volume entitled, "Letters from Colonial Children," by
Eva March Tappan (Houghton, MifHin & Co.), eariy
American Colonial periods are illustrated through the
medium of letters supposed to have been written from the
Colonies to friends in the Old World. For more exact
guidance in the matter of American History-books, I
would refer inquirers to the section headed " Historical
Stories for the Elementary School *' in '* A Bibliography of
History for Schools and Libraries: with descriptive and
critical annotations," by Charles M. Andrews, Ph.D.,
Professor of History in the Johns Hopkins University;
J. Montgomery Gambrill ; and Lida Lee Tall. This excellent
work has been published recently by Longmans & Co.,
New York, ''under the auspices of the Association of
History Teachers of the Middle States and Maryland."
Going to yet another department of Juvenile illustration,
well-selected passages from Bede, Froissart, Scott, Browning,
Defoe, &c., may be found in " Dramatic Scenes from
History," edited by Faimy Johnson (E. Arnold, 1908) :
and this brings me to books of historical poetry, sonub of
which I have recommended elsewhere {vide p. 163). Two
specially attractive volumes are, "Poetry of Empire:
Nineteen Centuries of British History," edited by John
and Jean Lang, with Sixteen Illustrations in colour by
W. Rainey (T. C. & E. C. Jack, 1910) ; and " Poems of
American History," edited by Burton E. Stevenson
SUPPLEMENT. 4^7
(Houghton, MifOin & Co., 1908). The following books
are mnch smaller, but decidedly useful : " English History
in Verse," edited by Ernest Pertwee (Routledge, Eng. ;
and Dutton, U.S.A., 1906) ; ** Ballads and Poems illus-
trating English History," edited by F. Sidgwick (Cam-
bridge University Press, 1907) ; and " A Book of Poetry
illustrative of English History," edited by G. Dowse
(Macmillan, 1908), in three parts, viz. (i) a.d. 61-1485 ;
(2) The Tudors and Stuarts ; (3) The Hanoverian Dynasty.
To Miss Josephine Smith's lists of Poetry illustrating
English History, I draw my readers' attention elsewhere
(see Bibliography, p. 434). Lastly, I may mention that
The School World (Macmillan) for March, 1909, has an
interesting article by Miss Fanny Johnson on '^ School
Plaj^," giving lists of Historical and Romantic Plays
suitable for young folk ; the same number of this magaadne,
it is worth noting, contains some carefully balanced remarks
on "Historical Story Books," by Professor F. J. C.
Heamshaw.
Having thus found myself once more in the region of
Prose, it is, perhaps, fitting that I should indicate, at the
very end of this section, two volumes of short stories which,
seeing that they are hardly to be classed with any of the
various books here recommended, ought to be considered
apart : I allude to Rudyard Kipling's '' Puck of Pook's
Hill," and the sequel, " Rewards and Fairies " (Macmillan,
Eng. ; and Doubleday, U.S. A.). The tales comprised in
these volumes furnish an original blend of fairy tale and
history, and youthful readers will find therein much enter-
taining reflection of ancient, mediaeval, and more recent
life: Romans (Britain), Picts, Saxons, Normans, Danes,
English, French, Americans — ^all flit across Mr. Kipling's
pages.
BIBLIOGRAPHY,
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Besides the list already given (pp. 167-174) of books and
articles. Sec, dealing with Historical Fiction, I set down
here a few of the more interesting contributions to the
subject, which have appeared in the seven years beginning
1904.
Article on " Afanrns J6kai and the Historical Novel/' by H. W. V.
Temperley, in The Contemporary RbvUw for July» 1904 ; also
appears in The Living Age (Boston, U.S.A.) of August 13,
X904.
Article on " Bdr. Stanley Weyman's Novels " in The Church Quarterly
Review for January, 1905.
[Contains a strong plea for Historical Romance in the opening
sections.]
Chapter V. ("The Waveiley Novels"), Chapter VI. ("Scott's
Greatness"), and Chapter XIII. ("Charles Reade") in
" The Makers of English Fiction," by W. J. Dawson (Hodder
& Stoughton, £ng. ; and Revdl, U.S. A.).
[Some acute remarks on Historical Romance are to be found
in each of the three chapters q>ecified above.]
The Lists of Fiction dealing with Nelson and his times, compiled by
James Hooper, Jonathan Nield, and others in Notes atid
Queries, Tenth Series, Vol. III. (January — June, 1905)
pp. 26, 77, 1x6, and 294.
Dr. Richard Gametf s Introduction in the new edition of " The
Household of Sir Thomas More," by Anne Manning (De La
More Press, 1905).
[A well-balanced estinmte of the Historical Novel by one whose
knowledge and literary judgment were reaUy wonderful. This
short essay has a special value as embodying some of a great scholar's
reflections at the end of his long life.]
432 SUPPLEMENT.
The second edition, " revised and greatly enlarged/' of H. Coorthope
Bowen's " Descriptive Catalogue of Historical Novels and
Tales. For the Use of School Libraries and Teachers of
History" (Stanford. 1905).
[It is a great pity that, in this later edition of his Catalogue,
Mr. Bowen — ^who was a pioneer in his own line of Bibliography —
did not do more to improve his original work (published 1882 :
vide p. 168 of this volume). Apparently ignoring what had been
done by others, he allowed glaring mistakes to remain, and his lists,
as they now stand, are most inaccurate as well as most incomplete.
Several well-known romances are rs-enUred under their sub-HUes as
separate books I Indeed, there can have been no serious attempt
at verification in numerous cases.]
" History in Fiction : a Guide to the Best Historical Romances,
Sagas, Novels, and Tales," by Ernest A. Baker. Vol. I.
English Fiction ; Vol. II. American and Foreign Fiction
(Routledge, Eng. ; and Dutton, U.S.A., 1907).
[The author's wide reputation is well sustained by these really
excellent lists, which for the most part are fully annotated, and
conveniently arranged under Counmes. Perhaps it would have
been better if the entry of exact daUs had onl^ been attempted where
a book was known at first-hand. Besides Historical Fiction proper,
some sevenly to eighty volumes of Sagas and Mediaeval Romances
are included : to the student such an addition must prove very
useful. On the other hand, it is doubtful whether the value of
Dr. Baker's work is really enhanced by the inclusion of such barely
semi-historic escamples as the fourteen novels of Charles Dickens
which appear, with brief comment, on p. 117 (Vol. I.). Turning
from Novels to Juvenile Tales, these Usts seem to me far less satis-
factory on that side : the notes, besides being often meagre, are not
always reliable, while a great many of the best tales — ^published
before " History in Fiction " was compiled— do not appear at all.
A good feature in each volume is the Index.]
Article on " The Growth of the Historical Novel," by Rowland E.
Prothero, in The Quarterly Review for January, 1907.
[A very valuable contribution. The origin and growth of
Historical Fiction are dealt with at considerable length.]
The essay on " A Historical Romance " in John Morley's " Miscel-
lanies, 4th Series" (MacmiUan & Co., 1908)..
SUPPLEMENT. 433
[Some extremely interesting remarks on Historical Romance
injjpienX, as well as on the particular book — Mi, Frederic Harrison's
" llieophano " — ^which occasioned the essay. Appeared first in
Tki Ntnsteenth Century for October, 1904.]
Chapter VI. (" Background ") in " The Technique of the Novel."
by Charles F. Home, Assistant Professor of English in the
College of New York City (Harper & Brothers, 1908).
TThere is a well-wrttten section on " The Historical Novel,'
in ue chapter above-mentioned. I quote one passage : " Historic
novels may do fax more for history than make it ' pleasant medicine.'
They may vivify, they may interpret it, as the sooer historian never
can."]
Chapter VI. (" Modem Romanticism : Scott ") in " Masters of the
English Novd," by Richard Burton, Professor of Knglish
Literature in the University of Minnesota (George Bell A Sons,
Eng. ; and Henry Holt & Co., U.S.A., 1909).
[A fair and thoroughly sane estimate of Historical Romance,
and of the trae relation between " the story of tmth and the story
of poetry.'T
The chapter on " Scott and Romanticism " in Part II. of " A
History of Story-telling." by Arthur Ransome (T. C. and
E. C. Jack, Eng. ; and F. A. Stokes & Co., U.S.A., 1909).
[Vigorously written, and distinctly illuminating.]
The " Introduction," by Arthur James Grant, Professor of History
in the University of Leeds, in the volume of " Scott " selec*
tions which forms one of the Masters of Literature Series
(George Bell ft Sons, 1909).
[Exceedingly interesting and instructive.]
The sections on " Setting in Historical Fiction " and " The Question
of Anachronism" in Chapter IV. ("The Study of Prose
Fiction ") of William H. Hudson's " Introduction to the
Study of Literature " (George G. Harrap ft Co., Eng. ; and
D. C. Heath, U.SJ^., i9io).
[Brief, but suggestive.]
2 F
434 SUPPLEMENT.
The section ob " Creative Art : Prose Fiction " in " The Literature
of the Victorian Era/' by Hugh Walker, LL.D., Professor
of English in St. David's College, Lampeter (Cambridge
University Press, Eng. ; and G. P. Patnam's Sons, U.S.A.»
1910).
[Especially interesting and noteworthy, for readers of Historical
Romance, are the remarks on Scott and his imitators (pp. 619-621) ;
those on Thackeray (pp. 704-706) ; those on Reade (pp. 763-765) ;
and those on the Later Fiction (pp. 753*755). J
The articles on " A Novel-Reader's Coarse of English History."
by Ernest Baker, M.A., DXit., appearing in T. P,'s Weekly*
June 24, and July 8, 1910.
[An interesting attempt to point out the more important romances
dealing with the various English epochs.]
Article on " The Importance of the Historical Novel," by J. F.
Harris, in The Journal of Education for August, 1910.
[A forcible plea for the uses of Imaginative literature in the
training of youtiii.]
The paragraphs of " Illustrative Material " {Prose and Poetry),
contributed by Miss Josephine C. Smith of Cincinnati Uni-
versity, in " Reading References for F.ngli«h History," by
Henry Lewin Cannon, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of History,
Leland Stanford Junior University (Ginn & Co., Eng. and
U.S.A., 1910).
[The lists of Historical Fiction in this work are neither complete
nor reliable : they are largely based on previous bibliographies of
the subject, and repeat man^ inaccuracies. On the other hand.
Miss Smith's lists of Poetry illustrating English History, will be
found decidedly useful.]
The annotated lists of " Historical Novels " and " Stories of Irish
Life in the Past," in " A Readers' Guide to Irish Fiction,"
by Stephen J. Brown, S.J. (Longmans & Co., Eng. and U.S. A.,
1910).
[Wonderfully comprehensive lists of novels and tales which in
some way illustrate Irish life and history. The descriptive notes —
often of considerable length — are interesting, and commendably
free from bias. NaturaUv, some of the romances included can hardly
attract the non-Irish reader ; on the other hand, a few tales of general
interest might still be added. The book contains useful notes on
authors.]
INDEX
of authors and titles.
(Supplement.)
INDEX OF AUTHORS AND TITLES
(Supplement).
NoTB. — The Birth and Death dates of Authors have been given where
possible. It must be noted that the book dates refer to
original publication ; a great many of the older books (espe-
cially those which appeal to juvenile readers) have been
brought out in new form within the last year or two. Transla-
tion dates are ignored, but in the case of one or two foreign
books I have had to be content with the approximate date of
issue ; the latter remark applies also to a few mid-Nineteenth
Century English volumes. It seems almost superfluous to
remind readers that the Indexes which follow, have rtfermtee
to the Supplement only ; when consulting the earlier lists,
see pp. 177-235.
" A.L.O.E." (See Tucker. C. M.)
Abbott, Dr. Edwin A., b. 1838.
Silanus the Christian (1906), 248.
Adam, PftuL
La Force (1899), 377.
L'Enfant d'Austerlitz (1902), 377.
Adams, Rev. H. C.
The Orphan of Evesham (1877), 274.
Bdark's Wedding (1877), 282.
The White Rose of Lynden (1877), 286.
The Prior's Ward (1877), 298.
In the Fifteen (1893), 338.
For James or George (1886), 342.
Adams, T. William.
Shibusawa (1906). 399.
ADDlsoN^ulia De Wolf.
Florestane the Troubadour (1903), 274.
" Adblbr, Max." (See Clark, C. H.)
Adbsbr, a., b. 1855.
Le Drapeau ou la Foi ? (1908), 399.
438 SUPPLEMENT.
Alcock, Deborah.
Crashed Yet Conquering (1891). 282.
The Roman Students (1883), 284.
Doctor Adrian (1897), 302.
The King's Service (1886), 313.
The Cross and the Crown (1886), 327.
Done and Dared in Old France (1907), 335.
The Czar (1882), 377.
Albxandbr, Eleanor.
The Lady of the Well (1906). 271.
Altshblbr, Joseph A., b. 1862.
The Wilderness Road (1901), 370.
In Circling Camps (1900), 395.
The Horsemen of the Plsdns (191 o), 402.
The Last of the Chiefs (1909), 402.
The Young Trailers (1907). 415.
The Forest Runners (1908), 415.
The Free Rangers (1909), 4x5.
The Riflemen of the Ohio (1910), 415.
Anderson, A. J.
Romance of Fra Filippo Lippi (Romance of a Friar and a
Nun) (1909), 284.
Andrews, Marion.
Sir Gu/s Trust (1906). 368.
Cousin Isabel (1892), 332.
Sylvia's Romance (1900), 338.
The Child of the Lighthouse (1898). 372.
Andrbysv, Leonid N., b. 1871.
Judas Iscariot (1907), 244.
Ben Tobit (1906), 244.
Eleazar (1906), 244.
Anonymous.
Brave Dame Mary (1873), 260.
The Last Days of John Hus (1909), 282.
The Separatist (1906), 310.
That Master of Ours (i9o8)» 342.
Hartley House, Calcutta (1789), 353.
Pandurang H^ (1826), 374.
The Life and Adventures of Lady Anne (1823), 415.
Ardagh, W. M.
The Magada (1910), 2S8.
" Ardbn, Henley I." (See Knight, Henrietta.)
AsHTON, Mark.
Jezebel's Husband (Azalim) (1904), 240.
Athbrton, Gertrude.
Rezanov (1906), 376.
The Doomswoman (1895), 417.
SUPPLEMENT. 439
Athbrton, Gertrade— con/inutfi.
Tlie Gorgeous Isle (1908), 417.
Austin, lira. Mary Hunter.
Isidro (1905), 417.
AUVRAY, R.
Les Gens d'^pinal (1891). 283.
AvELiNG, Frands.
Amoul the Englishman (1908), 273.
AvBRY, Harold, b. 1867.
Firelock and Steel (1907), 382.
With Wellington to Waterloo (1901), 383.
Captain Swing (1908), 386.
Ayscough, John, b. 1858.
San Celestino (1909), 274.
Dromina (1909), 386.
Bachbixbr, Irving, b. 1859.
VergiUus (1904), 242.
Badrick, Frederick C.
The Golden Buckle (1892), 324.
Peckover's Mill (1890), 342.
Starwood Hall (1888), 352.
King's Ferry (1891), 415.
Bakblktn, Henry.
On the Forgotten Road (1909), 270.
Bailsy, H. C, b. 1878.
Raoul, Gentleman of Fortune (1907), 303.
Colonel Stow (Colonel Greatheart) (1908), 316.
Beaujeu (1903), 328.
Storm and Treasure (1910), 364.
The God of Clay (1908), 365.
Springtime (Under Castle Walls) (1907), 410.
Bailly, Auguste.
The Divine Minstrels (1908). 271.
Baxbr, Mrs. Cornelia, b. 1855.
The Court Jester (1906), 288.
The Queen's Page (1905), 295.
Bakbr, Emily.
Peggy Gainsborough (1909), 346.
Baxbr, H. Barton.
For the Honour of His House (1906), 330.
Bangs, Ella M.
The King's Mark (1908), 355.
Banks, Idra. G. Linnaeus, 1821-97.
God's Providence House (1865), 368.
440 SUPPLEMENT.
Barham, a. M.
The Namesake of the King (1907), 268.
Barnes, Annie M.
A Lass of Dorchester (1904), 338.
The Lanrel Token (1904), 338.
Little Betty Blew (1903), 338.
Little Lady at the Fall of Quebec (1909) , 348.
Barnes, James, b. 1866.
Midshipman Farragnt (1902), 379.
A Loyal Traitor (1897), 379-
For King or Country (1896), 379.
Barnett, J.
rte Prince's Valet (1907), 349.
Bare, Amelia £., b. 1831.
The House on Cherry Street (1909), 341.
Bemicia (1895), 346*
The Strawberry Handkerchief (1908), 349.
The Belle of Bowling Green (1904), 381.
Barr, Robert, b. 1850.
Cardillac (1909), 308.
The Swordmaker (1910), 4x0.
Barreta, Enrique.
La Gloire de Don Ramire {c, 1908), 306.
Barrett, Frank, b. 1848.
The Obliging Husband (1907), 325.
Perfidious Lydia (1910), 416,
Barrjngton, Michael.
The Lady of Tripoli (1910), 265.
The Knight of the Golden Sword (1909)* 332.
The Reminiscences of Sir Barrington Beaumont (i9<)4)» 354<
The King's Fool (1904), 409.
Barstow, Mrs. Montagu.
The Tangled Skein (In Mary's Reign )(I907), 297.
The Nest of the Sparrowhawk (1909)1 321.
Beau Brocade (1908), 344.
Petticoat Government (Petticoat Rule) (1910), 351.
The Scarlet Pimpernel (1905), 362
I Will Repay (1906), 362.
The Elusive' Pimpernel (1908), 362.
By the Gods Beloved (The Gates of Kamt) (1905), 408.
Bartram, George.
The Longshoremen (1903), 416.
Bassbtt, Mrs. Mary E. Stone.
The Little Green Door (1905). 311.
Batchelor, D. O.
The Unstrung Bow (19x0), 291.
■n
SUPPLEMENT. 441
Batuxiat, Marcel.
La Vendte aux Genets (1908), 364.
Baxter, J. D.
The Meeting of the Ways (1908), 351 .
Bbalx, Anne.
Rose Mervyn (1905), 388.
Bbattie, W. B.
The Were-Wolf (1910), 322.
BxcK. William.
Hawkwood the Brave (1910), 278.
Bbddos, David M.
The Honour of Henri de Valois (1905), 386.
Bbddobs, Captein Willoughby.
A Son of Ashnr (1905), 240.
Bbmnbt, Robert Ames, b. 1870.
For the White Christ (1905), 258.
A Volunteer with Pike (1909), 375.
BsNNBTT, Louie.
A Prisoner of His Word (1908), 370.
Benson, Robert Hugh, b. 1871.
The History of Richard Raynal (X906)» 285.
The King's Achievement (1905), 293.
The Queen's Tragedy (1906), 297.
By What Authonty (1904), 298.
*' Berthbsoy, Jean." (See La Barillier.)
Bertz, £.
The French Prisoners {c, x88o), 400.
Besant, Sir Walter, 1836-1901.
A Fountain S^ed (1897), 345.
The Lady of Lynn (190X), 412.
No Other Way (1902), 412.
Besant, Sir Walter, and James Rice, 1843-82.
'Twas in Trafalgar's Bay, &c. (1879) :—
Le Chien D'Or, 33^.
'Twas in Tralalga^s Bay, 371.
Bettbsworth, W. a.
Two Little Cavaliers (1907), 316.
Bbvan, Tom.
A Hero in Wolf-Skin (1904). 248.
The Fen Robbers (1907). 279.
Red Dickon, the Outlaw (1906), 279.
Held by Rebels (1906), 285.
The War God and the Brown Maiden (1904), 291.
The Chancellor's Spy (1909), 292.
Sea Dogs All (1908), 298.
The " Grey Fox " of Holland (1908), 303.
A Trooper of the Finns (1905), 312.
442 SUPPLEMENT.
Bevan, Tom — conHnued,
The Goldsmith of Chepe (190S), 324.
Bidder, Maiy (afterwards Porter).
Westminster Cloisters (1887), 268.
Biggs, A. H.
The Marquis' Heir (1909), 361.
Billot, Augnstin.
Le Roman d'une Versaillaise (1909), 362.
Bird, R.
Jesus the Carpenter of Nazareth (1899), 243.
" Birmingham, George A" (Rev. J. O. Hannay).
The Northern Iron (1907), 37a.
Black, Clementina.
Caroline (1908), 413.
Black, Ladbroke, and Robert Lynd.
The Blantle of the Emperor (i907)< 388.
Blake, M. M.
The Glory and Sorrow of Norwich (1899}, 276.
BussETT, Nellie K.
Beggars' Luck (1903), 322.
The Silver Key (1905), 326.
Blundell, Mrs.
Noblesse Oblige (1909), 365.
Blvth. James.
The King's Guerdon (1906), 323.
A Hazardous Wooing (1907), 372.
A Bid for Loyalty (1909), 400.
Bodkin, M. McDonnell, b. 1850.
Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1896), 369-
True Man and Traitor (1910), 374.
BoGUE, Herbert E.
Dareford (1907), 393.
Bone, Florence.
A Rose of York (1910), 317.
The Morning of To-day (1907), 346.
Bonner, Gexaldine.
The Emigrant Trail (1910), 391 .
The Pioneer (1905), 402.
BouRGES, l^l^mir, b. 1852.
Sous la Hache (1885), 364.
BouvET, Marguerite.
Clotilde (1908), 375.
" BowEN, Marjorie." (See Campbell, G. V.)
BowxsR, Alfred.
Armadin (1908), 265.
Bowles, Emily.
Auriel Selwode (1908), 337.
SUPPLEMENT. 443
BoYLX, Virginia Frazer.
Serena (1905), 394-
BoYLXS, Kate and Virgil.
The Spirit Trail (xgio), 402.
Braddon, M. £. (Mrs. Maxwell) » b. 1837.
The Infidel (1900), 346,
Bradlby, S. C.
Jesus of Nazareth (1908), 243.
Brady, C^mis Townsend, b. 1861.
llittle France (The Quiberon Touch) (1909), 348.
The Blue Ocean's Daughter (1907), 360.
My Lady's Slip]^ (i905)* 360.
The Two Captains (1905), 366.
The Adventures of Lady Susan (1908), 368;
A Midshmman in the I^cific (1904). 380.
In the Wasp's Nest (1902), 380.
The Patriots of the South (The Patriots) (1906), 394.
On the Old Kearsage (1909), 395.
A Little Traitor to the South (1904), 396.
Brains, Sheila £.
The Adventures of Humfrey Chatteris (1902), 273
Bramston, Mary.
The King's Daughters (1907), 240.
The Failure of a Hero (1909), 301.
The Thorn Fortress (1879), 31 3.
The Story of a Cat and a Cake (1896), 313.
The Adventures of Denis (1892), 342.
Dangerous Jewels (1890). 364.
Brand, Captain Jack.
By Wild Waves Tossed (1908), 380.
" Brandanb, John."
My Lady of Aros (1910), 346.
Bray, Birs. Anna Eliza, 1790-1883.
Henry De Pomeroy (1842), 269.
De Foix (1826), 279.
Courtenay of Wahreddon (1844), 315.
Trelawny of Trelawne (1837), 328.
Hartland Forest (1871), 345.
Brebnbr, Percy James, b. 1864.
The Brown Mask (1910), 329%
A Gentleman of Virginia (1910), 363.
A Royal Ward (i909)» 384.
Brereton, Captain F. S., b. 1872.
Roger the Bold (1906), 291.
A Knight of St. John (1906), 303.
How C4inada Was Won (1908), 347.
Jones of the 64th (1907), 374;
444 SUPPLEMENT.
Bebxbton, Captain F. S. — conHnued,
Indian and Scout (1910), ^gu
A Hero of Lucknow (1905), 392.
A Hero of Sedan (1909), ^00.
With Woladey to Kumasi (1908), 402.
With Shield and Assegai (1900), 403.
With Roberts to Candahar (1907), 403.
Brittbn, Frank Curzon.
Sir Roland Preederoy (1909), 286.
Bromby, Charles H.
AUdbiades (1905), 241.
Brookfibld, Frances M.
A Friar Observant (1909), 293.
My Lord of Essex (1907), 301.
Brooks, Elbridge S., 1846-1902.
Chivalric Days (1886) : —
The Favored of Baal, 242.
The Gage of a Princess, 250.
The Tell-Tale Foot, 257.
The Cloister of the Seven Gates, 280.
Story of the Field of the Qoth of Gold. 295.
Monsieur the Captain of the Caravel, 324.
The Little Lord of the Manor, 359.
A Son of Issachar (1890), 244.
Historic Boys (1885) :—
Marcus of Rome. 248.
Brian of Munster, 260.
Olaf of Norway, 261;
William of Normandy, 262.
Baldwin of Jerusalem, 265.
Frederick of Hohenstaufen, 270.
Harry of Monmouth, 281.
Giovanni of Florence, 289.
Ixtlil' of Tezcuco, 291.
Louis of Bourbon, 322.
Charles of Sweden, 335.
Van Rensselaer of Rensselaerswyck, 358.
In Leisler's Times (1886), 333.
Brooks, Mansfield.
The NewcU Fortune (1906), 419.
Brown, Katharine H.
Diane (1904), 393.
Brownb, G. Waldo.
With Rogers' Rangers (1906), 347.
Rud Durkee, Master of Men (1910), 419.
Brucb, R.
Benbonuna (1904), 418.
SUPPLEMENT. 445
Buchanan, Thomi)8on, b. 1877.
Judith Triumphant (1905), 240.
Buck, Irving Ashby.
Cleburne and His Command (1909), 396.
BucKLBY, R. Wallace.
The Last o< the Houghtons (1908), 396.
BuzxEN, Frank T., b. 1857.
Sea Puritans (1904), 321.
BUftCHBLL, S. H.
The Prisoner of Carisbrooke (1904), 314.
The Mistress of the Robes (1905), 337.
BuRNHAM, Hampden.
Marcelle (1905). 334*
Burton, J. Bloundelle, b. 1850.
The King's Mignon (1909), 305.
Within Four Walls (1909). 308.
Knighthood's Flower (1906), 312.
Traitor and True (1906), 327.
The Sword of Gideon (1905), 336.
The Last of Her Race (1908), 337.
The Land of Bondage (1905), 340,
A Fair Bfartyr (1910), 350.
The Year One (1901), 363.
A Woman from 'Oie Sea (1907), 364.
BuTCHSR, Charles H., D.D.
The Oriflamme in Egypt (1905), 273.
BuTTBRWORTH, Hesekiah.
In the Days of Jefferson (1900), 355.
In the Boyhood of Lincoln (1892), 386.
Byatt, H.
The Testament of Judas (Z909)> 244*
Cable, George W., b. 1844.
Kincaid's Battery (1908), 394.
Cahun, Lton.
Hassan le Janissaire (1891), 290.
Cains, O. V.
The Coming of Navarre (1909), 305'.
Sons of Victory (1904), 366*
Calandra, Edoardo, b. 1852.
Juliette (1909). 377-
Campbell, A. Godric.
Fleur-de-Camp (1905), 377.
Campbell, GabrieUe Vere.
The Sword Decides (1908), 277.
446 SUPPLEMENT.
CAMPBBLLy GabrieUe yere~~cotUinued,
The Viper of Milan (1906), 278.
The Leopard and the Lily (1909)1 2S4,
I Will Maintain (19x0), 326.
Defender of the Faith (191 1), 326.
The Glen o' Weeping (The Master of Stair) (1907), 332.
Black Magic (1909), 409.
Campbell, Wilfrid.
Ian of the Orcades (1906), 280.
A Beautiful Rebd (1909), 380.
Canfield, C. L.
The City of Six (1910), 391.
Capbs, Bernard.
Historical Vignettes (1910) : —
Fair Rosamond, 267.
Margaret of Anjou, 285s
The Prior of St. Come. 287.
The Queen's Nurse, 293.
Queen Elizabeth, 307.
The King's Champion, 333.
Louis XIV., 336.
Captain Macartney, 337.
KingCoUey, 340.
Geoige I., 340.
The Love Story of St. Bel (1909), 278.
A Jay of Italy (Bembo) (1905), 287.
Jemmy Abercraw (1910), 346.
A Rogue's Tragedy (1906), 361.
The Extraordinary Confessions of Diana Please (1904), 367.
Carsy, Wymond.
Number One Hundred and One (1906), 350.
Carling, John R.
The Doomed City (1910), 246.
By Neva's Waters (1908), 376.
Carpentbr, Edward Childs.
The Code of Victor Jallot (1907), 375.
Captain Courtesy (1906), 390.
Carr, Kent.
The Boy Bondsman (19x0), 339.
Carr, M. E.
A Knight of Poland (Z9X0), 393.
Carr, Sarah Pratt
The Iron Way (1907), 398.
Carrbl, F.
Marcus and Faustina (1904), 248.
Carter, Miss J. M.
Diana Polwarth (1904), 320.
SUPPLEMENT. 447
Caspari, Carl Hdnrich.
The Schoolmaster and His Son (c, 1855), 313.
Castle, Agnes and Egerton.
Flower o' the Orange, &c. (1908) : —
My Rapier and My Daughter, 301.
Flower o' the Orange, 384.
My Merry Rockhnrst (1907), 323.
Incomparable Bellairs (1904), 345.
If Youth Bat Knew (1906), 381.
Wroth (1908), 384.
French Nan (1905), 413.
Castle, Egerton, b. 1858.
The Light of Scarthey (1895), 378.
Cathbrwood, Mrs. Mary H., 1847-1902.
The Days of Jeanne d'Arc (1897), 283*
Chalmers, Stephen.
The Vanishing Smuggler (1910), 415.
Chambers, Robert W., b. 1865.
The Reckoning (1905)* 359-
Ailsa Paige (1910), 394.
Special Messenger (1909), 397.
Chamier, Frederick, 17915-1870.
Ben Brace (1836), 367.
Chancellor, Louise Beecher.
The Players of London (1909), 302.
Charles, Mrs. Rundle, 1828-96.
Lapsed* Not Lost (Lapsed, But Not LosQ (1877), 249,
Attila and His Conqueror (1894), 252.
The Diary of Brother Bartholomew {c, i860), 265.
Joan the liaid (1879), 283.
Against the Stream (1873), 377*
Charlieu, H. de.
Le Chevalier de Puyjalon (1905), 341.
Chesson, Nora.
Father Felix's Chronicles (1907), 281.
Chetwode, R. D.
Cuthbert,Lord of Lowedale (TheLord of Lowedale) (i 895) , 304.
Church, Rev. Alfred J., b. 1829.
The Crown of Pine (1903), 245.
Churchill, Winston, b. 1871.
Coniston (1906), 39a
" Clare, Austin." (See James, Miss W. M.)
Clarj&tie, Jules, b. 1840.
Le Manage d' Agnes (1907), 401.
Clar^tie, Lfo, b. X862.
Cadet-la-Perle (1908), 311.
Marie Petit (1904), 336.
448 SUPPLEMENT.
Clark, Alfred.
Lemuel of the Left Hand (1909), 340.
CXark, Charles Heber, b. 1851.
Hie Quakeress (1905), 419.
Clark, Felicia Butts.
The Cripple of Nurembeig (1900), 295.
Gigi, the Hero of Sicily (1907), 389.
Clarke, Mrs. Henry {i.e, Mrs. Amy Clarke).
R^h the Outlaw (1908), 273.
A Trusty Rebel (1905), 289.
The Roskerry Treasure (1906), 297.
The Coplestone Cousins (1905), 413.
Clarke, Lawrence.
Murray of the Scots Greys (1906), 340.
" Clbbve, Lucas." (See Kingscote, Mrs.)
Cleghorn, Sarah N.
A Turnpike Lady (1907), 414.
Cleveland, Treadwell F., b. 1872.
A Night with Alessandro (1904), 295.
CuMEMSOM, Mrs. Emily J., b. 1844.
Strange Adventures in the County of Dorset, a.d. 1747
(1907). 345.
COAPB, H. C.
From the Enemy's Hand (1904), 327.
Cobb, James F.
A Feast of Stories from Foreign Lcmds (1695) :-^
A Journey through the Air, 295.
The Timdy Baron, 376.
The Serfs, 376.
The Railway Signalman, 418.
The Schoolmaster and His Son (1888), ^12.
In Time of War (Workman and Soldier) (1880), 401.
The Watchers on the Long Ships (1878), 414.
Cobban, J. Maclaren, 1849-1903.
The Red Sultan (1893), 354.
CoBBOLD, Richard, 1797*1877.
The History of Margaret Catchpole (1845), 369.
CoLB, Sylvester.
A Son of Navarre (19x1), 394.
Coleridge, Chxistabel R., b. 1843.
Minstrel Dick (1896), 277.
Max, Fritz, and Hob (i^), 289.
Collingwood, Harry " (Wm. J. C. Lancaster).
Across the Spanish Main (1906), 298.
A Middy of the Slave Squadron (1910), 385.
Blue and Grey (1908), 395.
Under the Chilian Fla^ (1908), 403.
•«
SUPPLEMENT. 449
CoLViLLB, Harriet £.
Life's Anchor (1900), 351.
€U>MFORT, B.
Arnold's Tempter {190S), 359.
CoMSTOCK, Harriet T.
Tlie Queen's Hostage (1906), 301.
CousTOCK, Seth Cook.
Marcelle the Mad (1906), 287.
Monsieur le Capitaine Douay (1904), 303.
The Rebel Prince (1905), 303.
^' CoNNEix, F. Norrejrs " (Conal O'Connell O'Riordan), b. 1874.
The Yonng Days of Admiral Quilliam (1906), 372.
CoNSAD, Joseph, b. 1857.
A Set of Six (1908) :—
The Duel, 377.
CooKB, Grace MacGowan, b. 1863, and Alice MacGowan, b. 1858.
Return (1905). 347«
CooKB, Grace MacGowan. and Annie Booth McKinney.
Mistress Joy (1901), 371.
CooKB, John Eaten, 1830-86.
My Lady Pokahontas (1879), 308.
Cocke, W. Bourne* b. 1869.
Her Faithful Knight (1908), 314.
Copus, Rev. J. E. (S.J.).
The Son of Siro (1909)1 ^47-
CoRSLLi, Marie.
Barabbas (1893), 243,
COSTBZXO, F. H.
Nelson's Yankee Boy (1904), 372.
COTXS, H.
The Counterpart (1909), 397*
Cotton, A. L.
The Company of Death (1904), 322.
Couch, Sir A. T. Quiller., b. 1863.
Shakespeare's Christmas and other Stories (1905) : —
Shakespeare's Christmas, 302*
Captain Wyvem's Adventures, 317.
Ram of Dollars, 382.
The Lamp and the Guitar. 382.
Frenchman's Creek, 416.
Ye Sexes give Ear 1 416.
Corporal Sam and other Stories (191 o) : —
The Copemican Convoy, 316.
Red Velvet, 317.
Corporal Sam, 381.
Fort Amity (1904), ^B»
Lady Good^For-Noumg (19x0), 348.
2 G
450 SUPPLEMENT.
Couch. Sir A. T. Qmller — caniinued.
Sir John Constantiiie (1906), 349*
The Merry Garden (1907) : —
Hi-Spy-Hi ! 378.
Poison Island (1907), 378.
COURTNBY, Etta.
Checkmate (1904), 325,
" CovERTSiDS, Naunton." (See Davies, N.)
CowPER, Edith E.
The Invaders of Fairford (1907), 316.
The House with the Dragon Gates (1908), 344.
The Moonrakers (191 o), 345.
Lady Fabia (1909), 373.
Viva Christina (1904), 387.
CowPBR, Frank.
The Forgotten Door (1907), 246*
"Craddock, Charles Egbert." (See Murfree.)
Crakb, Rev. A. D.
£milius (1871), 249.
The Victor's Laurel (1884), 250.
Evanus (1872), 251 •
Stories from Old English History (1888) :—
The Fall of Anderida, 253.
The Childhood of Oflfa, 257.
The Avenger of Blood» 257.
The Story of Edgar and Elfrida, 260.
Edward the Martyr, 260.
The Doomed City (1885) 254.
Stories of the Old Saints and the Anglo-Saxon Church
(1890), 255.
The Andreds- weald (1878), 262.
Brian Fitz Count (1888), 265.
The House of Waldeme (1886), 272.
The Last Abbot of Glastonbury (1884), 292*
The Heir of Treheme (1890), 292.
Fairleigh Hall (1883). 314.
Crake, Rev. E. E.
Dame Joan of Pevensey (1908), 280.
In Mortal Peril (i9o8)» 301.
The Royalist Brothers (1908), 318.
When the Puritans were in Power (1907), 320.
Cramp, Walter S.
Psyche (1905). 243.
Crane, Stephen, 1 870-1 900, and Robert Barr.
The O'Ruddy (1903), 412.
Crawford, F. Marion, 1854-1909.
Zoroaster (1885), 241.
SUPPLEMENT. 451
Crawford, F. Marion — continued.
Arethusa (1907), 278.
Stradella (1909), 326.
Crespigny, Mrs. P. C. de. (See De Crespigny.)
Crbswick, Psatil, b. x866.
With Richard the Fearless (1904), 268.
Cripps, Arthur S.
Magic Casements (1905), 285.
Crocebtt, S. R., b. i860.
Maid Margaret (1905), 283.
Jwui of the Sword Hand (1900), 287.
TheWhitePlumesof Navarre (The White Plume) (1906). ^04,
The Cherry Ribband {1905), 331. ^ ^
Strong Mac (1904), 382.
The Silver Sknll (1901), 385.
The Men of the Mountain (1909), 401.
The Grey Man (1896), 411.
The Dew of Their Youth (1910), 415.
Crosvibld, H. C.
For Three Kingdoms (1909), 332.
Crosfibld, T. H.
A Love in Ancient Days (1907), 254.
Cross, Mwa.
The Star of Valhalla (1907), 261.
Crottib, Jnlia M.
The Lost Land (1901), 414.
Crouch, Arthur Philip.
Nellie of the Eight Bells (1908), 372.
Crowlsy, Mary Catherine.
In Treaty with Honor (1906), 387.
CuLLBN, William Robert.
The Unwedded Bride (1910), 297.
CuLLUM, Ridgwell.
The Watchers of the Plains (1908), 402.
CuNMiMGHAif B, Alice.
The Love Story of Giraldus (1907), 266.
CuRTiES, Henry.
Ren^e (1908), 294.
The Idol of the King (1905), 345.
Curtis, A. C.
The Good Sword Belgarde (1908), 269.
Curtis, Alice Turner.
Anne Nelson (1910), 357.
CuRWOOD, J. Oliver.
The Courage of Captain Plum (1908), 391,
CzAjowsKi, Michal (afterwards Sadylc Pasha).
The Black Pilgrim (c. 1840), 376.
452 SUPPLEMENT.
D
Darlinger, Charles W.
Where the Red Volleys Poured (1907)* 395
Dampier, E. M. Smith.
Oil of Spikenard (1911^)* 4i2-
Dane, Joan.
Prince Madog (1909), 4^9.
Darmesteter, Madame. (See Duclaux.)
Da VIES, Nannton.
The King's Guide (i9oi)» 272-
Davis. W. Steams (Professor), b. 1877.
A Victor of Salamis (1907). 241.
Falaise of the Blessed Voice (1904). 273.
Da we, Carlton, b. 1865.
One Fair Enemy (1908). 3i7-
The Life Perilous (1907). 35°.
Dawson. A. J., b. 1871.
The Fortunes of Farthings (1905). 339-
Deane. Mary.
The Rose-Spinner (1904)* 34^*
Dearmbr. Mabel.
The Orangery (1904)1 4i4-
Debenham. Mary H. „ . . ^v
Faith's First Christmas and other Stones (1906)
The Seed of the Church, 250.
An Island of the Blest. 254.
How Nechtan Kept His Vow. 254.
Into the Dark, 256.
The Coming of the King. 256.
The Battle in the West, 256.
The Lark's Carol, 256.
The Queen's Ferry, 263.
The Witch of Huntingdon. 268.
Seven Champions, 328.
Honour Before Honours. 328.
A Fair Haven and other Stories (1909) :—
The King's House, 252.
How the King passed by. 259.
A Good Shepherd. 262.
Alan's Vow. 269,
For Church and State. 269.
A Master Builder. 280.
Clean Hands, 293.
A Fair Haven. 310.
In the Western Woods, 338.
SUPPLEMENT. 453
DsBBNHAM, Mary H. — continued.
The Shepherd Prior and other Stories (1907) : —
The Easter Victor>r, 252.
The Great Handwriting, 253.
An Angel Unawares, 254.
After Many Days, 254.
The Shepherd Prior, 256.
The Painter's Message, 256*
An Ascensiontide Dream. 257.
A Saxon Whom the Normans Loved, 263.
The Stranger Whom England Loved, 264.
The Lady Alda's Pilgrimage, 276.
The Peace of the Church and other Stories (1908) :—
The Peace of the Church, 254.
What Ercongeta Saw, 256.
A Fisher of Men, 256.
The Angel of the Fen, 257.
The Open Window, 257.
The Way of Service, 258*
The Ealdorman's Story, 260.
The Straight Road, 266.
The King's Business, 266.
A Friar of Orders Grey, 272*
Writer and Fighter, 272.
Stars in the Twilight (1910), 251.
The Star in the West (1904), 253.
Keepers of England (1900), 259.
Conan the Wonder- Worker (1902), 260.
A Goodly Pearl (1905), 263.
A Royal Road (1909), 272.
'Twixt Old and New (1907), 278»
Moor and Moss (1892), 294.
The Mavis and the Merlin (1895), 303*
Fairmeadows Farm (1890), 329.
A Little Candle (1890), 332.
The Laird's Legacy (1896), 337.
Mistress Phil (1891), 345.
A Flood Tide (1905J, 351.
My God-Daughter (1893), 352.
For King and Home (1891J, 363.
Sowing and Harvesting (1899), 365.
Hilda Brave-Heart (1895), 408.
The Waterloo Lass (1901), 416.
Db Crbspigivy, Mrs. Philip Champion.
The Giey Domino (1906), 306.
The Rose Brocade (1905), 339.
The Spanish Prisoner (1907)* 374*
454 SUPPLEMENT.
Debping, Warwick, b. 1877.
The Red Saint (1909), 272.
Bertrand of Brittany (1908), 277.
Mad Barbara (1908), 324.
The Lame Englishman (191Q), 389.
The Seven Streams (1905), 409.
Love Among the Ruins (1904), 409.
Bess of the XVoods (1906), 413.
De Haven, Audrey.
The Scarlet Cloak (1908). 355.
Db Leon, T. Cooper.
Crag-Nest (191 o), 398.
Dbmolder, Eugtoe.
Le Jardinier de la Pompadour (1904), 351.
De Morgan, John.
A Yankee Ship and a Yankee Crew (1909), 379.
Db Morgan, William, b. 1839.
An Aftsdi of Dishonour (19 10), 323.
Jos^h Vance (1906), 418.
De Trueba, D. Antonio.
The Cid Campeador (1861), 408.
Devereux, William, and S. LovelL
Sir Walter Raleigh (Raleigh) (1909), 300.
Dickson, Harris, b. 1868.
Gabrielle Transgressor (1906), 412.
Dill, Bessie.
The Silver Glen (X909), 339.
My Lady Nan (1907), 414.
Dillon, Mrs. Mary C. Johnson.
The Rose of Old St. Louis (1904), 375.
The Patience of John Morland (i9<)9), 386.
In Old Bellaire (1906), 395.
Dix, Beulah Marie, b. 1876
Merryb'ps (1906), 314*
The Fair iftaid of Greystones (1903), 318.
DixoN, Jun., Thomas, b. 1864!
The Clansman (1903), 398.
The Leopard's Spots (1902), 398.
The Traitor (1907), 398.
Dixon, W. Wilmott.
The Rogues of Rye (1909), 373.
130BS0N, A. Mary R.
Earl Osric's Minstrel (1908), 409.
DoDD, Annie Bowman.
On the Knees of the Gods (1908) , 241.
Donaldson, J. W.
The Conversion of St. Vladimir {c. 1S60), 260.
**
SUPPLEMENT. 455
Donaldson, J. W. — continued.
The Northern Light («. i860), a6i.
The Cross in Sweden {c. 1B60), 264.
Don-Caklos, Cooke.
A Bottle in the Smoke (1908), 267.
Donovan, Dkk." (See Mudrlock.)
Douglas, Theo." (Sec Everett, Mrs. H. D.)
DovLR, Sir A. Conan, b. 1859.
The Home Coming (1909), 253.
Sir Nigel (1906), 276.
Drummond, Hamilton, b. 1857.
The Justice of the King (191 1), 288.
The King's Scapegoat (1905), 288.
The Cuckoo (1906), 296.
Shoes of Gold (1909), 354*
Du Bois, liiary Constance, b. 1879.
Elinor Arden, Royalist (1904), 314.
DucLAUx, Madame (formerly Madame Dannesteter), b. 1857.
A Mediaeval Garland (1892), 410.
Dunn, Byion A.
The Young Kentuckians Series :—
General Nelson's Scout (1898), 395.
On General Thomas's Staff (1899), 395.
Battling for Atlanta (1900), 395.
From Atlanta to the Sell (1901), 395.
Raiding with Morgan (1903), 395.
DURRANT, W. Scott.
Cross and Dagger (1910), 27a
DuTT, Romesh C, b. 1848.
The Slave Girl of Agra (1909), 306.
Dyke, G. Connock.
The Betrayal of Mistress Donis (1906), 303.
Eaton, Paul W.
The Treasure (1909), 380.
ECCOTT, W. J.
A Demoiselle of France (19x0), 327.
His Indolence of Arras (1905), 327.
The Red Neighbour (1908), 327.
Fortune's Castaway (1904), 329.
The Hearth of Hutton (1906;, 343.
Edes, Dr. Robert Thazter.
Parson Gay's Three Sermons (1908), 347.
Edgbworth, Maria, 1767-1849.
Waste Not, Want Not (1796). 414.
456 SUPPLEMENT.
Edwards, M. Betham, b. 1856.
A Suffolk Courtship (1900), 418.
Egglbstom, George Cary» b. 1839.
Long Kxiives (1907), 359.
Two Gentlemen of Vir|;mia (1908), 393.
The Warrens of Virginia (1908), 396.
A Daughter of the South (1905), 398*
Westover of Wanalah (1910), 419.
Evelyn Byrd (1904), 4x9.
Love is the Sum of it All (1907), 419.
Ellis, Edward S., b. 1840.
The Cromwell of Virginia (1904), 326.
The Last Emperor of the Old Dominion (1905), 326.
Pontiac, Chiel of the Ottawas (1897). 349.
Patriot and Tory (1904). 357
Fire, Snow, and Water (1908), 420.
Ellis, Elizabeth.
The King's Spy (The Girl Who Won) (19x0), 333.
Madame Will You Walk (X905), 337.
The Moon of Bath (The Fair Moon of Bath) (1907), 343 •
Ellis, J. Breckenridge, b. 1870.
Adnah (1902), 243.
The Soul of a Serf (1910), 255.
Elringtok, Miss H.
A Story of Ancient Wales (1900). 245.
The Luck of Chervil (1908), 286.
The Schoolboy Outlaws (1905). 417-
EvERARD, William.
Sir Walter's Ward (1888), 271.
EvERXTT, Mrs. H. D«
A White Witch (1908), 344.
Golden Trust (1905), 363.
Miss Caroline (1904), 414.
Cousin Hugh (1910), 416.
F
Farmol, Jeffery.
The Broad Highway (19 10), 417.
Farrbr, Reginald.
The Anne-Queen's Chronicle (i909)» 293. .
Fea, Allen, b. i860.
My Lady Wentworth (i9c>9)i 329-
Fbnn, George Manville, 183 1-1909.
Marcus or the Young Centurion (1904), 242.
Frank and Saxon (1897),. 305.
'Tention (1906), 381.
Dick o' the Fenns (1887), 415.
SUPPLEMENT. 457
Fbrgcsson, R. Menzies.
The Silver Shoe-Buckle (iQOo),'33o.
FiRRAR, William John. ^^
The Fall of the Grand Satrasin (1905). 262.
FBRRYHAN, Lieut-Colond A. F. Mockler, b. 1856.
Lads of the Light Division (1909). 381.
Field, Mrs. E. M., b.ilje
At the lOng's ^ht Hand. (1904), 259.
Little Count Paul (1894). 361.
Bryda (i888), 392.
FiLON. Augustin. b. 1841.
FlWDLAY, J. T.
The Chosen (1905). 414.
FniLAy, Rev. T. A. (S.J.)
T?T««^ The Chances of War (1877), 316.
riMNXMORB, John.
A Captive of the Corsairs (1906), 303.
The Red Men of the Dusk (1899), 321.
A Pawn in the Game (1908). 365.
The Commander of the Hirondelle (1904), 366*
FiTZGBRALD, Eua.
The Witch Queen of Khem (1909)^ 239.
Patcola (1908). 280.
FlTZGBRALD. Percy H., b. 1834.
Josephine's Troubles (1907), 399.
FlTZHUGH, Percy K.
The Galleon Treasure (1908), 335.
FLAUBBRT. Gustave, 1821-80,
Herodias (1877), 244.
FtBTCHBR. J. S.. b. 1863.
In the Days of Drake (1896), 299.
David March (1904), 325.
Floyer. Edith S.
TT^ w 7^® Young Huguenots (1879). 335.
rOA, Madame Eugenie.
Contes Historiques (1840) : —
Bertrand Duguesclin, 275.
Un Grand Chagrin. 341.
Jean-Baptiste Greuze. Peintre, 35a
Andrfe-Emest-Modeste Gr^try, Musicten, 350.
Guillaume Dupuytren, 354.
Monsieur the Captain of the Caravel (1840), 324.
FoGAZZARo, Antonio, b. 1848.
The Patriot (1896), 389.
458 SUPPLEMENT.
FooTE, Bfary Hallock.
The Royal Americans (1910), 348.
Forbes, Lady Helen.
His Eminence (1904), 366,
Forbes, Hon. Mrs. Walter R. D.
Leroux (1908), 366.
Forester, F. B.
Hostage for a Kingdom (1907), 401.
FoRMAN, Justus M.
The Island of Enchantment (1905), 277.
FoRMONT, Maxime.
La Princesse de Venise (1909), 306.
Forrest, Joshua Rhodes.
The Student Cavaliers (1908), 397.
FoRSTER, R. H., b. 1857.
The Mistress of Aydon (1907), 277.
Harry of Athol (1909), 281.
In Steel and Leather (1904), 286.
The Arrow of the North (1906), 294.
Midsummer Mom (191 1), 302.
A Jacobite Admiral (1908), 339.
Strained Allegiance (1905), 339.
Foster, A. J.
Ampthill Towers (1895), 292.
Foster, Frances G. Knowles. (See Knowles-Foster.)
FoTHERiNGHAME, Josephiue.
Sir Valdemar the Ganger (1905), 273.
Fox, Frances Margaret
Carlota (1907), 390.
Fox, Marion.
The Seven Nights (1910), 279.
The Hand of the North (1910), 307.
" France, Anatole." (See Thibault.)
" Francis, M. E." (See Blundell, Mrs.)
Eraser, Mrs. Hugh.
In the Shadow of the Lord (1906), 346.
Gianella (1909), 418.
Frear, Robert Louis.
Nancy Hart (1908), 357.
Fri^jag, Ed. de.
La Fin de Tadmor (1908), 249.
French, Allen, b. 1870.
The Story of Rolf and the Viking's Bow (1904), 261.
Sir Marrok (1902), 408.
Frenssen, Gnstav, b. Z863.
jbm Uhl (1901), 400.
The Three Comrades (1898), 40a
SUPPLEMENT. 459
Freshfisld, F. H.
At All Hazards (191 o), 329.
Frost, T. G.
The Bfan of Destiny (1909), 389.
Frotringham, Jessie Peabcidy.
Rumung the Gauntlet (1906), 395.
Fuller, Robert H.
The Golden Hope (1905), 242.
Fulton, D. Kerr.
The Witch's Sword (1908), 294.
Galb, Oliver Marble, and Harriet Wheeler.
A Knight of the Wilderness (1909), 387.
Gallizisr, Natiban, b. x866.
llie Sorceress of Rome (1907), 261.
Castel Del Monte (1905), 274.
The Court of Lucifer (1910), 290.
Gardiner, Samuel M.
Lux Crucis (1904), 247.
Gardner, Chris G.
Dudley Castle (1904), 275.
Garmbtt, Mrs. R. S.
The Infamous John Friend (1909), 374.
Gasiorowski, Waclaw (Count J6zef I. T. Grabowski).
Napoleon's Love Story (1903), 376.
Gaskbll, Mrs. Elizabeth C, 1810-^5.
Sylvia's Lovers (1863), 368.
Gasp£, Philippe Anbert de.
Cameron of Lochiel (1877), 347.
Gay, Florence.
The Dmidess (1908), 254.
Gay, Geraldine M.
The Astrologer's Daughter (1906), 24 1.
A King's Thegn (1900), 258.
Gay, Maude Clark.
The Knitting of the Souls (1904), 326.
Gebhart, Emile.
Autour d'une Tiare (1894), 264.
Gee, Annie L.
The Victory that Overcometh (1898), 251.
Through tiie Door of Hope (X900), 259.
Won — Not by Might (1902), 265.
" Gerard, Morice " (acv. J. J. Teague), b. 1856.
The King's Signet (1909)1 320.
Purple Love (1908), 326.
46o SUPPLEMENT.
" Gerako, Morice " — c<mHnued,
The Adventures of an Equerry (1905), 326.
The Red Seal (1906), 330.
The Broken Sword (19 10), 331.
Check to the King (1906), 331.
Rose of Blenheim (1907), 336.
A Fair Refugee (1909), 365.
A Gentleman of London (1908), 373.
" Gerrare, Wirt." (See Greener, W.)
GiBBRNE, Agnes.
Under Puritan Rule (1909), 320.
Gibson, C.
The Refugee (1910), 365.
GiFVORD, Evelyn H.
Provenzano the Proud (1904). 274.
Gilbert, George.
To My King Ever Faithful (1909), 369.
GiLXES. A. H.
Four Sons (1909), 241.
GiLSON, Captain Charles.
The Lost Empire (1909), 366.
The Spy : a Story of the Peninsular.War[^(i9io), 382.
GissiNG, George, 1857-1903.
Veramlda (1904), 253.
GissiMGHAM, James.
For Prince or Pope (1910), 331.
GoLDRiNG, Maude.
Dean's Hall (1908), 4x3.
Goodwin, Maud Wilder, b. 1856.
Veronica Playfair (1909), 340.
Gordon, Colonel H. R.
Black Partridge (1908), 380.
Gould, S. Baring, b. 1834.
In Dewisland (1904), 388.
GowiNG, Mrs. Aylmer.
By Tluunes and Tiber (1903), 246.
Graydon. W. Murray.
The Fighting Lads of Devon (1910), 300.
With Musketeer and Redskin (With Puritan and Pequot)
(1904), 311.
Green, E. Everett, b. 1856.
The Children's Oiisade (1905), 270.
In Northern Seas (1906), 275.
A Heroine of France (1907), 283.
The Secret Chamber at Chad (1909), 289.
Evil May-Day (1893). ^92.
For the Faith (1908), 292.
SUPPLEMENT. 461
Gksbn, £. Everett — conHnued,
The Chnich and the King (1892). 293*
Under Two Queens (1904), 297.
Loyal Hearts and True (1891), 300.
The Faith of Hilary Lovel (1904), 300.
Cowrie's Vengeance (1908), 307.
Ruth Ravelsten (1908), 320.
A Lad of London Town (1909), 323.
The Sign of the Red Cross (1897), 324.
French and English (1899), 347.
Knights of the Road (1908), 352.
The Defence of the Rock (1907), 352.
Ringed by Fire (1905), 400.
Grsbne, Homer.
A Lincoln Conscript (1909), 395.
Grbbnbr, William.
The Men of Harlech (1896), 285.
Grbgg, Hilda, b. 1868.
The Great Proconsul (1904), 353.
A Young Man Married (1909), 382.
The Path to Honour (1909), 388.
Grbslby, W.
The Forest of Arden (1840), 292.
The Si^e of Lichfield (1840), 316.
Grbville, Beatrice Violet (Baroness Greville).
The Fighters (1907), 382.
Grby, Cyril.
For Crown and Covenant (1902), 331.
The Lost Earldom (1905), 331.
Gribbi;b, Francis.
The Dream of Peace (1904), 401.
" Gribr, Sydney C." (See Gregg, H.)
Griffin, E. Aceituna.
A Servant of the King (1906), 31a
Griffis, William Elliot
The Pathfinders of the Revolution (1900), 359.
Griffith, George.
John Brown Buccaneer (1908), 308.
The Knights of the White Rose (1897), 332.
Griffiths, Major Arthur, b. 1838.
Thrice Captive (1908), 337.
A Royal Kascal (1903), 370.
Griffiths, D. Rvles.
Elgiva (1901}, 262.
Grindrod, C. F.
The Shadow of the Ragged Stone (1908), 266.
462 SUPPLEMENT.
Grogam. Walter £.
The King's Cause (1909), 3x8.
Guix. Cyril Ranger (" Guy Thome "), b. 1875.
House of Torment (191 1), 297.
GuNN, John.
Sons of the Vikings (1909), 378.
GuNTBR, A. C, b. 1907.
The Conscience of a King (1903), 335.
'Twixt Sword and Glove (1907), 336.
The Sword in the Air (1904), 388.
The Spy Company (1903), 390.
GUTHKIB, K. M.
The Glassmaker of Yarmouth (1905), 37
GwYifN, Stephen, b. 1864.
Robert Emmet (1909), 374.
H
Haggard, H. Rider» b. 1856.
The Brethren (1904), 267.
Fair Margaret (1907), 288.
The Lady of Blossholme (1909), 293.
Morning Star (1910), 408.
Eric Brighteyes (1891), 408.
Halbs» a. G.
Maid Molly (1907), 3x7.
The Watcher on the Tower (1904), 38a.
Hall, H. R.
Days before History (1907)1 407.
Hall, Blarie.
Andrew Marvell and His Friends (1873), 310.
Hamilton, Eugene Lee.
The Romance of the Fountain (1905), 290.
Hamilton, John A.
Captain John Lister (1906), 3x4.
Hamilton, Captam Rowan.
The Second Answer (1908), 383.
Hancock, Albert £., b. 1870.
Bronson of the Rabble (1909)* 381*
Hancock, S.
The Cruise of the Golden Fleece (1909), 297
Hanson, Joseph Mills.
With Sully into the Sioux Land (19x0), 398.
Hardy, Thomas, b. 1840.
The Trumpet-Major (1880), 373*
" Harb, Chiistopher " (Blrs. Andrews).
Felicity (1904), 277.
In the Straits of Time (1904), 327.
SUPPLEMENT, 463
Harris, Joel Chandler, b. 1848.
A Little Union Soout (1904), 398.
Harrison, Constance Cary.
The Carlylea (1905). 398.
Harrison, Frederick.
De Montfort's Squire (1909), 272,
" 1779." A Story of Old Shoreham (1899). 352 .
Englauid Expects (1904), 372. "^
From Playgronnd to Battlefield (1901), 383.
Harrison, F. Baytod.
Brothers-in-Arms (1885), 267.
" Harrod, Frances." (See Robertson, Frances Forbes.)
Hart, Jerome.
The Vigilante Girl (1910). 4x8.
Hart, J. Wesley.
In the Iron Time (1907), 315.
Hart, Lucie M. (" LuciUa "),
The Secret of the Golden Key (1908), 305.
Hartley, M.
Beyond Man's Strength (1909), 388.
Hartlby, Percy J.
My Lady of Qeeve (1908), 333.
Hawtrby Valentina.
Suzanne (1906), 279.
Perronelle (1904), 281.
Hay, Agnes Grant.
MalcolTn Canmore's Pearl (1907), 263
Hay, Marie (Baroness Hindenburg).
The Winter Queen (1910), 309.
Hayoon, a. L.
With PizaxTO the Conquistador (1904), 291.
A Desperate Venture (1909), 363.
Haybns, Herbert, b. 1861.
The Bravest Gentleman in France (1908), 3x1
For Rupert and the King (1910), 3x5.
My Sword's My Fortune (1904), 322.
The Red Caps of Lyons (i909\, 363.
A Captain of Irregulars (1900), 385.
In the Grip of the Spaniard (1899), 385.
The Tiger of the Pampas (1907) » 386.
The British Legion (1900), 387.
Clevely Sahib (1897), 388.
Red, White, and Green (1901), 389.
One of the Red Shirts (1901), 389.
Under the Lone Star (1906), 391.
The President's Scouts (1904), 391.
464 SUPPLEMENT.
Haybns, Herbert — conHnuetU
A Fighter in Green (1906), 392.
A Vanished Nation (1899), 393.
Paris at Bay (1897), 401.
Hayes, F. W.
The Shadow of a Throne (1904), 364*
Captain Kirke Webbe (1907), 382.
Hazelton, Jun., George C
BCisrtress Nell (1901), 324.
The Raven (1909), 387.
Hekxing, Avis.
In Search of JAanne (1907), 305.
Henderson, R. W. Wright.
John Goodchild (1909), 388.
Henty, G. A-, 1832-1902.
The Cat of Bubastes (1889), 239.
The Young Carthaginian (1887), 242.
For the Temple (1888), 246.
Winning His Spurs (1882), 367.
A Knight of the White Cross (1896), 286.
Under Drake's Flag (1883), 299.
St. Bartholomew's Eve (1894), 304.
Friends Though Divided {1883). 315.
When London Burned (1895), 324.
Orange and Green fi888), 332.
Bonme Prince Charlie (1888), 341.
With Wolfe in Canada (1887), 348.
Held Fast for England (1892), 352.
True to the Old Flag (1885), 356.
In the Reign of Terror (1896). 362.
No Surrender (1900), 364.
By Conduct and Courage (1905), 366.
At Aboukir and Acre (1899), 367.
The Tiger of Mysore (1896), 370.
A Roving Commission (1900), 370.
At the Point of the Bayonet (1902), 374,
Through the Fray (1886), 378.
The Young Buglers (1880), 381.
With Cochrane the Dauntless (1897), 385.
In Greek Waters (1893), 385.
On the Irrawaddy (1897). 386.
With the British L^on (1903), 387.
Through the Sikh War (1894), 388.
Maori and Settler (1897), 393.
The Young Franctireurs (1872), 400.
By Sheer Pluck (1884). 402.
SUPPLEMENT. 465
Hbnty, G. A.^-continued.
For Name and Fame (Z899), 403.
Hervey, Maurice H.
Amyas Egerton, Cavalier (1896), 315.
Hbwett, George.
In Nelson's Day (1891), 371.
Hewlett, Maurice, b. 1861.
Fond Adventures (1905) : —
The Heart's Key, 271.
Brazenhead the Great, 285.
Buondelmonte's Saga, 409.
The Love Chase, 410.
The Stooping Lady (1907), 378.
The Spanish Jade (1908), 392.
Heygatb, W. E.
The Cave in the Hills {c. i860), 251.
The Penitent (c. i860), 252.
The Alleluia Battle {c. i860). 252.
The Fugitive [c. i860), 254.
The Rivals (c. i860), 255.
The Black Danes {c. i860), 259,
The Forsaken (e. i860), 260.
Aubrey de TOrme {c. i860), 264.
Walter the Armourer {c. i860), 269.
Alice of Fobbing (c, i860), 279.
Agnes Martin {c. i860), 292,
The Scholar and the Trooper (1858). 316.
Hill, William K. f v o /. d
Under Three Kings (1907), 328.
" HiLLiBRS, Ashton " (Henry M. Wallis.)
As it Happened (1909), 353.
Memoirs of a Person of Quality (Faaahawe of the Fifth)
(1907). 368.
The Master Girl (1910), 407.
HiNKSON, H. A.
The Splendid Knight (1905), 300.
The lung's Liege (1909), 310.
HoBBS, R. R.
The Court of Pilate (1907), 247.
Hocking, Joseph.
The Sword of the Lord (1909), 290.
The Coming of the King (1904), 323.
The Chariots of the Lord (1903), 330.
Roger Trewinion (1905), 413,
HocHWALT, Albert F.
Arrows of Ambition (1907), 313.
2 H
466 SUPPLEMENT.
H0X>GBTTS, J. F.
Edwin the Boy Outlaw (1887), 268.
Harold the Boy Earl (z888), 408.
HoLLis, Gertrude.
Leo of Mediolanum (1909), 252.
Dolphin of the Sepulchre (1906), 266.
Between Two Crusades (1908), 267.
A Slave of the Saracen (1905), 275.
Hugh the Messenger (1905), 276.
Philip Okeover's Pagehood (1907), 279*
Jen]^ Clyffe, Bedesman (19x0), 282.
The King who was never Crowned (1904), 286.
Two Dover Boys (1910), 294.
The Pearl Fishers (1908), 296.
HOLMBS, F. M.
Brave Sidney Somers (1910), 306.
Holt, Emily.
The Slave Girl of Pompeii (1887), 247.
The Way of the Cross (i^^S)* 248.
Imogen (1876), 255.
Behind the Veil (1890), 263.
One Snowy Nif^ht (1893), 266.
Princess Adelaide (1894), 273.
A Forgotten Hero (Not For Him) (1883), 275.
The White Lady of Hazelwood (1891), 278.
Under One Sceptre (The Lord of the Marches) (1884). 280
Mistress Margery (1868), 281.
Hood, Alexander Nelson.
Tales of Old Sicily (1906), 241.
Adria : a Tale of Venice (1904), 389.
HoPB, Miss Graham.
The Gage of Red and White (1904), 296.
The Lady of Lyte (Z905), 325.
HoRNB, Roland.
The Lion of De Montfort (1909), 272.
HoRSUEY, Reginald.
In the Grip of the Hawk (1907), 393.
HORTOM, S.
For King or Parliament (1909), 317.
HouGB, Emerson, b. 1857.
50-40 or Fight (1900), 390-
The Way of a Man (1907), 419.
HowBix, Constance.
Married in India (1910), 420.
Hubbard, Lindley Murray.
An Express of '76 (1907), 357.
SUPPLEMENT. 467
Hugh, Ricarda.
Die Verteidigang Roms (1906), 389.
Hudson, C. B.
The Crimson Conquest (1908) » 291.
HxTBFFBR, Ford Madoz.
The Fifth Queen (1906), 293.
Privy Seal (1907), 293.
The Fifth Queen Crowned (1908), 294.
The " Half Moon " (1909), 307.
The Portrait (19x0), 412.
HuNTBR, P. Hay.
Bible and Sword (1904), 331.
Huntington, H. S.
His Majesty's Sloop Diamond Rock (1904), 371.
HuTTON, Edward, b. 1875.
Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta (1906), 284.
Hynb, C. J. Cutclifie, b. 1866.
Prince Ruport the Buccaneer (1901), 321.
Sandy Cannichad (1908), 343.
I
Iddbslbigh, Earl of, b. 1845.
lone Chaloner (1909), 342.
Inchbold, a. C.
Phantasma (1906), 366b
Ingsabam, J. A.
Prince of the House of David (1855), 247.
Inm AN, H. Escott
Wnlnoth the Wanderer (1908), 259.
INNBS, J. W. Brodie.
For the Soul of a Witch (19x0), 294.
Innbs, Norman.
My Lady's Kiss (X908), 3x2.
Parson Croft (1907), 338.
The Lonely Guard (1908), 350.
The Surge of War (1906), 350.
Irwin, H. C.
With Sword and Pen (1904), 392.
IsHAM, Frederick S., b. 1866.
The Lady of the Mount (1908), 361 •
Black Friday (1904), 399.
J
Jacob, Violet (Mrs. Arthur Jacob).
The Interloper (1904), 415.
The History of Aythan Waring (1908), 4x7.
Jambs. Biiss W. M.
Court Cards (1904), 302.
468 SUPPLEMENT.
JSANS, A.
The Stronger Wings (1909), 389.
Jennings, Edward W.
Under the Pompadour (1907), 351.
Jbnsbn, W., b. 1837.
Deutsche Mftnner (1909), 376.
Jbwsix, M. H. Abraham.
Glenith (1908), 352.
Johnson, Henry.
Untrue to His Trust (1886), 332.
Johnson, Owen.
Nicole (In the Name of Liberty) (1905), 363.
Johnson, W. H.
Sir Galahad of New France (1905), 296.
Johnston, Mrs. A. F.
Joel : a Boy of Galilee (1895), 247.
Johnston, Mary, b. 1870.
Lewis Rand (1908), 375.
The Long Roll (1911), 396.
J<Skai, Maums, 1825-1904.
A Christian, but a Roman {c. 1890), 2^9,
The Strange Story of Rab Raby (1879), 354.
JoNBS, Dora M.
The Duke's Ward (1896). 279.
A Maid of Normandy (1906), 336.
Jordan, Humfrey.
My Lady of Intrigue (1910), 31 x.
K
Kaler, James Otis, b. 1848.
Ruth of Boston (1910), 311.
Mary of Plymouth (1910), 311.
Richard of Jamestown (X9xp). 311.
Calvert of Maryland (19x0), 3x1.
Peter of New Amsterdam (X9X0), 311.
Stephen of Philadelphia (19x0), 311.
Dorothy's Spy (X904), 357.
A Struggle for Freedom (X909), 357.
The Minute Boys of Long Island (1908), 358.
The Minute Boys of Soutii Carolina (1907), 35&
The Minute Boys of Wyoming Valley (X906), 358.
The Minute Boys of Mohawk VaUey^ (i905)« 358*
The Minute Boys of Green Mountams (X904), 358.
The Minute Boys of New York City (1909), 358.
The Minute Boys of Boston (x9Xo), 358.
With Grant at vicksburg (19x0), 398.
SUPPLEMENT. 469
Kayb, liichael W.
The Duke's Vengeance (1910), 287.
The Caxdinal's "Past (1910), 312.
Kbddie« Henrietta.
A Young Oxford Maid (1890), 316.
At Lathom's Siege (zSSy), 317.
Innocent Masqueraders (1907), 351.
The Poet and His Guardian Angel (1904), 353*
Sir David's Visitors (1903), ^Sa,
The Two Lady Lascelles (Z908), 416.
A Daughter of the Manse (1905), 417.
Kblly, Florence F.
Rhoda of the Undergrounds (1910), 394.
Kblly, W. Patrick.
The Assyrian Bride (1905), 240.
The Stonecutter of Meifiphis (X904)< ^40*
The Senator Licinius (1909), 245*
Kenny, Mrs. Stacjpoole.
Love is Life (1910), 332;
Kbnyon, Charles R.
Won in Wariare (1904), 356.
Kbnyon, Edith C.
The Adventures of Timothy (1907), 315.
Two Girls in a Siege (i9o8)» 3x8.
Kbr, David.
Under the Flag of France (1907), 277.
Kbstbr, Vaughan» b. 1869.
John o' Jamestown (1907), 308.
King, General Charles, b. 1844.
Rock of Chicamauga (1907), 397.
King, R.
The Chief's Daughter (c. z86o), 308.
The Convert of Massachusetts (c. i860), 341.
KiNGSCOTB, Mrs. Adelina G. I.
Our Lady of Beauty (1904), 284*
KiNGSLEY, Mrs. Florence Morse, b. 1859.
The Star of Love (1909), 241.
Titus : a Comrade of the Cross (1894), 244.
Love Triumphant (Tor : or A Street Boy of Jerusalem)
(1905). 244.
Stephen : a Soldier of the Cross (1896), 244.
Paul : a Herald of the Cross (1897), 244.
The Cross Triumfdiant (1899), 244.
Kingston, W. H, G.
Eldol the Druid (1874), 245.
The Young Rajah (1876), 392.
470 SUPPLEMENT.
Kirk, James P.
Fortuna Chance (19x0), 342*
KiRKB, Violet T.
Brothers Five (1910), 302.
KiRXMAN, Marshall Muiuoe.
Alexander the Prince (1909), 241.
Alexander the King (1909), 241.
Alexander and Roxana (1909), 241.
Iskander (1903), 241.
Klarman, Andrew.
The Princess of Gan-Sar (1907), 247.
Knapp, Adeline.
The Boy and the Baron (1902), 274*
Knight, Mrs. Adele Ferguson.
Mademoiselle Celeste (1910), 362.
Knight, Henrietta.
Aylmer Court (1895), 314.
Knowlbs-Fostbr, Frances G.
Jehanne of the Golden Lips (1910), 277.
Knox, Dorothea H.
Tlie Heart of Washington (1909), 346.
Krambr, Harold M.
Gayle Langford (1907). 357*
L
La Barilubr, Madame, b. 1868.
Cltoptoe (1891), 242.
Xim6n^8 (1893), 290.
Lancb, Rupert.
Tne Crowning Hour (19x0), 4x0.
Landis, Frederick.
The Glory of His Country (19x0), 4x9.
Lanx, Elinor Macartney.
All for the Love of a Lady (1906), 31 1.
Nancv Stair (1904), 353.
Lanb, Mrs. John.
Kitwyk (1903), 4x5.
Lanb, John V.
Marching with Morgan (1909), 357.
Lawrencx, George Alfred, 1827-76.
Brakespeare (x868), 276.
Lb Clbrc, M. £.
Mistress Beatrice Cope (1889), 339.
Lbb, Rev. Albert, b. 1855.
King Stork of the Netherlands (X901), 303,
A idng's Treachery (1909), 304.
SUPPLEMENT. 471
Lbb, Mary and Catherine.
The Oak Staircase (1872), 329.
St. Dnnstan's Fair (1892), 383.
" Leb, Vernon." (See Page, Violet.)
Lbbs, Robert James.
The Car of Phoebus (1903), 408.
Lb Fanu, Joseph Sheridan, 1814-73.
The Fortunes of CoL Torlogh O'Brien (1847), 333,
Lbggb, Clayton Mackenzie.
Highland Mary (1907), 353«.
Lbighton, Robert, b. 1859.
Hurxah for the Spanish Main (1904), 299.
With Nelson in Command (1905), 371.
Lbslib, Emma.
Glaucia the Greek Slave (1904), 246..
On the Emperor's Service (1905), 251.
The Martyr's Victory (1886), 259.
Gytha's Message (1885), 262.
Dearer than Life (1884), 278.
Faithful, But Not Famous (1872), 290.
The Hermit of Livry (1877J, 291.
At the Sign of the Golden fleece (1900), 292*
Peter the Apprentice (1S89), 292.
Sazby (1884), 309,
Lbvbr, Charles, 1806--72.
The O'Donoghue (1845), 369.
The Knight of Gwynne (1847), 369.
Lbwis, Alfred H.
The Stcnry of Paul Jones (1906), 360.
Lbwis, Arthur.
The Pilgrim (19x0), 263.
LiGHTON, W. Rheem.
The Shadow of a Great Rock (1907), 391.
LiLjBNCRANTZ, Ottilie A., b. X876.
The Vinland Champions (1904), 261.
Lindsay, C. H. Forbes, b. i860.
John Smith, Gentleman Adventurer (1907), 308.
Daniel Boone (1908), 360.
LiNDSBY, William, b. 1858.
The Severed Mantle (1909), 268.
Loch, Emihr.
A bearer of Despatches (1905), 316.
LoRKAiMB, Rupert.
The Woman and the Sword (1908), 313.
LoiHROP, Mrs.
The Judges' Cave (1900), 321.
472 SUPPLEMENT.
LoTHROP» Birs . — conHnued.
A Little Maid of Boston Town (1910), 355.
The Little Maid of Concord Town (1898). 356.
Lows, Charles.
A Lindsay's Love (1905), 399.
Lucas, Annie.
Wenzd's Inheritance (1880), 283.
The aty and the Castle (1876), 290.
Ludlow, James M., b. 1841.
Sir Raonl (1905), 270.-
LuTZ, Grace Livingston Hill.
Marda Sdiuyler (1908), 4x7.
Lyls, Jun., Eugene P.
The Lone Star (1907), 387.
The Missourian (1905), 393,
Lynn, Escott.
When Lion-Heart was King (1907), 268.
Under the Red Rose (19x0), 286.
M
" M. R. H."
The Hermit of Livry (1890), 290.
" McAuLAY, Allan " (Miss Stewart).
The Safety of the Honours (1906), 319.
The Eagle's Nest (1909), 354.
MacBridb, Mackenzie.
King Penda's Captain (1908), 256.
McCarthy. Justin Huntly, b. i860.
The God of Love (X909), 274*
The Dryad (1905), 275.
The Flower of France (1906), 283.
Needles and Pins (1907), 284.
The Gorgeous Borgia (1908), 289.
The Duke's Motto (1908), 3x2.
The Lady of Loyalty House (1904), 314.
Seraphica (1907), 341.
The O'Flynn (i9io),4ix.
McChesnby, Dora G., b. 1871.
The Wounds of a Friend (1908), 300.
Yesterday's To-morrow (X905), 325.
McDonnell, R.
When Cromwell came to Drogheda (X906), 318.
My Sword for Patrick Sarsfield (1907), 333.
Macparlanb, p. C.
The Centurion's Story (1910], 247.
MacGowan, Alice, b. x858.
The Sword in the Mountains (19x0), 395.
SUPPLEMENT. 473
MclNTYRB, John T.
The Young Continentals at Lexington (1909), 355.
The Yoang Continentals at Bunker Hill (1910), 355
Fighting Kiilg George (1905), 359-
With Paul Jones (1906), 36a
The Boy Tars of 1812 (1907), 380.
Mackenzie, W. C.
The Lady of Hirta (1905), 342.
The Shirra (19x0), 416.
" Maclaren, Ian." (See Watson, Rev. John.)
McLaws, Emily Lafayette.
The Maid of Athens (1906), 385.
The Welding (1907). 394-
Maclean, Norman.
XM *^ ^ Of Home (1906), 344.
McManus, Miss L.
In Sarsfield's Days (1906), 333.
Macmillan, Michael.
In Wild Maratha Battie (1906), 328.
The Princess of Balkh (1905), 328.
The Last of the Peshwas (1906), 384.
McNeil, Everett. ^ ^ / o ^
In Texas with Davy Crockett (1908), 387.
Fighting with Fremont (1910), 390.
The Boy Forty-Niners (1908), 391.
Macphail, Andrew.
The Vine of Sibmah (1906), 323.
Macquoid, Katharine S.
Captain Dallington (1907), 337.
Madden, Eva.
Two Royal Foes (1907), 376,
BlADisoN, Mrs. Lucy Foster.
A Maid of Salem Town (1906), 333.
P^gy Owen (1908), 356.
Magnav, Sir William, Bart, b. 1855.
The Amazing Duke (1906), 324.
Major, Charles, b. 1856.
Yolanda, Maid of Burgundy (1906), 287.
The Little King (19x0), 322.
A Gentle Knight of Old Brandenburg (1909). 350.
Mann, Millicent E.
Lady Dear (1906), 288.
Mansford, Charles J.
Fags and the King (1909), 367.
Margueritte, Victor, b. 1866.
Le Petit Roi d'Ombre (1909), 364.
474 SUPPLEMENT.
Marxham, Sir Clements Robert, b. 1830.
The Paladins of Edwin the Great (1896), 255.
Marsh, Frances.
A Romance of Old Folkestone (1906), 368.
The Iron Game (1909), 399.
BlARSBALL, Beatrice.
The Queen's Knight Errant (1904), 300.
His Most Dear Ladye (1906), 307.
BiARSHALL, Enuna, 1832-99.
No. XIII. or The Story of the Lost Vestal (1885). 250.
The Two Swords (1887). 317.
The First Light on the Eddystone (x894)» 334.
An Escape from the Tower (1896), 339.
Bristol Diamonds (z888). 351.
Castle Meadow (1897), 352.
In Four Reigns (1887), 352.
On the Banks of the Ouse (z888), 353.
Up and Down the Pantiles (1890), 368.
A Romance of the Underclifi (1891), 368.
Marx, W. J.
For the Admiral (1906), 304.
Maszfield, John.
Martin Hyde (1910), 329.
Captain Margaret (1908), 330.
Lost Endeavour (1910), 411.
Mason, Caroline Atwater, b. 1853.
The White Shield (1904), 247.
The Binding of the Strong (1908), 310.
Maturin, Charles Robert, 1782-1824.
The Albigenses (1824), 271.
Maugbam, H. N.
Richard Hawkwood (1906), 287.
Mbadb, L. T. (Mrs. Toulmin Smith).
The Witch Maid (1903), 373.
MsiNHOLD, Johann Wilhelm, z 797-1 851.
The Amber Witch (1843), 312.
Mbllor, Dora.
Beauty Retire (1909), 330.
Merczbr, Mrs. Jerome.
By the King and Queen (1886), 245.
M^RBJKOWSKI, D.
Peter and Alexis (Peter the Great) (1904)1 338*
" Mbrriman, H. Seton." (See Scott, Hugh S.)
MlLZ.BR, Elizabeth, b. Z878.
The Yoke (Z904), 24a
Saul of Tarsus (Z906), 245.
The City of Delight (Z908). 246.
SUPPLEMENT. 475
MiLLSR, Lewis B.
The White River Raft (1910), 4184
MiLUNGTON, T. S.
A Great Mistake (i902)« 400«
Mills, Weymer J., b. 1880.
The Van Rensselaers of Old Manhattan (1907), 358
The Girl I Left Behind Me (1910), 417.
MiTCHBLL, Mrs. Elizabeth Harcourt.
The King's Stirrup (1896), 264.
The Little Blue Lady, &c. (1881) :~
The Little Blue Lady, 360.
Ina, 403.
Lazy Rudolph, 410.
Engel the Fearless (1886), 409*
Mjtcbbll, S. Weir, b. 1830.
A Venture in 1777 (1908), 358.
The Red City (1908), 370.
A Diplomatic Adventure (1906), 392;
Constance Trescott (1905), 419.
MiTFORD, Algernon Bertram Freeman. (See Redcsdale. Baron.)
Molandbr, Harald.
The Fortune-Hnnter (1897), 312.
" MoNTGOMBRY, K. L." (Kathleen and Letitia Montgomery),
The Ark of the Curse (1906), 305.
The Cardinal's Pawn (1904), 306.
Major Weir (1904), 319.
Colonel Kate (1908), 343.
MooRE, Dorothea.
God's Bairn (1905), 310.
My Lady Bellamy (1909), 333-
A Lady of Mettle (1910), 333.
Pamela's Hero (1907), 352.
The Luck of Ledge Point (1909), 373.
Brown (1905). 383-
MooRB, F. Frankfort, b. 1855.
Captain Lalymer (1907), 318.
The Messenger (The Love That Prevailed) (1907), 346.
Tre, Pol, and Pen (1887), 367.
He Loved But One (1905), 385.
Sir Roger's Heir (1904), 411.
Moors, H. C.
A Devonshire Lass (1908), 297.
MoRDBCAi, Margaret.
The Flower of Destiny, &c. (191 o) : —
The Flower of Destiny, 255.
The Last of the Fatimites, 267.
476 SUPPLEMENT.
MoRDBCAi, Blaigaret — canHnued.
Ilie Flower of Destiny, Ac. (1910) — canHnued, |
The New Moon of Islam, 283. t
The Heart of Bosnia, 383.
MoRB, £• Anson, b. 1854.
A Captain of Men (190^) » 240.
Morgan, George,
The Issae (1904), 389.
Morgan, J. Brown and J. Rogers Freeman.
The Spurs of Gold (1905), 281.
Morris, William, 1834-96.
A Dream of John Ball (x88o), 279.
MoTT, F. B.
Before the Crisis (1904), 393.
MuDDOCK, J. £. P., b. 1843.
Jane Shore (1905), 286.
In the Face of Night (1908), 296.
In the Qaeen's Service (1907), 298.
For the White Cockade (1906), 343.
The Shadow of Evil (1907), 378.
MuNROB, Kirk, b. 1850.
The White Conquerors of Mexico (The White Conquerors)
(1^3). ^9U
Midshipman Stuart (1899), 380,
MuRFRBB, Mary Noailles, b. 1850.
The Amulet (1906), 349.
The Storm Centre (1905), 394.
The Frontiersmen (1904), 413.
Murray, Hon. Charles A.
The Prairie Bird (1844), 370.
Murray, David Christie, i847-X907.
V.C. : a Chronicle of Cc^tle Barfield (1904), 391.
Myrzck, Herbert.
Cache La Poudre (1905), 401.
N
Naylor, J. Ball, b. i86o.
The Kentuckians (1905), 419.
Nbalb, Rev. John Mason, 1818--66.
The Exiles of the Cebenna {c, i860), 249.
Lucia's Marriage {c. i860), 249.
The Farm of Aptonga {c, 1850), 249.
Followers of the Lord (1851) : —
The Theban Legion, 249.
Evenings at Sackville College (c. 1850), 249.
Deeds of Faith (1850), 249.
Lent L^ends (c. 1850), 249.
SUPPLEMENT. 477
NsALB, Rev. John Mason — conHntud,
Tales of Christian Heroism (1845), 249.
Tales Illustrative of the Apostles' Creed (c, 1850), 249.
The Egyptian Wanderers (1854), 250.
The Daughters of Pola (c, x86o), 25Z«
The Quay of the Dioscuri (c, i860), 251.
The Rescue (c. i860), 257.
The LUy of Tiflis (c. i860), 257.
The Dove of Tabenna (c, i860), 258.
Agnes De Tracy (1843), 266.
Stories of the Crusades (c, 1845) : —
De HelUngley, 267.
The Crusade of St. Louis, 273.
The Sea-Tigers (c, i860), 274.
The Bride of RamcuttaJi (c. i860), 295.
Larache (c. i860), 305.
Shepperton Manor (1845), 307.
The Lazar House ot Leros (c. i86o)« 3Z3«
Dores de Gualdim (c. 1865), 313.
Herbert Tresham (1845), 317.
Duchenier (1848), 364.
Nbwbolt, Henry John, b. 1862.
The New June (1909), 280.
NiCHOLLS, William Jasper.
The Daughters of Sufiolk (1910), 297.
NiVBN, Frederick.
The Island Providence (19x0), 331.
Norway, G.
A Roman Household (1899), 246.
O'Brien, William, b. 1852.
A Queen of Men (1898), 301.
When we were Boys (1890), 420.
O'Byrmb, W, L.
The Knight of the Cave (1906), 265.
The Falcon King (1907), 266.
O'Grady, Standish, b. 1846.
The Flight of the Eagle (1897), 301.
The Bog of Stars, &c. (1893), 3ox«
O'Kamb, W. M.
With Poison and Sword (1910), 298.
Oldmsadow, Ernest J.
Antonio (1909), 387*
Oluvant, Alfred.
The Gentleman (1908), 372.
478 SUPPLEMENT.
" Onions, Oliver."
Draw in your Stool (1909) : —
A Daughter of Gaul. 242.
Back o' the Moon (1906), 413.
Opbnshaw, Maiy.
The Loser Pays (1908), 362.
The Cross of Honour (19x0), 376.
Orcutt, William Dana, b. 1870.
Robert Cavalier (1904), 334.
The Flower of Destiny (1905), 399.
" Orczy, Baroness." (See Barstow, Mrs. M.)
Ormbrod, Frank.
The Two-Handed Sword (1909), 342.
Osbornb, Duffield, b. 1858.
The Angels of Messer Ercole (1907), 288.
Oswald, E. J.
The Dragon of the Nortii (1888), 262.
" Ons, James." (See Kaler.)
OUTRAM, M. F.
In the Van of the Vikings (1909), 260.
OxBNHAM, Elsie Jeanette.
Mistress Nanciebd (1909), 324.
OxBNHAif, John.
Carette of Sark (A Man of Sark) (1907), 371.
Lauristons (i9io),377.
The Coil of Came (191 1), 391.
Great Heart Gillian (1909), 400.
OxLBY, J. Macdonald.
Diamond Rock (1904), 371.
North Overland with Franklin (1907), 384.
Terry's Trials and Triumphs (1900), 396.
OZAKi, Yei Theodora.
Warriors of Old Japan (1909), 410.
P
Pagb, Violet, b. 1856.
Penelope Brandling (1903), 413.
Parkbr, Frances.
Winding Waters (1909), 402.
Parkbr, Sir Gilbert, b. 1862.
A Ladder of Swords (1904), 300;
The Weavers (1907), 418.
Parrish, Randall, b. 1858.
A Sword of the Old Frontier (1905), 349.
Prisoners of Chance (1908), 349.
When Wilderness was King (1904), 380.
My Lady of the South (1909), 397.
SUPPLEMENT, 479
Parrxsh, Randall— coM^niMiI
My Lady of the North (1904), 398.
Bob Hampton of Placer (1906), 402.
Parry, D. H.
The Golden Glory (i9o6)» 296.
Parry, Judge £. A.
England's Elizabeth (1904), 297.
Patbr, Walter, 1839-^4.
Gaston de Latonr (1889), 304.
Patterson, B. S.
The Head of Iron (i9o3), 348.
Pbarcb, Charles £.
Love Besieged (1909), 392.
Pbard, Frances Mary.
Prentice Hugh (1887) 275.
The Abbot's Bndge (1891), 276.
The Blue Dragon (1890), 289.
To Horse and Away (x888), 319.
Scapegrace Dick (x886), 320.
Pbasb, Howard.
With the Warden of the Marches (1909), 298.
Magnus Sinclair (1904), 318.
Of Mistress Eve (1906), 3x8.
The Burning Cresset (X908), 339,
Pbck, Theodore.
The Sword of Dundee (X908), 342.
Pbmbbrton, Max, b. 1863.
Sir Richard Escombe (X908), 345.
My Sword for Lafayette (X906), 360.
Beatrice of Venice (X904), 366.
The Hundred Days (X905), 383.
Pbplb, Edward.
Semiramis (1907), 239.
Pbtbrson, H.
Duldbel (X907), 335.
Phblps, C. E. D., b. X851.
The Acadade (X905), 278.
Phillpotts, Eden, b. x862.
The American Prisoner (X904), 379.
Pickering, Edgar.
An Old Time Yam (X893). 298.
The Cruise of the Angel (X907), 303.
Two Gallant Rebels (X895), 364.
Pickering, Sidney.
Paths Perilous (1909), 365.
The Key of Paradise (1903), 414
48o SUPPLEMENT.
Plant, C. P.
John Rigdon (X904)> 393-
PoLLAKD, Eliza F.
A Saxon Maid (xgoi), 264.
The White Standard (1905). 282.
Soldiers of the Cross (1905). 288.
A Gentleman of England (1897). S^O'
The Old Moat Farm (1906). 300-
The Queen's Favourite (i907)» 3*^*
Roger the Ranger (1893), 347.
The Silver Hand (1908). 353.
The Green Mountain Boys (Liberty or Death) (1896), 350.
A New England Maid (1910), 359.
A Girl of the Eighteenth Century (1907). 30o.
For the Emperor (i909)> 382-
The Knij^ts of Liberty (1905). 3^3-
True Unto Death (1895), 391.
The White Dove of Amritzer (1897). 392.
Porter, Helen.
The Second Bloom (1906), 374-
Post, Van Zo.
Retz (1903), 287.
Potter, David.
The Lady of the Spur (1910). 386.
The Eleventh Hour (1910), 390.
Potter, Margaret H., b. 1881.
The Flame-Gatherers (1904)* 269.
PoTTiNGBR, Sir Henry.
Blue and Green (1879). 253.
Power, Edith Mary.
A Knight of God (1909). 30'-
Praed, Mrs. Campbell, b. 1851.
Nyria (1904)* 247.
The Romance of Mdle. AIss6 (1910). 34i-
Pratt, Tinsley. , « , % o
When Hawkins Sailed the Sea (1907). *98.
Price, Eleanor C.
The Queen's Man (1905). 285.
In the Lion's Mouth (1894). 3^2.
" Prior, James." (See Kirk, J. P.)
Protberoe, Ernest.
For Queen and Emperor (1909). 245.
Scouting for a King (1910). 3X9-
PuDDicoMBE, Mrs. Beuyou.
Hearts of Wales {1905). 281.
Pylb, Howard, b. 1853.
Men of Iron (1892). 281. ^ , ao ^
The Merry Adventures of Robm Hood (1883), 409.
SUPPLEMENT. 481
Q
"0" (See Couch, A. T. QuiUer.).
Radcxitfe, Mrs. Ann, 1 764-1 823.
The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794), 305*
The Italian (1797)* 353-
" Rainb, Allen." (See Puddkombe.)
Rainb, William Macleod.
For Love and Honour (1904), 343.
Ralu, Constantine Scaramanga.
The Wisdom of the Serpent (1907), 399^
The Tyranny of Honour (191 1), 401.
Ramsdbn, Lewis.
Red Cavalier (1907), 330.
Rawlbncb, Guy.
The Romantic Road (1910), 414.
Rawson, Mrs. Maud Stepney.
Tales of Rye Town (1905) : —
A Coronation, 299*
The Weaving of Gys^le Espinette, 331.
My Lady Qemency goes down to Rye, 334.
My Lady Qemency welcomes a Gues^ 334.
The Apprentice (1904), 384.
The Staunnray of Honour (1909) :-«
Chloe Finds a Conscience, 4x5.
Delia at a Disadvantage, 4x5.
Ray, F. a.
Maid of the Mohawk (X906), 358*
Raymond, Walter, b. 1852.
In the Smoke of War (x895)» 31 7«
Jacob and John (1905), 412*
Two Men or Mendip (1889), 4x6.
Rbad, Opie.
The Son of the Swordmaker (1905), 244.
By the Eternal (X906), 379*
RxADB, Compton, b. X834.
Discobol (X907), 245.
Rbdssdalb, Baron, b. X837.
Tales of Old Japan (X87X), 41 x.
Rbbd, Helen Leah.
Napoleon's Young Neighbour (1907), 383.
Rbwdbl, H.
The King's Cockade (1903), 363.
2 I
48a SUPPLEMENT.
Reynolds, George W. M., 1814-79.
The Rye House Plot (1S44), 325.
" Rhoscomyl, Owen." (See Vaoghan. Captain Owen.)
Rhys, Ernest, b. 1859.
The Man at Odds (1904), 344.
Rhys, Grace, b. 1865.
The Prince of Lisnover (1904), 420;
Rich, £. R.
Comrades Four (1907), 39^*
Richardson, Norval.
The Heart of Hope (1905). 398-
The Lead of Honour (1910), 417.
RiCKBRT, Edith, b. 1871.
Out of the Cypress Swamp (1902), 379.
Golden Hawk (1907)* 4«>.
RiVBS, H. Erminie.
The Castaway (1904). 385.
RoBBRSON, Harriette G.
Mary of Magdala (1909)1 247.
RoBERTON, Mrs. Margaret H.
John Knox's Bairns (X905), 296*
Roberts, Charles G. D., b. z86o.
The Prisoner of Mademoiselle (1904)1 338*
Roberts, Margaret (Author of " Mademoisdle Mori "), b. 1833;
A Little Step-Daughter (1887)^ 341.
St^hanie's Children (i89<4, 363.
Roberts, Theodore.
Captain Love (1908), 340.
Brothers of Peril (1905). 4"*
A Cavalier of Virginia (1910), 412.
Robertson, Frances Forbes.
The Wanton (1909)* 271.
The Taming of the Brute (X905), 4<3«
Robinson, A. Mary F. (See Duclaoz, Mdme.)
Robinson, Edith.
A Puritan Knight Errant (1903), 321.
A Little Puritan's First Christmas (1900), 326,
Robinson, Nellie G.
Philo's Daughter (1909)* 247*
RODOCANACHIB, E.
ToUa the Courtesan (1897), 336,
RoDWBLL, G. Herbert.
Old London Bridge (1849), 293.
ROLFB, F.
Don Tarquinio (i905)> 289*
SUPPLEMENT. 483
RouMAMiA, Elizabeth Qneen of (" Carmen Sylva "), b. 1843.
A Ro3ral Story Book (2910) : —
Decebal's Daughter, 248.
The Poet, 248.
The Dacian Virgin, 248.
RoussBLBT, Louis.
Le Serviteur du Lion de la Mer (1905), 361 •
Rows, G.
In Nelson's Day (1905), 372.
RowssLL, Mary C.
Monsieur de Paris (1907), 361.
RuTFiN, Mrs. Margaret £. Henry.
The North Star (1904), a6z.
RussBLL, W. Clark, b. 1844.
The Yam of Old Harbour Town (1905), 372.
Rydbbrg, Viktor, 1828-95.
SingoaUa (2864), 277.
Ryvbn. George.
The Mightiest Power (1909), 239.
S
Sabatinz, Rafael, b. 1875.
The Shame of Motley (1908)9 290.
Love at Arms (1907), 290.
St. Martin's Summer (1909), 308.
Bardeleys the Magnificent (1906), 311.
The Tavern Knight (1904), 319.
The Lovers of Yvonne (Suitors of Yvonne) (1902), 322.
Anthony Wilding (Arms and the Maid) (2910), 330.
The Lion's Skin (1911), 340.
The Trampling of the lities (1906), 362*
" Sagom, Amyot."
Under the Roman Eagles (2907), 246.
St. John, H.
The Voyage of the Avenger (2898), 299.
Samson, John.
In the Dictator's Grip (2903), 382.
Savidgb, £. Coleman.
The American in Paris (2896)9 402.
Schmidt, Ferdinand, 2823-^8.
Hermann and Inusnelda {c, 2870), 243,
ScHOFiBLD, Mary.
The Ladye of LydHnch (2906), 262.
ScBUS]&, Edouard, b. 2842.
The Priestess of Isis (2907), 247.
ScRUYLBR, William,
Under Pontius Pilate (1906), 243*
484 SUPPLEMENT.
ScoLLASD, Clinton, b. i86o.
The Vicar of the Marches (191 1), 265«
Scott, Hugh Stowell, 1863-1903.
The Last Hope (1904), 388.
Scott, John Reed, b. 1869.
Beatrix of Clare (1907), 286.
The Impostor (19x0), 349.
Scott, Michael, x 789-1835.
Tom Cringle's Log (X836), 4x6,
Scott, Thomas.
Morcar (X903), 309.
ScuDDBR, Vida D.
The Disciple of a Saint (X907), 278*
Sbabrook, Phosbe H.
A Daughter of the Confederacy (X907), 397*
Seaman, Augusta H.
Jacqudixie of the Carrier Pigeons (x9xo),^t>303.
Sbars, Margaret L.
Menotomy (X908), 356.
Seaton, Paul.
For Love and Loyalty (1905)^ 343*
Sbaweix, Molly Elliott, b. x86o.
The Last Duchess of Belgarde (X908), 361.
Decatur and Somers (1894), 375*
The Imprisoned Midshipman (i9o8)» 376*
Midshipman Paulding (i89x)» 380.
The Victory (1906), 396.
Sedgwick, Sidney Newman.
A Daughter of the Druids (1904), 250.
Seluck, G. G.
Highway Dust (X907), 344.
Senior, Dorothy.
The Clutch of Circumstance (x9o8)» 408.
Seymour, Pliny B.
WoodhuU (1907), 355*
Shackelford, Henrv.
The Lost Bjng (X903)> 365.
Sbaw, Captain Frank H.
In the Days of Nelson (X910), 367.
Sheehan, Canon Patrick A., b. 1852.
Glenanaar (1905)1 385.
Shbppard, Alfred T.
The Red Cravat (1905), 349.
Running Horse Inn (1906)^ 384*
Sburts, J. Van der Veer.
Kedar Kross (X9o8)« 389.
" Sidney, Margaret" (See Lothrop, Mrs.)
SUPPLEMENT. 485
SiSNKiBWicZf H., b. 1846.
The Field of Glory (On the Field of Glory) («. 1900), 328.
SiLBBRRAD, Una L.
Declined with Thanks (191 1)» 410.
Sampson Rideont, Qnaker (191 1), 411*
SiLKB, Louisa C.
Ravensdale Castle (1903), 300;
A Hero in the Strife (1892), 323.
Margaret Somerset (1894), S^S-
Simpson, Violet A.
The Parson's Wood (1905), 331.
The Sovereign Power (1904), 373.
Sinclair, Bertrand W.
Raw Gold (1908), 420.
Sinclair, Upton.
Manassas (1904), 394.
Smith, Alice Prescott.
Montlivet (1906), 334.
Smith, E. K. Seth.
A Son of Odin (1909), 258.
Friedhelm (1905), 270.
To the Shrine of St. Truth (1904), 279.
Smith, F. Hopkinson, b. 1838.
The Tides of Bamegat (1906), 419.
Smith, James, and John Wren Sutton.
The Secret of the Sphinx (1906), 240.
Smith, Mrs. liary P. Wells, b. 1840.
The Boy Captive of Old Deerfield (1904), 338.
Bo3rs of the Border (1907), 347.
Boys and Girls of '77 (1909), 358,
Smith, Bfinna Caroline.
Mary Paget (1900), 307.
Smith, Ruel Perley, b. 1869.
Prisoners of Fortune (1907), 338.
Smith, Sheila Kaye.
Starbrace (1909), 412*
The Tramping Methodist (1908), 414*
Smyth, Dr. Newman.
The Story of the Child that Jesus Took (1907)* M7*
Snaith, J. C.
The Wa3rfarers (1902), 345.
Fortune (1910), 410.
Spillmann, J.
Valiant and True (1905), 361*
Spragub, William C.
The Boy Courier of Napoleon (1904)1 375*
486 SUPPLEMENT.
Spurreix, Herbert.
At Sunrise (1904)9 345.
Stables, Gordon, b. 1840.
As We Sweep Through the Deep (1894), 367.
Chris Cunningham (1903), 367.
Stage, Henry.
The Adventures ol Count O'Connor (i907)«[328,
Stacfools, H. de Vere.
The Drums of War (19x0), 399.
Stanard, Mary Newton.
The Dreamer (1909), 387.
Stark, James H.
The Lo3ralists of Massachusetts (1910), 360.
Stavert, a. a, B.
Bo3rs of Baltimore (1907), 309.
Stead, R.
Kinsman and Namesake (1909)* 281.
Will of the Dales (i905)> 41 !•
Steel, Flora Annie, b. 1847.
A Prince of Dreamers (igoS), 306.
Stein, Evaleen.
A Little Shepherd of Provence (1910), 409.
Stephens, C. A.
The Ark of 1803 (i904)« 374-
Stephens, R« Neilson, d. 1906.
Captain Ravenshaw (i90i}, 302.
The Bright Face of Danger (1904). 308.
The Flight of Georgiana (1905)* 343*
The Road to Paris (1902), 354.
The Continental Dragoon (i90i), 339*
Stephens, R. Neilson, and G. H. Westley.
Clementina's Highwayman (X907)» 344*
Stephenson, Nathaniel, b. 1867.
Eleanor Dayton (i903)» 399*
Sterling, Sara Hawks.
Shakespeare's Sweetheart (i905)> 3<>2*
A Lady of King Arthur's Court (1909). 4°^
Steuart, John A.
The Red Reaper (1905)* 3i9*
Stevens, Sheppard, b. 1862.
The Sign of Triumph (1904), 270.
Stevens, W. O., and Barclay McKee.
The Young Privateersman (1910), 379.
Stevenson, Burton Egbert, b. 1872.
At Odds with the Regent (1901), 34i«
The Path of Honor (1910), 362.
SUPPLEMENT. 4^7
Stbvbmson, Philip L.
The Rose of Danphiny (1909), 305.
A Gallant of Gascony (1907), 305.
The Black Ctiisassier (1906), 313.
A Gendarme of the King (1905), 350.
Stevenson, Robert Loui^, 1850-94.
A Lodging for the Night (1878), 284.
Weir of Hermiston (1895), 378.
Stewart, Newton V.
A Son of the Emperor (1909), 27X«
Stodoasd, W. O., b. 1835.
Ulric the Jarl (1899), 244.
The Swordmaker's Son (1896), 244.
With the Black Prince (1898), 276.
Dan Monroe (1905), 35^.
Two Cadets with Washmgton (1906), 357.
The Fight for the Valley (1904), 358.
The Spy of Yorktown (1903), 359.
On the Old Frontier (1894), 359.
Long Bridge Boys (1904), 394-
The Battle of New York (1892), 397.
Strain, Mrs. £. H.
A Prophet's Reward (1908), 353.
Strang, Herbert.
With Drake on the Spanish Main (On the Spanish Main)
(1904), 299-
Humphrey Bold (1908), 336.
The Adventures of Harry Rochester (1906), 336.
Rob the Ranger (2907), 348.
One of Clive's Heroes (In dive's Command) (1906)9 349-
Jack Hardy (1906), 373,
The Adventures of I^ck Trevanion (19x0), 373.
Boys of the Light Brigade (Light Brigade in Spain) (1905)* S^x.
Barclay of the Guides (1908), 392.
Strang, Herbert, and George Lawrence.
Roger the Scout (19 11), 344.
Strang, Herbert, and John Aston.
In the New Forest (1910), 263.
Claud the Archer (1909), 282.
Strang, Herbert, and Richard Stead.
Lion Heart (19x0), 268.
With the Black Prince (19x0), 276.
A Mariner of England (19x0)^ 299.
One of Rupert's Horse (1909)* 3x4.
With Marlborough to Malplaquet (X9X0), 337.
Stratbmbyer, Edward, b. 1862.
On the Trail of Pontiac (X904), 348.
488 SUPPLEMENT.
Stratbmbybr, Edward — coniinued.
The Minute Boys of Bunker Hill (1899), 358.
The Minute Boys of Lexington (1898), 358.
For the Liberty of Texas (1909), 390.
With Taylor on the Rio Grande (1909), 39a
Under Scott in Mexico (1909), 39a
Defending His Flag (1907), 397.
Stuart, Dorothy Margaret.
Martin the Mummer (1910), 284.
Stuart, £sm6.
In the Days of Luther (The Fate of Castle L6weogard)
(1884). 291.
Carried Oft (x888), 326.
Isabeau's Hero (x882), 336.
For Love and Ransom (1904), 383.
A Nest of Royalists (1892), 386.
The Belfry of St. Jude (1880), 400.
Stuart, Henry L.
Weeping Cross (1908), 321.
Surrey, George.
A Northumbrian in Arms (1909) , 262.
Mid Clash of Swords (1908), 295.
SuTCLiTFB, Halliwell, b. 1870.
Pam the Fiddler (1911), 298.
Under the White Cockade (X902)» 343.
Swallow, Henry J.
Love While Ye May (1907), 298,
Swan, Edgar.
The Sword and the Cowl (1909), 263.
" Sylva, Carmen." (See Roumania, Queen of).
Symonds, B.
A Lady of France (19x0), 275.
T
" Tallbntyrs, S. G." (Miss E. V. HaU).
Early Victorian (Basset) (x9Xo), 418.
Tanqueray, Mrs. Bertram.
The Royal Quaker (X904), 323.
Tanslby, F. C.
For Kett and Countryside (19x0), 296.
Tappam, Eva March.
Robin Hood : his Book (i903)» 409^
Tarbbt, W. G.
A Loyal Maid (X908), 343.
Taylor, C. Bryson.
Nicanor, Teller of Tales (X906), 252.
SUPPLEMENT. 489
Taylor, Irene Strickland.
True Gold (19x0), 3x5.
Taylor, Mary Imlay.
My Lady Qancarty (X905), 334.
TsARLB, Christian.
Holbom Hill (i909)» 37a.
" Thekla."
In the Days of the Gironde (19x0), 363.
Thburibt, Andr6
La Chanoinesse (x893)g 36X.
T^bault, Anatole, b. 1844.
Judaens Procuxator (1892), 247.
Thais (X890), 408.
At the Sign of the Qneen Pedanque (1889). 4x2.
Thomas, Rev. H. Elwyn.
The Forerunner (X9X0), 3x0.
Ifor Owain (X9xx), 3x0.
Thomas, Martha McCannon, b. 1823.
Captain Phil (1884), 397.
Thompson, Adele £.
American Patty (X909), 380.
Thompson, £. Perronet.
A Dragoon's Wiie (X907), 327.
Thynnb, A.C.
Sir Bevill (1904), 309.
TiLTON, Dwight.
My Lady Laughter (X905), 356.
Todd, G. Eyre.
Cavalier and Covenant (Anne of Argyle) (1895), 3x9^
ToMLiNSON, Everett T., b. X859.
The Fort in the Forest (X904), 347.
A Soldier of the Wilderness (X905), 347.
The Young Rangers (X907), 347,
With Flintlock and Fife (1903), 347.
The Camp-Fire of Mad Antiiony (X907), 356.
Mad Anthony's Young Scout (1908), 356.
The Rider of the Black Horse (1904), 358.
The Red Chief (X905), 358.
Marching Against the Iroquois (X906), 359.
The War of x8x2 (X906), 379.
For the Stars and Stripes (X909), 396.
The Young Blockaders (X9X0), 396.
TouDOUZB, Gustave and Georges.
lit Sordire da V6suve (1907), 377.
TowNSHBMD, Dorothea.
A St George of King Charles' Days (X906), 32a
490 SUPPLEMENT.
TftAcy, Louis.
Heart's Delight (The Great Mogul) (1905), 307.
" Travbss, Graham '^ (Margaret G. Todd, M.D.).
Growth (1906), 420.
Travbrs, Libbie Miller.
The Honor of a Lee (1908)^ 394.
Trbvelyan, Marie (Mrs. Paslieu).
Britain's Greatness Foretold (1900), 245.
Trowbridge, W. R. H.
The Little Marquis of Brandenburg (1904), 349.
Trub, John Preston.
Scouting for Washington (1900), 357.
Morgan's Men (1901), 357.
The Iron Star (1899). 407.
TucKBR, Miss Charlotte Maria, 1821-^3.
The Blacksmith of Boniface Lane (1891), 281.
Tttppbr, Edith Sessions,
Hearts Triumphant (1906), 375.
TwBLLS, Julia H.
£t Tu Sejane (1904), 243.
Tylbb, Edward S.
The Red Cap (igoS), 362.
" TVtlbr, Sarah." (See Keddie, Henrietta.)
U
Upton, George Putnam, b. 1834.
Life Stories for Young People (1907, &c.), 243.
V
Valbmtinb, Edward Uffington, b. 1870.
Heda Sandwith (1905), 4x8.
Vallings, Harold.
The Lady Mary of Tavistock (1908), 309.
Vamcb, Wilson.
Big John Baldwin (1909), 320.
Vaugbam, Gwyneth.
O Gorlannau y Defaid (1905), 392.
Vaughan, Captain Owen.
Sweet Rogues (1907), 3x8.
The Jewel of Ynys Galon (1895), 41 x.
Vbvbrs, Maud.
Lettice Temple (1900), 328.
W
Wagnalls, MabeL
The Palace of Danger (1908), 351.
SUPPLEMENT. 491
Waight, J. F.
King of the Barons (1908), 272.
Walker, Frances M. Cotton.
Cloister to Court (1909), 296.
Walxby, S.
The Ix>ver8 of Lorraine (1904), 334.
Yo Ho I For the Spanish Main (1910), 4x1.
Wallace, Helen.
To Pleasure Madame (The Sons of the Seigneur) (1907)^ 3x9,
Walshe. £. H.
The Foster-Brothers of Doon (1906), 369.
Ward, F.
Wolfingham {e, x86o), 370.
The Catechumens of the Coromandel Coast (e, i860), 384.
Rose and Minnie (c. i860), 388,
Warbe, Evelyn B.
Elena (1910), 289.
Ware, William.
Julian (x84i)« 247.
Warren, C. E.
The Musket Boys of Old Boston (1909), 355.
The Musket Boys under Washington (1909), 355,
Warry, C. King.
The Sentinel of Wessex (1904), 373,
Waterloo, Stanley.
The Story of Ab (1897), 407.
Watson, Mrs. Herbert.
Andrew Goodfellow (1906), 372.
Watson, H. B. Marriott, b. 1863.
Galloping Dick (1896)9 330.
The High Toby (1906), 330.
The King's Highway (1910), 330.
Twisted Eglantine (1905), 378.
Watson, Rev. John, 1850-1907.
Graham of Claverhouse (1908), 332.
Watt, L. M.
Edragil, 1 745 (1907), 343-
Watts, Mary S.
Nathan Burke (19x0), 4x7.
Way. a. S.
David the Captain (1904), 240.
Weaver, Emily.
lYince Ruperf s Namesake (1894), 323*
Webb, Mrs. J. B. (afterwards Mrs. Webb-Peploe),
Naomi (1841)9 246^
Webster, Henry K.
Traitor or Loyalist (1904), 396*
492 SUPPLEMENT.
Wbntworth, Patricia.
A llarriage Under the Terror (x9io)# 363.
A Little More than Kin (More than Kin) (X9tx), 363.
Wbstbrman, Percy F.
A Lad of Grit (1908), 335.
Wbstovbr, Clyde C.
The Romance of Gentle Will (1903), 302.
Wbyman, Stanley J., b. 1855.
The Abbess of Vlaye (1904), 306.
The WUd Geese (1908), 339.
Starvecrow Farm (1905), 384.
Chippinge (Chippinge Borough) (1906), 386.
Sophia (1900), 4x2.
Wheelwright, j. Tyler.
War Cluldren (1908), 397.
Whishaw, F.
The Tiger of Muscovy (1904), 306.
Once Bitten, Twice Shy (1910), 335.
An Empress in Love (19x0), 354.
Moscow (X905), 382.
'• WmspBR, A."
King and Captive (19x0), 239.
Black Mark (X909), 344.
Whistler, Charles W., b. X856.
A Prince of Cornwall (X904), 257.
A King's Comrade (X906), 258.
A Prince Errant (X908), 258.
A Sea Queen's Sailing (1907), 260.
Gerald the SherifE (X906), 264.
White, Stewart Edward, b. 1873.
The Blazed Trail (1902), 419.
The Riverman (1908), 4x9.
Wbitkam, Grace I.
Sir Sleep- Awake and His Brother (X908), 269.
The Red Knight (19x0), 277.
Squire and Page (X906}, 282.
Basil the Page (X908), 299.
His Majesty's Glove (X909), 318.
The Last of the White Coats (1905), 3x9.
Whiting, Ma^ B.
The Plough of Shame (1906), 295.
WiGGiN, Kate Douglas (Mrs. George Riggs), b. 1857.
The Old Peabody Pew (X907), 418.
WII3RAHAM, Frances M.
The Qneen's Badge( X878), 285.
SUPPLEMENT. 493
Wiley, Belle, and Grace W. Edick.
Children of the Clifi (1903), 407.
Lodrix the Little Lake Dweller (X904)« 407.
WiLVOSD, Florence.
The King of a Day (1868), aSa.
WnxAXD, Rachel.
Catharine Douglas (1905), 283.
Wn.T.TAMS, Jnn., Egerton R.
Ridolfo : the Coming of the Dawn (X906), 284.
WnxiAiiS, H. Noel.
The Hand of Uonore (1904), 351.
WlLUAMS, R.
Memoirs of a Buccaneer (1909), 32i«
WiLLYSp A. A.
The Swiss Heroes (1907)* 287.
Wilson, Mary J.
The IQiight of the Needle Rock (1905), 302.
WiNSLOW, W. H.
Southern Buds and Sons of War (1907), 398.
Wood, Frances.
For an Atonement (1905), 240.
Wood, L. C.
For a Free Conscience (X905), 323.
Wood, Warren.
The Tragedy of the Deserted Isle (1909), 375.
Woods, Margaret L., b. 1856.
The King's Revoke (1905), 38z,
Wymkb, Fdda.
The Profligates (1906), 323.
Wymnb, G. Robert.
BaUinvalley (1896), 369.
" Wtmkb, May " (Miss M. W. Knowles).
Let Erin Remember (1908), 266.
A King's Tragedy (1905), 283.
The Tailor of Vitr6 (The Gipsy Count) (1908), 288.
A Maid of Brittany (1906), 288.
A King's Biaaquerade (1910), 294.
For Church and Chieftun (1909), 301.
For Faith and Navarre (Henry dt Navarre) (1904), 304*
Ronald Lindsay (1904), 332.
Mistress Cjrnthia (19x0), 342.
For Charles the Rover (1909), ^44.
A Blot on the Scutcheon (X9ioy, 360.
When Terror Ruled (1907), 362.
494 SUPPLEMENT.
Y
YxATS, S. Levett.
Orrain (1904)^ 296.
YOLLAND, G.
Under the Stars (1907), 393.
YoNGB, Charlotte M., 1823-1901.
The Patriots of Palestine (1889). 242.
The Slaves of Sabinns (1890), 247.
The Cook and the Captive (1895), 253.
The Constable's Tower (1891), 27a
The Wardship of Steepcombe (1888), 278.
The Herd Boy and His Hermit (1900), 285.
Under the Storm (1887), 5x9.
The Canning Woman's Grandson (1890), 352.
The Carbonels (1896), 4x7.
Young, Margaret
The Wreathed Dagger (X909). 3x8.
YoxAix, Sir James Henry, b. 1857.
Beyond the Wall (1906), 354.
Z
Zola, J^lmile, 1840-1902.
The Attack on the Mill (L'Attaqne dn Moahn) (1880), 401.
ZoLLTNGBR, Gulielma.
A Boy's Ride (1909), 269.
The Roat of the Foreigner (19x0), 27x,
INDEX OF TITLES
(SupfusmentV
INDEX OF TITLES.
Abbess of Vlaye, 306.
Abbot's Bridge, 276.
Accolade (The), 278.
Across the Spanish Main, 298.
Adnah, 243.
Adria, 389.
Adventures of an Equerry, 326.
Adventures of Count O'Connor,
328.
Adventures of Denis, 342.-
Adventures of Dick Tre-
vanion, 373.
Adventures of Harry Rochester,
336.
Adventures of HumfreyChatteris,
273.
Adventures of Lady Susan, 368.
Adventures of Timothy, 315.
iCmilius, 249;
Affair of Dishonour, 323.
After Many Days, 254.
Against the Stream, 377.
Agnes de Tracy, 266.
Agnes Martin, 292.
Ailsa Paige, 394.
Alan's Vow, 269.
Albigenses (The), 271.
Alexander and Roxana, 241.
Alexander the King, 241.
Alexander the Prince, 241.
Alice of Fobbing, 279.
Alkibiades, 241.
All for the Love of a Lady, 31 1.
Alleluia Battle, 252.
Amazing Duke, 324;
Amber Witch, 312.
America and our Colonies,
308, etc^
American in Paris, 401.
American Patty, 380.
American Prisoner, 379.
Ampthill Towers, 292.
Amulet (The), 349.
Amyas Egerton Cavalier, 315.
Andr6-Emest-Modeste Gr^try,
Musicien, 350.
Andreds- Weald, 262.
Andrew Goodfdlow, 372.
Andrew Marvel and His Friends,
310
Angel of the Fen, 257.
Angel Unawares, 254.
Angels of Messer Ercole, 288.
Anne Nelson, 357.
Anne of Argyle, 3x9.
Anne-Queen's Chronicle, 293.
Anthony Wilding, 330W-
Antonio, 387.
Apprentice (The), 384.
Arethusa, 278.
Ark of 1803, 374.
Ark of the Curse, 305.
Armadin, 265.
Arms and the Maid, 330.
Arnold's Tempter, 359.
Amoul the Englishman, 273;
Arrow of the North, 294.
Arrows of Ambition, 313.
As it Happened, 353.
As we Sweep through the Deep,
367.
Ascensiontide Dream, 257.
Asia and Africa, 249, etc.
Assyrian Bride, 2^0.
Astrologer's Daugnter, 241 .
At Aboukir and Acre, 67
At All Hazards, 329.
At Lathom's Siege, 317.
At Odds with the Regent, 341.
At Sunzis^ 245.
497
2 K
498
SUPPLEMENT.
At the King's Right Hand, 259^
At the Point of the Bayonet, 374.
At the Sign of the Golden Fleece,
292.
At the Sign of the Queen
Pedauque, 412.
Attack on the Mill, 401.
Attaque du Moulin, 401.
Attila and His Conqueror, 252.
Aubrey de I'Onne, 264.
Audel Selwode, 337.
Antour d'une Tiare, 264.
Avenger of Blood, 257.
Aylmer Court, 314.
Azalim, 240.
Back o' the Moon, 413.
Baldwin of Jerusalem, 265.
Ballinvalley, 369.
Barabbas, 243.
Barclay of the Guides, 392.
Bardelys the Magnificent, 311.
Basil the Page, 299.
Basset, 418.
Battle in the West, 256.
Battle of New York, 397.
Battling for Atlanta, 395.
Bearer of Despatches, 316*
Beatrice of Venice, 366.
Beatrix of Clare, 286.
Beau Brocade, 344.
Beaujeu, 328.
Beautiful Rebel, 380.
Beauty Retire, 330.
Before the Crisis, 393.
Beggars' Luck, 322.
Behind the VdU, 263.
Belfry of St. Jude, 400.
Belle of BowUng Green, 381.
Bembo, 287.
Ben Brace, 367.
Ben Tobit, 244.
Benbonuna, 418.
Bemicia, 346.
Bertrand Duguesdin, 375.
Bertrand of Brittany, 277.
Bess of the Woods, 413.
Betrayal of Mistress JDonis, 303.
Between two Crusades, 267.
Beyond Man's Strength, 388.
Beyond the Wall, 354.
Bible and Sword, 331.
Bid for Loyalty, 400.
Big John Baldwin, 320.
Binding of the Strong, 310.
Black Cuirassier, 313.
Black Danes, 259.
Black Friday, 399.
Black Magic, 409.
Black Mark, 344.
Black Partridge, 380.
Black Pilgrim, 376.
Blacksmith of Boniface Lane,
281.
Blazed Trail, 419.
Blot on the Scutcheon, 360.
Blue and Green, 253.
Blue and Grey, 395.
Blue Dragon, 289.
Blue Ocean's Daughter, 360.
Bob Hampton of Placer, 402.
Bog of Stars, 30X.
Bonnie Prince Charlie, 341.
Bottle in the Smoke, 267.
Boy and the Baron, 274.
Boy Bondsman, 339.
Boy Captive of Old Deerfteld,
338.
Boy Courier of Napoleon, 375
Boy Forty-niners, 391.
Boy Tars of 1812, 380.
Boy's Ride, 269.
Boys and Girls of '77, 358.
Boys of Baltimore, 309.
Boys of the Border, 347.
Boys of the Light Brigade. 381.
Brake^eare, 276.
Brave Dame Mary, 260.
Brave Heart Series, 380.
Brave Sidney Somers, 306.
Bravest Gentleman in France,
3".
SUPPLEMENT.
499
Brazenhead the Great, 285.
Brethren (The), 267.
Brian Fits Count, 265.
Brian of Mnnster, 260.
Bride of Ramcnttah, 295.
Bright Face of Danger, 308.
Bristol Diamonds, 351.
Britain's Greatness Foretold, 245.
British L^on, 387.
Broad Highway, 4x7.
Broken Sword, 331.
Bronson of the Rabble, 381.
Brothers Five, 302.
Brothers-in-Arms, 267.
Brothers of Peril, 411.
Brown, 383.
Brown Mask, 329.
Bryda, 392.
Buondehnonte's Saga, 409.
Burning Cresset, 339.
By Conduct and Courage, 366.
By Neva's Waters, 376.
By Sheer Pluck, 402.
By Thames and Tiber, 246 .
By the Eternal, 379.
By the Gods Beloved, 408.
By the King and Queen, 245.
By What Authority, 298.
By Wild Waves Tossed, 380.
Cache la Poudre, 401.
Cadet-la-Perle, 311.
Calvert of Maryhind, 3x1.
Cameron of Lochiel, 347.
Camp-Fire of Mad Anthony, 356.
Captein Courtesy, 390.
Captain Dallington, 337.
Captain John Lister, 314.
Captain Kirke Webbe, 382.
Captain Latymer, 3x8.
Captain Love, 340.
Captain Macartney, 337.
Captain Margaret, 330.
Captain of Irreguhirs, 385.
Captain of Men, 240.
Captain Phil, 397.
Captain Ravenshaw. 302.
Captain Swing, 386.
Captain Wyvern's Adventures,,
3x7-
Captive of the Corsairs, 303.
Car of Phccbus. 408.
Carbonels (The), 4x7.
Cardillac, 308.
Cardinal's Past, 312.
Cardinal's Pawn, 306.
Carette of Sark, 371.
Carlota, 390.-
Carlyles (The), 398.
Caroline, 4x3.
Carried Off, 326.
Castaway (The), 385.
Castel del Monte, 274.
Castle Meadow, 352.
Cat of Bubastes, 239.
Catechumens of the Coromandel
Cc»st, 384.
Catharine Douglas, 283.
Cavalier and Covenant, 3x9.
Cavalier of Virginia, 4x2.
Cave in the Hills, 25X.
Centurion's Story, 247.
Chancellor's Spy, 292.
Chances of War, 316.
Chanoinesse (La), 361.
Chariots of the Lord, 330.
Charles of Sweden, 335.
Check to the King, 331.
Checkmate, 325.
Cherry Ribband, 331:
Chevalier de Puyjalou, 34 x.
Chief's Daughter, 308.
Chien d'Or, 334.
Child of the Lighthouse, 372.
Childhood of Offa, 237.
Children of the Cliff, 407.
Children's Crusade, 270.
Chippinge, 386.
Chippinge Borough. 386.
Chivalric Days, 242, etc.
Chloe finds a Conscience, 415.
500
SUPPLEMENT.
Chosen (The), 414.
Chris Cunningham, 367.
Christian, But a Roman, 249.
Church and the King, 293.
Cid Campeador, 408.
City and the Castle, 290.
City of Delight, 246.
City of Six, 391.
Clansman (The), 398.
Claud the Archer, 282.
Clean Hands, 293.
Cleburne and His Command, 396.
Clementina's Highwayman, 344.
Cl^opatre, 242.
Clevely Sahib, 388.
Cloister of the Seven Gates,
280.
Cloister to Court, 296.
Clotilde, 375.
Clutch of Circumstance, 408.
Coates's Colonial Series, 326.
Code of Victor Jallot, 375.
Coil of Came, 391.
Colonel Greatheart, 3x6.
Colonel Kate, 343.
Colonel Stow, 3x6.
Coming of Navarre, 305.
Coming of the King, 236.
Coming of the King, 323.
Commander of the Hivondelle,
366.
Company of Death, 322.
Comrades Four, 39i6.
Conan the Wonder- Worker. 260.
Coniston, 390.
Conscience of a King, 335.
Constable's Tower, 270.
Constance Trescot, 4x9.
Contes Historiques, 275, etc.
Continental Dragoon, 359.
Conversion of St. Vladunir, 260,
Convert of Massachusetts, 341.
Cook and the Captive, 253.
Copemican Convoy, 3x6.
Coplestone Cousins, 4x3.
Coronation (A), 299.
Corporal Sam, 381.
Corporal Sam and other stories,
3x6, 3x7
Counterpart (The), 397.
Courage of Captain Plum, 39X.
Court Cards, 302.
Court Jester, 288.
Court of Lucifer, 290.
Court of Pilate, 247.
Courtenay of Walreddon, 3x5.
Cousin Hugh, 4x6.
Cousin Isabel, 332.
Crag-Nest, 398.
Crimson Conquest, 29X.
Cripple of Nuremberg, 295.
Cromwell of Virginia, 326.
Cross and Dagger, 270.
Cross and the Crown, 327.
Cross in Sweden, 264.
Cross of Honour, 376.
Cross Triumphant, 244.
Crown of Pine, 245.
Crowning Hour, 4x0.
Cruise of the Angel, 303.
Cruise of the Golden Fleece, 297.
Crusade of St. Louis, 273.
Crushed Yet Conquering, 282.
Cuckoo (The), 296.
Cunning Woman's Grandson,
352*
Cuthbert Lord of Lowedale, 304.
Czar (The), 377.
D
Dacian Virgin, 248.
Dame Joan of Pevensey, 280.
Dan Monroe, 357.
Dangerous Jewds, 364.
Daniel Boone, 360.
Dareford, 393*
Daughter of Gaul, 242.
Daughter of the Confederacy,
397-
Daughter of the Druids, 250.
Daughter of the Manse, 4x7.
Daughter of the South, 398.
SUPPLEMENT.
501
Daughters of Pola/251.
Daughters of Suffolk, 297.
David March, 325.
David the Captain, 240.
Days before History. 407.
Days of Jeanne d'Arc, 283.
Dean's Hall, 413.
Dearer than Life, 278.
Decatur and Somers, 375.
Decebal's Daughter, 248.
Declined with Thanks, 410.
Deeds of Faith, 249.
Defence of the Rock, 352.
Defender of the Faith, 326.
Defending His Flag, 397.
De Foix, 279.
De Hellingley, 267.
Delia at a Disadvantage,
415.
Demoiselle of France, 327.
De Montfort's Squire, 272.
Desperate Venture, 363.
Deutsche M&nner, 376.
Devonshire Lass, 297.
Dew of their Youth. 415.
Diamond Rock, 371.
Diana Polwarth, 320.
Diane, 393.
Diary of Brother Bartholomew.
265.
Dick o' the Fens. 415.
Diplomatic Adventure, 392.
Disciple of a Saint, 278.
Discobol, 245.
Divine Minstrels, 271.
Doctor Adrian, 302.
Dolphin of the Sepulchre, 266.
Don Tarquinio, 289.
Done and Dared in Old France,
335.
Doomed City, 246.
Doomed City, 254.
Doomswoman (The), 417.
Dores de Gualdim, 313.
Dorothy's Spy, 357.
Dove of Tabenna, 257, 258.
Dragon of the North, 262.
Dragoon's Wife, 327.
Drapeau ou la Foi. 399.
Draw in your Stool. 242.
Dream of John Ball. 279.
Dream of Peace, 401.
Dreamer (The), 387.
Dromina, 386.
Druidess ('Hie), 254.
Drums of War, 399.
Dryad (The), 275.
Duchenier, 364.
Dudley Castle. 275.
Duel (The), 377.
Duke's Motto, 312.
Duke's Vengeance, 287.
Duke's Ward, 279.
Dulcibcl, 335.
Eagle's Nest, 354.
Eafdorman's Story, 260.
Earl Osric's Minstrel, 409.
Early Victorian. 418.
Easter Victory, 252.
Eastern and Northern Europe,
251, etc.
Edragil, 343.
Edward the Martyr, 260.
Edwin the Boy Outlaw, 268.
Egyptian Wanderers, 250.
Eldol the Druid, 245.
Eleanor Dayton, 399.
Eleazar, 244.
Elena, 289.
Eleventh Hour, 390.
Elgiva, 262.
Elmor Arden Royalist. 314.
Elusive Pimpernel. 362.
Emigrant Trail. 391.
Empress in Love, 354.
Enfant d'Austerlitz, 377.
Engel the Fearless, 409.
England Expects, 372.
England the Early Period, 251,
etc.
502
SUPPLEMENT.
England the Medisval Period,
260. etc.
England's Elizabeth, 297.
Eric Brighteyes, 408.
Escape from the Tower, 339.
£t tu Sejane, 243.
Evanus, 251.
Evel3m Byrd, 419.
Evenings at Sackville College,
249.
Evil May-Day, 292.
Exiles of the Cebenna, 249.
Express of '76, 357.
Extraordinary Confessions of
Diana Please, 367.
Fags and tiie King, 367.
Failure of a Hero, 301.
Fair Haven, 310.
Fair Haven and other Stories,
252, etc.
Fair Maid of Greys tones, 318.
Fair Margaret, 288.
Fair Martyr, 350.
Fair Moon of Bath. 343.
Fair Refugee, 365.
Fair Rosamond, 267.
Fairleigh Hall« 314.
Fairm^ulows Farm, 329.
Faith of Hilary Lovel, 300.
Faith's First Christmas and
other stories, 250, etc.
Faithful but not Famous, 290.
Falaise of the Blessed Voice, 273.
Falcon King, 266.
Fall of Anderida, 253.
Fall of the Grand Sarrasin, 262.
Fanshawe of the Fifth, 368.
Farm of Aptonga, 249.
Fate of Castle Lowengard, 291.
Fated to Win, 255.
Father Felix's Chronicles, 281.
Favored of Baal, 242.
Feast of Stories from Foreign
Lands, 295, etc.
Felicity. 277.
Fen Robbers, 279.
Field of Glory, 328.
Fifth Queen, 293.
Fifth Queen Crowned, 294.
50-40 or Fight, 390.
Fight for the Valley, 358.
Fighter in Green, 392.
Fighters (The), 382.
Fighting King George, 359.
Fighting Lads of Devon, 300.
Fighting with Fremont, 390.
Fin de Tadmor, 249.
Fire, Snow, and Water, 420.
Firelock and Steel, 382.
First Light on the Eddystone^
.334-
Fisher of Men, 256.
Flame-Gatherers, 269.
Fleur-de-Camp, 377.
Flight of Georgiana, 343.
Flight of the Eagle, 301.
Flood Tide, 351.
Florestane the Troubadour, 274.
Flower o' the Orange, 384.
Flower o' the Orange, etc., 301.
Flower of Destiny, 255.
Flower of Destiny, 399.
Flower of Destiny, etc., 267, etc.
Flower of France, 283.
Followers of the Lord, 249.
Fond Adventures, 271, etc.
Fool Errant, 411.
For a Free Conscience, 323.
For an Atonement, 240.
For Charles the Rover, 344.
For Church and Chieftain, 301.
For Church and State, 269.
For Crown and Covenant, 331.
For Faith and Navarre, 304.
For James or George, 342.
For Kett and Countryside, 296.
For King and Home, 363.
For King or Country, 379.
For King or Parliament, 317.
For Love and Honour, 343.
For Love and Loyalty, 343.
SUPPLEMENT.
503
For Love and Ransom, 383.
For Name and Fame, 403.
For Prince or Pope, 331.
For Queen and Emperor, 245.
For Rupert and the King, 315.
For the Admiral, 304.
For the Emperor, 382.
For the Faith, 392.
For the Honour of His House,
330.
For the Liberty of Texas, 390.
For the Soul of a Witch, 294.
For the Stars and Stripes, 396,
For the Temple, 246.
For the White Christ, 258.
For the White Cockade, 343.
For Three Kingdoms, 332.
Force (La), 377.
Forerunner (The), 310
Forest of Arden, 292.
Forest Runners, 415.
Forgotten Door, 246.
Forgotten Hero, 275.
Forgotten Tales of Long Ago,
4M. 415-
Forsaken (The), 260.
Fort Amity, 348.
Fort in the Forest, 347.
Fortuna Chance, 342.
Fortune, 410.
Fortune-Hunter, 312.
Fortune's Castaway, 329.
Fortunes of Col. Torlogh O'Brien,
333.
Fortunes of Farthmgs, 339.
Foster-Brothers of Doon, 369.
Fountain Sealed, 345.
Four Sons, 241.
France and Spain, 249, eU.
Frank and Saxon, 305.
Frederick of Hohenstaufen, 270.
Free Rangers, 4Z5«
French and English, 347.
French Nan, 413.
French Prisoners, 400.
Frenchman's Creek, 416.
Friar Observant, 293.
Friar of Orders Grey, 272.
Friedhelm, 270.
Friends though Divided, 3x5.
From Atlanta to the Sea, 395.
From Playground to Battlefield,
383.
From the Enemy's Hand, 327.
Frontiersmen (The), 413.
Fugitive (The). 254.
Gabrielle Transgressor, 412.
Gage of a Princess, 250.
Gage of Red and White, 296.
Gallant of Gascony, 303.
Galleon Treasure, 335.
Galloping Dick, 330.
Gaston de Latour, 304.
Gates of Kamt, 408.
Gayle Langford, 357.
Gendarme of the King. 350.
General Nelson's Scout, 395.
Gens d'j^pinal, 283.
Gentle Knight of Old Branden-
burg, 350.
Gentleman (The), 372.
Gentleman of England, 300.
Gentleman of London, 373.
Gentleman of Virginia, 363.
George L, 340.
Gerald the Sheriff, 264.
Gianella, 418.
Gigi the Hero of SicUy, 389.
Giovanni of Florence, 289.
Gipsy Count, 288.
Girl I left Behind Me, 417.
Girl of the Eighteenth Century,
368.
Girl Who Won, 333.
Glassmaker of Yarmouth, 371.
Glaucia the Greek Slave, 246.
Glen o* Weeping, 332.
Glenanaar, 385.
Glenith, 352.
Gloire de Don Ramire, 306.
504
SUPPLEMENT.
Glory and Sorrow of Norwich,
276.
Glory of His Country, 419.
God of Clay, 365.
God of Love, 274.
God's Bairn, 3x0.
God's Providence House, 368.
Golden Buckle, 324.
Golden Glory, 296.
Golden Hawk, 410.
Golden Hope, 242.
Golden Trust, 363.
Goldsmith of Chepe, 324.
Good Shepherd, 262.
Good Sword Belgarde, 269.
Goodly Pearl, 263.
Gorgeous Borgia, 289.
Gorgeous Isle, 417.
Cowrie's Vengeance, 307.
Graham of Claverhouse, 332.
Grand Chagrin, 34Z.
Great Handwriting, 253.
Great Heart Gillian, 400.
Great Mistake, 400.
Great Mogul, 307.
Great Proconsul, 353.
Green Mountain Boys, 356.
Grey Domino, 306.
" Grey Fox " of Holland. 303.
Grey Man, 411.
Growth, 420.
Guillaume Dupuytren, 354.
Gytha's Message, 262.
H
Half Moon, 307.
Hand of L^onore, 351.
Hand of the North, 307.
Harold the Boy Earl, 408.
Harr\' of Athol, 281.
Harry of Monmouth, 281.
Hartland Forest, 345.
Hartley House, Calcutta, 353.
Hassan le Janissaire, 290.
Hawkwood the Brave, 278.
Hazardous Wooing, 372.
He Loved but One, 385.
Head of Iron 348.
Heart of Bosnia, 383.
Heart of Hope, 398.
Heart of Washington, 346.
Heart's Delight, 307.
Heart's Key, 271.
Hearth of Hutton, 343.
Hearts of Wales, 281.
Hearts Triumphant, 375.
Heda Sandwith, 4x8.
Heir of Treheme, 292.
Held by Rebels, 285.
Held Fast for England, 352.
Henry de Pomeroy, 269.
Henry of Navarre, 304.
Her Faithful Knight, 3x4.
Herbert Strang's Historical
Sales, 263, etc.
Herbert TrcSuim, 317.
Herd Boy and His Hermit, 285.
Hermann and Thusnelda, 243.
Hermit of Livry, 290.
Hermit of Livry, 29X.
Hero in the Strife, 323.
Hero in Wolf -skin, 248.
Hero of Lucknow, 392.
Hero of Sedan, 400.
Herodias, 244.
Heroine of France. 283.
Hi-Sjw-Hi, 378.
High Toby, 330.
Highland Mary, 353.
Highway Dust, 344.
Hilda Brave Heart, 408.
Hills of Home, 344.
His Eminence, 366.
His Indolence of Arras, 327.
His Majesty's Glove, 318.
His Majesty's Sloop Diamond
Rock, 37X.
His Most Dear Ladye, 307.
Historic Boys, 248, etc.
Historical Romances for Young
People, 256.
Historical Vignettes, 267, etc.
SUPPLEMENT.
505
History of Aythan Waring, 417.
History oi Margaret Catchpole,
369.
History of Richard Raynal, 285.
Holbom Hill. 372.
Home Coming, 253.
Honor of a L^» 394.
Honour before Honours, 328.
Honour of Henri de Valois, 386.
Horsemen of the Plains, 402.
Hostage for a Kingdom, 401.
House of Torment, 297.
House of Waldeme, 272.
House on Cherry Street, 341.
House with the Dragon Gates,
344-
How Canada was Won, 347.
How Nechtan kept his Vow, 254.
How the King passed by, 259.
Hugh the Messenger, 276.
Humphrey Bold, 336.
Huncked Days, 383.
Hurrah for Uie Spanish Main,
299.
I Will Maintain, 326*
I Will Repay, 362.
Ian of the Orcades, 280.
Idol of the King, 345.
If Youth but Knew, 381.
Ifor Owain, 310.
Imogen, 255.
Impostor (The), 349.
Imprisoned Midshipman, 376.
In Circling Camps, 395.
In Clive's Command, 349.
In Dewisland, 388.
In Four Reigns, 352.
In Greek Waters, 385.
In Leisler's Times, 335.
In Mary's Rei^, 297.
In Mortal Penl, 30Z.
In Nelson's Day, 371.
In Nelson's Day, 372.
In Northern Seas, 275.
In Old Bellaire, 395.
In Sarsfield's Days, 333.
In Search of J^hanne, 305.
In Steel and Leather, 286.
In Texas with Davy Crockett,
387-
In the Boyhood of Lincoln, 386.
In the Days of Drake, 299.
In the Days of Jefferson, 355.
In the Days of Luther, 291.
In the Days of Nelson, 367.
In the Days of the Gironde,
363.
In the Dictator's Grip, 381.
In the Face of Night, 296.
In the Fifteen. 338.
In the Grip of the Hawk, 393.
In l^e Grip of the Spaniard, 385.
In the Iron Time, 3x5.
In the Lion's Mouth, 362.
In the Name of Liberty, 363.
In the New Forest, 263.
In the Queen's Service, 298.
In the Reign of Terror, 362.
In the Shadow of the Lord, 346.
In the Smoke of War, 317.
In the Straits of Time, 327.
In the Trenches, 392.
In the Van of the Vikings, 260.
In the Wasp's Nest, 380.
In the Western Woods, 338.
In Time of War, 40Z.
In Treaty with Honour, 387.
In Wild Maratha BatUe, 328.
Ina, 403.
Incomparable Bellairs. 345.
Indian and Scout, 391.
Infamous John Friend, 374.
Infidel (The), 346.
Innocent Masqueraders, 351.
Interloper (The), 415.
Into the Dark, 256.
Invaders of Fairford, 316.
lone Chaloner, 342.
Iron Game, 399.
Iron Star, 407.
5o6
SUPPLEMENT.
Iron Way, 398.
Isabeau's Hero, 336.
Isidro, 4x7.
Iskander, 341.
Island of Enchantment, 277.
Island of the Blest, 254.
Island Providence, 331.
Issue (The), 389.
Italian (The). 353.
Iztlil' of Tezcuco, 291.
J
ack Hardy, 373.
acob and John, 4x2.
acobite Admiral, 339.
acqueline of the Carrier
Hgeons, 303.
ane Shore, 286.
ardinier de la Pompadour, 351.
ay of Italy, 287.
ean-Baptiste Greuze Peintre,
350.
ehanne of the Golden Lips, 277.
emmy Abercraw, 346.
enk3m Clyffe Bedesman, 282.
esus of Nazareth, 243.
esus the Carpenter of Nazareth,
243-
ewel of Ynys Galon, 411.
ezebel's Husband, 240.
oan of the Sword Hand, 287.
oan the Maid, 283.
oel a Boy of Galilee, 247.
ohn Brown Buccaneer, 308.
ohn Goodchild, 388.
ohn Knox's Bairns, 296.
ohn o' Jamestown, 308.
ohn Rigdon, 393.
ohn Smith Grentleman Ad-
venturer, 308
ones of the 64th, 374.
dm Uhl, 400.
oseph Vance, 418.
osephine's Troubles, 399.
onmey through the Air, 295.
Judaeus Procurator, 247.
Judas Iscariot, 244.
Judges' Cave, 321.
Judith Triumphant, 240.
Julian, 247
Juliette, 377.
Justice of the King, 288.
K
Kedar Kross, 389.
Keepers of England, 259.
Kentuckians (The), 419.
Key of Paradise, 414.
Kincaid's Battery, 394.
King and Captive, 239.
King Colley, 340.
King of a Day, 282.
King of the Barons, 272.
King Penda's Captain, 256.
King Stork of the Netherlands,
303.
King Who was Never Crowned,
286.
King's Achievement, 293.
King's Business, 266.
King's Cause, 318.
King's Champion, 333.
King's Cockade, 363.
King's Comrade, 258.
King's Daughters, 240.
King's Ferry, 415.
King's Fool, 409.
King's Guerdon, 323.
King's Guide, 272.
King's Highway, 330.
King's House, 252.
King's Liege, 310.
King's Mark, 355.
King's Masquerade, 294.
King's Mignon, 305.
King's Revoke, 381.
King's Scapegoat, 288.
King's Service, 313.
King's Signet, 320.
King's Spy, 333.
SUPPLEMENT.
507
King's Stirrup, 264.
King's Thegn, 258.
King's Tragedy, 283.
King's Treachery, 304.
Kinsman and Namesake, 281.
Kirke Webbe. 382.
Kitwyk, 415.
Knight oi God, 301.
Knight of G3rwnne, 369.
Knight of Poland, 393.
Knight of St. John, 303.
Knight of the Cave, 265.
Knight of the Golden Sword,
332.
Knight of the Needle Rock,''302.
Knight of the White Cross, 286.
Knight of the Wilderness, 387.
Knighthood's Flower, 312.
Knights of Liberty, 383.
Knights of the Road, 352.
Knights of the White Rose, 332.
Knitting of the Souls, 326.
Lad of Grit, 325.
I^ad of London Town, 323.
Ladder of Swords, 300.
Lads of the Light Division, 381.
Lady Alda's Hlgrimage, 276.
Lady Dear, 288.
Lady Fabia, 373.
Lady Good-for-Nothing. 348.
Lady Mary of Tavistock, 309.
Lady of Blossholme, 293.
Lady of France, 275.
Lady of Hirta, 342.
Lady of King Arthur's Court,
408.
Lady of Loyalty House, 314.
Lady of Lynn, 412.
Lady of Lyte, 325.
Lady of Mettle, 333.
Lady of Tripoli, 265.
Lady of the Mount, 361.
Lady of the Spur, 386.
Lady of the Well, 27 1»
Ladye of Lydlinch, 262.
Laird's Legacy, 337.
Lame Englishman, 389.
Lamp and the Guitar, 382.
Land of Bondage, 340.
Lapsed, but not Lost, 249.
Lapsed, not Lost, 249.
Larache, 305,
Lark's C^l, 256.
Lass of Dorchester, 338.
Last Abbot of Glastonbury, 292.
LASt Days of John Hus. 282.
Last Duchess of Belgarde, 361.
Last Emperor of the Old
Dominion, 326.
Last Hope, 388.
Last of Her Race, 337.
Last of the Chiefs, 402*
Last of the Fatimites, 267.
Last of the Houghtons, 396.
Last of the Peshwas, 384.
Last of the White Coats, 319.
Laurel Token, 338.
Lauristons, 377.
Lazar House of Leros, 313.
Lazy Rudolf, 4x0.
Lead of Honour, 417.
Lemuel of the Leit Hand, 240.
Lent Legends, 249.
Leo of Mediolanum, 252.
Leopard and the Lily, 284.
Le^Murd's Spots, 398.
Leroux, 366.
Let Erin Remember, 266.
Lettice Temple, 328.
Lewis Rand, 375.
Liberty or Death, 356.
Life and Adventures of Lady
Anne, 415.
Life Perilous, 350.
Life Stories for Young People.
«43.
Life's Anchor, 351.
Light Brigade in Spain, 381.
Light of Scarthey, 378.
Lily of Tiflis, 257.
5o8
SUPPLEMENT.
Lincoln Conscript, 395.
Lindsay's Love, 399.
Lion Heart, 268.
Lion of De Montfort, 272.
Lion's Skin, 340.
Little Betty Blew 338.
Little Blue Lady, 360.
Little Blue Lady, Sdc., 403, 410.
Little Candle, 332.
JJttle Count Paul, 361.
Little France, 348.
Little Green Door, 3x1.
Little King, 322.
Little Lady, etc., 348.
Little Lord of the Manor, 359.
Little Maid of Boston Town, 355.
Little Maid of Concord Town,
356.
Little Marquis of Brandenburg,
349.
Little More than Kin, 36^
Little Puritan's First Christmas,
326.
Little Shepherd of Provence, 409.
Little Step-Daughter, 341.
Little Traitor to the South, 396.
Little Union Scout, 398.
Lodging for the Night, 284.
Lodrix the Little Lake Dweller,
407.
Lone Star, 387.
Lonely Guard, 350.
Long Bridge Bo3rs, 394.
Long Knives, 359.
Long Roll, 396.
Longshoremen (The), 4x6.
Lord Edward Fitzgerald, 369.
Lord of Lowedale, 304.
Lord of the Marches, 280.
Loser Pays, 362.
Lost Earldom, 33 x.
Lost Empire, 366.
Lost Endeavour, 41 x.
Lost King, 365.
Lost Land, 4x4.
Louis of Bourbon, 322.
Louis XIV., 336.
Love among the Ruins, 409.
Love at Arms, 290.
Love Besieged, 392.
Love Chase, 4x0.
Love in Ancient Days, 254.
Love is Life, 332.
Love is the Sum of it All. 419*
Love Story of Giraldus, 266.
Love Story of St. Bel, 278.
Love that Prevailed, 346.
Love Triumphant, 244.
Love While Ye May, 298.
Lovers of Lorraine, 334.
Lovers of Yvonne, 322.
Loyal Hearts and True, 300.
Loyal Maid, 343.
Loyal Traitor, 379.
Loyalists of Massachusetts, 360.
Luda's Marriage, 249.
Luck of Chervil, 286.
Luck of Ledge Point, 373.
Lux Cruets, 247.
M
Mad Anthony's Young Scout,
356.
Mad Barbara, 324.
Madame will you Walk, 337.
Mademoiselle Celeste, 362.
Magada (The), 288.
Magic Casements, 285.
Magnus Sinclair, 3x8.
Maid Margaret, 283.
Maid Molly, 3x7.
Maid of Athens, 385.
Maid of Brittany, 288.
Maid of Normandy, 336.
Maid of Salem Town, 335.
Maid of the Mohawk, 358.
Major Weir, 3x9.
Making of Our Nation Series,
375-
Malcolm Canmore's Pearl, 263.
Man at Odds, 344.
Man of Destiny, 389.
SUPPLEMENT.
509
Man of Sark, 371.
Manassas, 394.
Mantle of the Emperor, 388.
Maori and Settler, 393.
Marcelle, 334.
Marcelle the Mad, 287.
Marching Against the Iroquois,
359.
Marching with Morgan, 357.
Marcia Schuyler, 4x7.
Marcus and Faustina, 248.
Marcus of Rome, 248.
Marcus or the Young Centurion,
242.
Margaret of Anjou, 285.
Market Somerset, 325.
Mariage d'Agnes, 401.
Marie Petit, 336.
Mariner of England, 299.
Mark's Wedding, 282.
Mar(]^uis' Heir, 361.
Marriage under the Terror, 363.
Married in India, 420.
Biartin Hyde, 329.
Martin the Mummer, 284.
Martyr's Victory, 259.
Mary of Magdala, 247.
Mary of Plymouth, 3x1.
Mary Paget, 307.
Master Builder, 280.
Master Girl, 407.
Master of Stair 332.
Mavis and the Merlin, 303.
Max, Fritz, and Hob, 289.
Mediaeval Garland, 4x0.
Meeting of the Ways, 25X.
Memoirs of a Buccaneer, 32 x.
Memoirs of a Person of Quality,
368.
Men of Harlech, 285.
Men of Iron, 28 x.
Men of the Mountain, 40X.
Menotomy, 356.
Merry Adventures of Robin
Hood, 409.
Merry Garden, 378.
Merrylips, 3x4.
Messenger (The), 346.
Mexican War Series, 390,
Mid Clash of Swords, 295.
Middy of the Slave Squadron,
385.
Midshipman Farragut, 379.
Biidshipman in the Pacific, 380.
Midshipman Paulding, 380.
Midshipman Stuart, 380.
Midsummer Mom, 302.
Ifightiest Power, 239.
Minstrel Dick, 277.
Minute Boys of Boston, 358.
Minute Boys of Bunker Hill, 358.
Minute Boys of Green Moun-
tains, 358.
Minute Bo3rs of Lexington, 358.
Minute Boys of Long Island, 358.
Minute Boys of Mohawk Valley,
358-
Minute Boys of New York City.
358.
Minute Boys of South Carolina,
358.
Minute Bo3rs of Wyoming Valley,
358.
Minute Bo^ Series, 358.
Miss Carolme, 4x4.
Misaonrian (The), 393.
Mistress Beatrice Cope, 339.
Mistress Cynthia, 342.
Mistress Joy, 37X.
Mistress Margery, 28x.
Mistress Nanciebel, 324.
Mistress Ncdl, 324.
Mistress of Aydon, 277.
Mistress of the Robes, 337.
Mistress Phil, 345.
Monsieur de Paris, 36X.
Monsieur le Capitaine Douay,
303.
Monsieur the Captain of the
Caravel, 324.
Montlivet, 334.
Moon of Batii, 343.
Moonrakers (The), 345.
Moor and Moss, 294.
510
SUPPLEMENT.
Morcar, 309.
More than Kin, 363.
Morgan's Men, 357.
Morning of To-day, 346.
Morning Star, 408.
Moscow, 382.
Blother of Pearl, 247.
Murray of the Scots Greys, 340.
Musket Boys of Old Boston, 355.
Musket Boys under Washington,
355-
My God- Daughter, 352.
My Lady BeUamy, 333.
My Lady Clancarty, 334.
My Lady Clemency goes down
to Rye, 334.
My Lady Clemency welcomes a
Guest, 334.
My Lady Laughter, 356.
My Lady Nan, 414.
My Lady of Aros, 346.
My Lady of Cleeve, 333.
My Lady of Intrigue, 31 x.
My Lady of the North, 398.
My Lady of the South, 397.
My Lady Pokahontas, 308.
My Lady Wentworth, 329.
My Lady's Kiss, 312.
My I-ady's Slipper, 360.
My Lord of Essex, 301.
My Merry Rockhurst, 323.
My Rapier and my Daughter,
301.
My Sword for Lafayette, 360.
My Sword for Patrick Sarsfield,
333.
My Sword's my Fortune, 322.
Mysteries of Udolpho, 305.
N
Namesake of the King, 268.
Nancy Hart, 357.
Nancy Stair, 353.
Naomi, 246.
Napoleon's Love Story, 376.
Napoleon's Young Neighbour,
383.
Nathan Burke, 417.
Needles and Pins, 284. . ''
Nellie of the Eight Bells, 372.
Nelson's Yankee Boy, 372.
Nest of Royalists, 386.
Nest of the Sparrowhawk,f32i.
New Arabian Nights, 284.
New England Maid, 359.
New June, 280.
New Moon of Islam, 283.
Newell Fortune, 419.
Nicanor Teller of Tales, 252.
Nicole, 363.
Night with Alessandro, 295.
No Other Way, 412.
No Surrender, 364.
Noblesse Oblige, 365.
Norman Conquest, 262.
North Overland with Franklin,
384.
North Star, 26x.
Northern Iron, 370.
Northern Light, 261.
Northumbrian in Arms, 262.
Not for Him, 275.
Number One Hundred and One,
350.
Number XIII., 250.
Nyria, 247.
O
O Gorlannau y Defaid, 392.
Oak Staircase, 329.
Obliging Husband, 325.
O'Donoghue (The), 369.
O'Fljmn (The), 411.
Of Mistress Eve, 318,
Oil of Spikenard, 412.
Olaf of Norway, 261.
Old Deerfield Series, 358.
Old London Bridge, 293.
Old Moat Farm, 300.
Old Peabody Pew, 418.
SUPPLEMENT.
511
>
Old Time Yam, agS.
Oa General Thomas's Staff, 395.
On the Banks of the Ouse, 353.
On the Emperor's Service, 251.
On the Field of Glory, 328.
On the Forgotten Road, 270.
On the Irrawaddy, 386*
On the Knees of the Gods, 241 .
On the Old Frontier, 359 .
On the Old Kearsa^e, 395.
On the Spanish Mam, 299.
On the Trail of Pontiac, 348.
Once Bitten Twice Shy, 335.
One Fair £nemy» 3x7.
One of Clive's Heroes, 349.
One of Rupert's Horse, 314.
One of the Red Shirts, 389.
One Snowy Night, 266.
Open Window, 237.
Orange and Green, 332.
Orangery (The), 4x4.
Oriflamme in Egypt, 273.
Orphan of Evewam, 274*
Oirain, 296.
O'Ruddy (The), 4x2.
Our Lady of Beauty, 284.
Out of the Cypress Swamp, 379.
Painter's Message, 256.
Palace of Danger, 35 x.
Paladins of Edwin the Great,
255-
Pam the Fiddler, 298.
Pamela's Hero, 352.
Pandurang Hkri, 374.
Parent's Assistant, 414.
Paris at Bay, 40X.
Parson Croft, 338.
Parson Gay's Three Sermons,
347-
Parson's Wood, 331.
Patcola, 280.
Path of Honor, 362.
Path to Honour, 388.
Pathfinders of the Revolution,
359.
Paths Perilous, 365.
Patience of John Morland. 386*
Patriot (The), 389.
Patriots (The), 394.
Patriot and Tory, 357.
Patriots of Palestine, 242.
Patriots of the South, 394.
Paul a Herald of the Cross, 244.
Pawn in the Game, 365.
Peace of the Church, 254.
Peace of the Church and other
Stories, 256, $tc.
Pearl Fibers, 296.
Peckover's Mill, 342.
P^gy Gainsborough, 346.
Peggy Owen, 356.
Penelope Brandling, 4x3.
Penitent (The). 252.
Perfidious Lydia, 4x6.
Perronelle, 28 x.
Peter and Alexis, 338.
Peter of New Amsterdam, 3x1.
Peter the Apprentice, 292.
Peter the Great, 338.
Petit Roi d'Ombre, 364.
Petticoat Government, 351.
Petticoat Rule, 351.
Phantasma, 366.
Philip Okeover's Pagehood, 279.
Philo's Daughter, 247.
Pilgrim (The), 263.
Pioneer (The), 402.
Players of London, 302.
Plough of Shame, 295.
Poet (The), 248.
Poet and His Guardian Angel,
353.
Poison Island. 378.
Pontiac Chief of the Ottawas,
349.
Portrait (The), 4x2.
Prairie Bird, 370.
Prentice Hugh, 275.
President's Scouts, 391.
Priestess of Isis, 247.
512
SUPPLEMENT.
Prince Errant, 258.
Prince Madog, 409.
Prince of Com^-aU, 257.
Prince of Dreamers, 306.
Prince of Lisnover, 420.
Prince of the House of David,
247.
Prince Rupert the Buccaneer,
J2I.
Prmce Rnpert's Namesake, 323.
Prince's Valet, 349.
Princess Adelaide, 273.
IVincess of Balkh, 328.
Princess of Gan-Sar, 247.
Princesse de Venise. 306.
Prior of St. Come. 287.
Prior's Ward, 298.
Prisoner of Carisbrooke, 314.
Prisoner of His Word, 370.
Prisoner of Mademoiselle, 338.
Prisoners of Chance, 349.
Prisoners of Fortune, 338.
Privy Seal, 293.
Profligates (The), 323.
Prophet's Reward, 353.
Provenzano the Proud, 274.
Psyche, 243.
Puritan Knight Errant, 321.
Purple Love, 326.
Q
Quakeress (The), 419.
Quay of the Dioscuri, 251.
Queen Elizabeth, 307.
Queen of Men, 301.
Queen's Badge, 285.
Queen's Favourite, 322,
Queen's Ferry, 263.
Queen's Hostage, 30X.
Queen's Knight Errant, 300.
Queen's Man, 285.
Queen's Nurse, 293.
Queen's Page, 295.
Queen's Tragedy, 297.
Quiberon Touch, 348.
R
Raiding with Morgan, 395.
Railway Signalman, 418.
Rain of Dollars, 382.
Raleigh. 300.
Ralph the Outlaw, 273.
Raoul Gentleman of Fortune,
303.
Raven (The), 387.
Ravensdale Castle, 300.
Raw Gold, 420.
Rebel Prince, 303.
Reckoning (The), 359,
Red Cap, 362.
Red Caps of Lyons, 363.
Red Cavalier, 330.
Red Chief, 358.
Red City, 370.
Red Cravat, 349.
Red Dickon the Outlaw, 279,
Red Knight, 277.
Red Men of the Dusk, 321.
Red Neighbour, 327.
Red Reaper, 319.
Red Saint, 272.
Red Seal, 330.
Red Sultan, 354.
Red Velvet, 317.
Red White and Green, 389.
Refugee (The), 365.
Reminiscences of Sir Barrington
Beaumont, 354.
Ren6e, 294.
Renegat, 299.
Rescue (The), 257.
Return, 347*
Retz, 287.
Revolutionary Series (Cupples),
355.
Revolutionary Series (Lothrop),
357-
Rez&Qov, 376;
Rhoda of the Undergrounds, 394.
Richard Hawkwood, 287.
Richard of Jamestown, 311.
Rider of the Black Horse, 358.
SUPPLEMENT.
513
Ridolfo, 284.
Riflemen of the Ohio, 415.
Ringed by Fire, 400.
Rivals (The), 255.
Riverman (The), 419.
Road to Paris, 354.
Rob the Ranger, 348.
Robert Cavafier, 334.
Robert Emmet, 374.
Robin Hood his Book, 409.
Rock of Chicamauga, 397.
Roger the Bold, 291.
Roger the Ranger, 347.
Roger the Scout, 344.
Roger Trewinion, 413.
Rogue of Rye, 373,
Rogue's Tragedy, 361.
Roman d'une Versaillaise, 362.
Roman Household, 246.
Roman Students, 284.
Romance of a Friar and a Nun,
284.
Romance of Fra Filippo Lippi,
284.
Romance of Gentle Will, 302.
Romance of Mdle. Aisse, 341.
Romance of Old Folkestone, 368.
Romance of the Fountain, 290.
Romance of the Undercliff, 368.
Romantic Road, 414.
Ronald Lindsay, 332.
Rose and Minnie, 388.
Rose Brocade, 339.
Rose Mervyn, 388.
Rose of Blenheim, 336.
Rose of Dauphiny, 305.
Rose of Old St. Louis, 375.
Rose of York, 3x7.
Rose-Spinner (The), 340.
Roskerry Treasure, 297.
Rout of the Foreigner, 271.
Roving Commission, 370.
Royal Americans, 348.
Royal Quaker, 323.
Royal Rascal, 370.
Royal Road, 272.
Royal Story Book, 248.
Royal Ward» 384.
Royalist Brothers, 318.
Ruel Durkee, 419.
Running Horse Inn, 384.
Running the Gauntlet, 395.
Ruth of Boston, 3x1.
Ruth Ravelstan, 320.
Rye House Plot, 325.
Safety of the Honours, 3x9.
St. Bartholomew's Eve, 304.
St. Dtmstan's Fair, 383.
St. George > of King Charles's
Days, 320.
St. Martin's Summer, 308.
Sampson Rideout, Quaker, 41 !•
San Celestino, 274.
Sandy Carmichael, 343.
Saul of Tarsus, 245.
Saxby, 309.
Saxon Maid, 264.
Saxon Whom the Normans
Loved, 263.
Scapegrace Dick, 320.
Scarlet Cloak, 355.
Scarlet Pimpernel, 362.
Scholar and the Trooper, 316.
Schoolboy Outlaws, 4x7.
Schoolmaster and His Son, 3<2.
Scouting tor a King, 3x9.
Scouting for Washington, 357.
Sea Dogs All, 298*
Sea Puritans, 32X.
Sea Queen's SaiUng, 260.
Sea-Tigers (The), 274.
Second Answer, 383.
Second Bloom, 374.
Secret Chamber at Chad, 289.
Secret of the Golden Key, 305.
Secret of the Sphinx, 240.
Seed of the Church, 250.
Semiramis, 239.
Senator Licinius, 245.
Sentinel of Wessex, 373.
2 L
514
SUPPLEMENT.
Separatist (The), 3x0.
Smpbica, 341.
Serena, 394.
Serfs (The). 376.
Servant of the King, 310.
Serviteur du Lion de la Mer, 361 .
Set of Six, 377.
Seven Champions. 328.
Seven Nights, 279.
Seven Streams, 409*
Seventeen hundred and Seventy-
nine, 352.
Severed Mantle, 268.
Shadow of a Great Rock, 391.
Shadow of a Throne, 364.
Shadow of Evil, 378.
Shadow of the Raggedstone, 266.
Shakespeare's Chnstmas, 302.
Shakespeare's Christmas, etc,,
3I7» ^'
Shakespeare's Sweetheart, 302.
Shame of Motley, 290.
Shepherd Prior, 256.
Shepherd Prior and other Stories,
252, etc.
Shepperton Manor, 307.
Shibusawa, 399.
Shirra (The), 4x6.
Shoes oi Gold, 354.
Sie^e of Lichfield, 3x6^
Sigismondo Pandolf o Malatesta,
284.
Sign of the Red Cross, 324*
S&i of Triumph, 270.
Siianus the Christian, 248.
Silver Glen, 339.
Silver Hand, 353.
Silver Key, 326.
Silver Shoe-Bnckle, 339.
Silver Skull, 385.
SingoaUa, 277.
Sir Bevill, 309.
Sir David's Visitors, 384.
Sir Galahad of New France, 296.
Sir Guy's Trust, 268.
Sir John Constantine, 349*
Sir Marrok, 408.
Sir Nigel, 276.
Sir Raoul, 270.
Sir Richard Escombe, 345.
Sir Roger's Heir, 411.
Sir Roland Preederoy, 286.
Sir Sleep- Awake and his Brother*
269.
Sir Valdemar the Ganger, 273.
Sir Walter Raleigh, 300.
Sir Walter's Ward, 271.
Slave Girl of Agra, 306.
Slave Girl of Pompeii, 247.
Slave of the Saracen, 273.
Slaves of Sabinus, 247.
Soldier of the Wilderness, 347.
Soldiers of the Cross, 288,
Son of Ashur, 240.
Son of Issachar, 244.
Son of Navarre, 294.
Son of Odin, 258.
Son of Siro, 247.
Son of the Emperor, 271.
Son of the Swordmaker, 244.
Sons of the Seigneur, 319.
Sons of the Vilongs, 378.
Sons of Victory, 366*
Sophia, 4x2.
Sorceress of Rome, 26X.
Sorciere du V6suve, 377,
Soul of a Serf, 255.
Sous la Hache, 364.
Southern Buds and Sons of
War, 398.
Sovereign Power, 373.
Sowing and Harvesting, 365.
Spanish Jade, 392.
Spanish Prisoner, 374,
Special Messenger, 397.
Spirit Trail, 402.
Splendid Knight, 300.
Springtime, 4x0.
Spurs of Gold, 281.
Spy (The), 382.
Spy Company, 390.
Spy of Yorktown, 359.
Squire and Page. 282.
Stairway of Honour, 4x5.
SUPPLEMENT.
515
star in the West, 253.
Star of Love, 241.
Star of Valhalla, 261.
Starbrace, 412.
Stars in the Twilight, 251.
Starvecrow Farm, 384.
Starwood Hall, 352.
Stephanie's Children, 363.
St^hen a Soldier of the Cross,
Stephen of Philadelphia, 311.
Stonecutter of Memphis, 240.
Stooping Lady, 378.
Stones by G. Flaubert, 244,
Stories from Old English History,
253, etc.
Storiesof American History, 358.
Stories of the Crusades, 267, 273.
Stories of the Old Saints, etc,.
Storm and Treasure, 364.
Storm Centre, 394*
Story of a Cat and a Cake, 313.
Story of Ab, 407.
Story of Ancient Wales, 245.
Story of Edgar and Elfrida, 260.
Story of Paul Jones, 360.
Story of Rolf and the Viking's
Bow, 261.
Story of the Child that Jesus
Took, 247.
Story of the Field of the Cloth
of Gold, 295.
Stradella, 326.
Straight Road, 266.
Strained Allegiance, 339.
Strange Adventures in the
County of Dorset, 345.
Strange Story of Rab Raby, 354.
Stranger Whom England Loved,
264*
Strawberry Handkerchief, 349.
Strong liac, 382.
Stronger Wixigs, 389.
Struggle for Freedom, 357.
Stuart Schuyler Series, 357.
Student Ca^^ers, 397.
Suffolk Courtship, 4x8.
Suitors of Yvonne, 322.
Surge of War, 350.
Suzanne, 279.
Sweet Rogues, 318.
Swiss Heroes, 287.
Sword and the Cowl, 263.
Sword Decides, 277.
Sword in the Air, 388.
Sword in the Mountains, 395.
Sword of Dundee, 342.
Sword of Gideon, 336.
Sword of the Lord, 290.
Sword of the Old Frontier, 349.
Swordmaker (The), 410.
Swordmaker's Son, 244.
Sylvia's Lovers, 368.
Sylvia's Romance, 338.
Tailor of Vitr6, 288.
Tales and Sketches of Christian
Life, 265.
Tales Illustrating Church
History (Parker's), 249, etc.
Tales Illustrative of the Apostles'
Creed, 249.
Tales of Chiistian Heroism, 249*
Tales of Old Japan, 411.
Tales of Old Sicily, 241.
Tales of Rye Town, 299, etc.
Taming of the Brute, 413.
Tangled Skein, 297.
Tavern Knight, 319,
Tell-tale Foot; 257.
Temps et la Vie, 377.
'Tention, 381.
Terry's Trials and Triumphs.
396.
Testament of Judas, 244.
Thais, 408.
That Master of Ours, 342.
Theban Legion, 249.
Thorn Fortress, 3x3.
Three Comrades, 400.
5i6
SUPPLEMENT.
Thrice Captive, 337.
Through the Door of Hope, 259.
Through the Fray, 378.
Through the Sikh War, 388.
Tides of Bamegat, 4x9.
Tiger of Muscovy, 306.
Tiger of Mysore, 370.
Tiger of the Pampas, 386.
Timely Baron, 376.
Titus a Comrade of the Cross,
244.
To Horse and Away, 319.
To My King Ever Faithful, 369.
To Pleasure Madame, 3x9.
To the Shrine of St. TruUi, 279.
ToUa the Courtesan, 336.
Tom Cringle's Log, 4x6.
Tor, or a Street boy of Jerusalem,
244,
Tragedy of the Deserted Isle,
375.
Traitor (The), 398.
Traitor and True, 327.
Traitor or Loyalist, 396.
Tramping Methodist, 414.
Trampling of the Lilies, 361.
Tre, Pol, and Pen, 367.
Treasure (The), 380.
Trelawny of Trelawne, 328.
Trooper of the Finns, 312.
True Gold, 315.
True Man and Traitor, 374.
True to the Old Flag, 356.
True Unto Death, 39X.
Trumpet-Major (The), 373.
Trusty Rebel, 289.
Turnpike Lady, 414.
'Twai in Trafalgsir's Bay, 371.
*Twas in Trafsdgar's Bay, etc.,
334-
Twisted Eglantine, 378.
'Twixt Old and New, 278.
'Twixt Sword and Glove, 336.
Two Cadets with Washington,
357.
Two Captains, 366.
Two Dover Boys, 294.
Two Gallant Rebels, 364.
Two Gentlemen of Virginia, 393.
Two Girls in a Siege, 3x8.
Two Lady Lascelles, 4x6.
Two Little Cavaliers, 3x6.
Two Men o' Mendip, 4x6.
Two Royal Foes, 376.
Two Swords, 3x7.
Two-Handed Sword, 342.
Tyranny of Honour, 401.
U
Ulric the Jarl, 244.
Under Castle Walls, 410.
Under Drake's Flag, 299.
Under One Sceptre, 280.
Under Pontius Pilate, 243.
Under Puritan Rule, 320.
Under Scott in Mexico, 390.
Under the Chilian Flag, 403.
Under the Flag of France, 277.
Under the Lone Star, 39X.
Under the Pompadour, 351.
Under the Red Rose, 286.
Under the Roman Eagles, 246.
Under the Stars, 393.
Under the Storm 319.
Under the White Cockade, 343.
Under Three Kings, 328.
Under Two Queens, 297.
Unstrung Bow, 29X.
Untrue to His Trust, 322.
Unwedded Bride, 297.
Up and Down the Pantiles, 368.
V.C., a Chronicle of Castle
Barfield, 39X.
Valiant and True, 36x*
Van Rensselaers of Old Man-
hattan, 358.
Van Rensselaer of Rensselaers-
wyck, 358,
SUPPLEMENT.
517
Vanished Nation, 393.
Vanishing Smuggler, 4x5.
Vend6e aux Genits, 364.
Venture in 1777, 358.
Veranilda, 253.
Vergilius, 242.
Veronica Playfair, 340.
Vertddigung Roms, 389.
Vicar of the Marches, 265.
Victor of Salanus, 241.
Victor's Laurel, 250.
Victory (The), 396.
Victory that Overcometh, 25Z.
Vigilante Girl, 418.
Vine of Sibmah, 325.
Vinland Champions, 261.
Viper of Milan, 278.
Viva Christina, 387.
Volunteer vdth Pike, 375,
Voyage of the Avenger, 299.
W
Walter the Armourer, 269.
Wanton (The), 271.
War Children, 397.
War for the XTnion Series, 396.
War God and the Brown Maiden,
29Z.
War of 1812, 379.
War of 1812 Series, 379.
Wardship of Steepcombe, 278.
Warrens of Virginia, 396.
Warriors of Old Japan, 410.
Waste Not, Want Not, 414.
Watcher on the Tower, 382.
Watchers on the Long Ships,
4x4.
Watchers of the Plains, 402.
Waterloo Lass, 416.
Way of a Man, 4x9.
Way of Service, 258.
Way of the Cross, 248.
Wayfarers (The), 345.
Weavers (The), 418.
Weaving of Gy sile Espinette, 331.
Weeping Cross, 321.
Weir of Hermiston, 378.
Welding (The), 394.
Wenzel's Inheritance, 283.
Were-Wolf (The), 322.
Westminster Cloisters, 268.
Westover of Wanalah, 4x9.
What Ercongeta Saw, 256.
When Cromwell came to
Drogheda, 3x8.
When Hawkins sailed the Sea,
298.
When Lion-Heart was King, 268.
When London Burned, 324
When Terror Ruled, 362.
When the Puritans were in
Power, 320,
When we were Boys, 420.
When Wilderness was King, 380.
Where the Red Volleys Poured,
395-
Whispering Winds, 408.
White Conquerors, 29X.
White Conquerors of Mexico, 29 x .
White Dove of Amritzer, 392.
White Lady of Hazelwood, 278.
White Plume, 304,
White Plumes of Navarre, 304.
White River Raft, 4x8.
White Rose of Lynden, 286.
White Shield, 247.
White Standard, 282.
White Witch. 344.
Wild Geese, 339.
Wild Scenes amongst the Celts,
252, 254.
Wilderness Road, 370.
Willof the Dales, 4XX.
William of Normandy, 262.
Winding Waters, 402.
Winning His Spurs, 267.
Winter Queen, 309.
Wisdom of the Serpent, 399.
Witch Maid, 373.
Witch of Huntingdon, 268.
Witch Queen of Khem, 239.
Witch's Sword, 294.
5i8
SUPPLEMENT.
With Cochrane the DauntleaSi
385.
With Drake on the Spanish
Main, 299.
With Flintlock and Fife, 347.
With Grant at Vicksborg, 398.
With Marlborough to Mal-
plaquet, 337.
With Musketeer and Redskin
3".
With Nelson in Command, 371
With Paul Jones, 360.
With Pizarro the Conquistador,
291.
With Poison and Sword, 298.
With Puritan and Pequot, 3x1.
With Richard the Fearless, 268.
With Roberts to Candahar, 403.
With Rogers' Rangers, 347.
With Shield and Assagai, 403.
With Sully into the Sioux Land,
398.
With Sword and Pen, 392.
With Taylor on the Rio Grande,
390.
With the Black Prince, 276.
With the Black Prince, 276.
With the British Legion, 387.
With the Warden of tiie Marches,
298.
With Wellington to Waterloo,
383.
With Wolfe in Canada, 3^8.
With W*olseley to Kumasi, 402.
Within Four WaUs, 308.
Wolfingham, 370.
Woman and the Sword, 313.
Wo