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THE GOLDEN BOOK OF INDIA

MESSRS. MACMILLAN AND CO.'S

POPULAR NOVELS FOR INDIAN READERS.

By RUDYARD KIPLING.

THE LIGHT THAT FAILED.

enlarged. Crown 8vo. 6s.

Re-written and considerably

THE ACADEMY.-"Whatever else be true of Mr. Kipling; it is the first truth about him that he has power, real intrinsic power. . . . Mr. Kipling's work has innumerable good qualities."

GLASGOW HERALD.-"The power and interest are sustained throughout, and there is nowhere any indication of flagging or of a second breath. . . . It carries on the tradition of the author's picturesque freshness and inexhaustible resources."

MANCHESTer courier." The story is a brilliant one and full of vivid interest." PLAIN TALES FROM THE HILLS. Crown 8vo.

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THE SATURDAY REVIEW.-"Mr. Kipling knows and appreciates the English in India, and is a born story-teller and a man of humour into the bargain. . . It would be hard to find better reading." DUBLIN EVENING MAIL.—"This is a delightful book. . . . Mr. Kipling is a man of genius, and prefers quality to quantity. Many of his stories are profoundly pathetic. We think the dominant note of his genius is pathos, but there is humour, rich and racy humour, in all of them."

GLASGOW HERALD.—" One of the first things that strikes the reader is the exceptional excellence of the tales.... The man who wrote them has manifestly numberless others to tell. . . . Character, situation, incident, humour, pathos, tragic force, are all in abundance; words alone are at a minimum. Of course these are plain' tales,-lightning-flash tales. A gleam, and there the whole tragedy or comedy is before you-elaborate it for yourself afterwards."

SCOTTISH REVIEW.—. . . Whatever may be Mr. Kipling's ability in the higher walks of fiction, his ability as a story-teller or for narrating such incidents, whether real or fictitious, as are here put together is beyond question. They are told with ease, force, and directness. There is not an uninteresting story in the volume, and one closes the book with the desire to read the 'other stories' Mr. Kipling so often alludes to, and somewhat tantalisingly passes over."

BROAD ARROW." Mr. Kipling is accomplished beyond all recent standards of comparison, and his forty stories are all readable and clever. There is a freshness about them rare in such delicious morsels of satire and sentiment... and there is not a dull page in the three hundred and ten."

LIFE'S HANDICAP. Stories of Mine own People. Crown 8vo.

Cloth. 6s.

"

BLACK AND WHITE.—"Life's Handicap contains much of the best work hitherto accomplished by the author, and taken as a whole is a complete advance upon its predecessors. . . OBSERVER.-"The stories are as good as ever, and are quite as well told. volume that can be read with pleasure and interest under almost any circumstances.'

*

Now publishing. Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. each.

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Life's Handicap is a

TWELVE ENGLISH STATESMEN.

A Series of Short Biographies, not designed to be a complete roll of famous Statesmen, but to present in historic order the lives and work of those leading actors in our affairs who by their direct influence have left an abiding mark on the policy, the institutions, and the position of Great Britain among States.

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TIMES.-"Brilliant and fascinating. The style is terse, masculine, nervous, articulate, and clear; the grasp of circumstance and character is firm, penetrating, luminous, and unprejudiced; the judgment is broad, generous, humane, and scrupulously candid. . . . It is not only a luminous estimate of Pitt's character and policy; it is also a brilliant gallery of portraits. The portrait of Fox, for example, is a masterpiece." PEEL. By J. R. THURSFIELD.

DAILY NEWS.-"A model of what such a book should be. We can give it no higher praise than to say that it is worthy to rank with Mr. John Morley's Walpole in the same

series.

MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.

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Estimates and Specifications Free.

General Offices & Works: ARLINGTON ST., LONDON, N. Show Rooms: 76 CHEAPSIDE, LONDON, E.C.

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THE following Volumes are now ready, and may be obtained through any Bookseller in India or the British Colonies. They are issued both in paper covers and in cloth :—

1. BARKER.-Station Life in New Zealand. By Lady BARKER.

2. BARKER-A Year's Housekeeping in South Africa. By Lady BARKER.

4. CONWAY.-A Family Affair. By HUGH CONWAY.

5. CRAWFORD.-Mr. Isaacs: A Tale of Modern India. By F. MARION CRAW

FORD.

6. CRAWFORD.-Dr. Claudius: A True Story. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

7. CRAWFORD.-A Roman Singer. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

8. CRAWFORD.-A Tale of a Lonely Parish. By F. MARION CRAWFORD. 9. EMERSON.-The Conduct of Life. By RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

10. FARRAR.—Seekers after God. By Archdeacon FARRAR, D.D. 11. FORBES.-Souvenirs of some Continents.

By ARCHIBALD FORBES, LL.D.

12. HAMERTON.-Human Intercourse. By P. G. HAMERTON. 13. KEARY.-Oldbury. By ANNIE KEARY.

14. JAMES.-Tales of Three Cities. By HENRY JAMES.

15. MITFORD.—Tales of Old Japan. By A. B. MITFord.

16. OLIPHANT.-A Country Gentleman. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.

17, 18, 19. OLIPHANT.—The Literary History of England in the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th Century. By Mrs. OLIPHANT. 3 vols.

20. ST. JOHNSTON.-Camping among Cannibals. By ALFRED ST. JOHNSTON. 21. MURRAY.-Aunt Rachel. By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY.

22. YONGE.-Chantry House. By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

23. HARRISON.-The Choice of Books, etc. By FREDERIC HARRISON.

24. THE AUTHOR OF “JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN."-Miss Tommy: A Mediæval Romance. By the Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman."

25. MALET.-Mrs. Lorimer: A Sketch in Black and White. By LUCAS MALET. 26. CONWAY.-Living or Dead. By HUGH CONWAY.

27. OLIPHANT.—Effle Ogilvie. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.

28. HARRISON.—A Northern Lily. By JOANNA HARRISON.

29. NORRIS.-My Friend Jim. By W. E. NORRIS.

30. LAWLESS.-Hurrish: A Study. By the Hon. EMILY LAWLESS.

31. THE AUTHOR OF “JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN.”—King Arthur: not a Love Story. By the Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman."

32. HARDY.-The Mayor of Casterbridge.

By THOMAS HARDY.

33. GRAHAM.-Neæra: A Tale of Ancient Rome. 34. MADOC.—Margaret Jermine. By FAYR MADOC.

By JOHN W. GRAHAM.

35. YONGE.—A Modern Telemachus. By CHARLOTTE M. Yonge.

36. SHORTHOUSE.-Sir Percival. By J. HENRY SHORtHouse.

37. OLIPHANT.—A House Divided Against Itself. By Mrs. OLIPHANT,

38. THE AUTHOR OF "JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN."--About Money, and other things. By the Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman."

40. ARNOLD.-Essays in Criticism. By MATTHEW ARNOLD.

41. HUGHES.-Tom Brown's Schooldays. By an Old Boy.

42. YONGE-The Dove in the Eagle's Nest. By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

43. OLIPHANT.—A Beleaguered City. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.

44. MORLEY.-Critical Miscellanies. By JOHN MORLEY.

45. BRET HARTE.—A Millionaire of Rough-and-Ready, etc. By BRET HARTE. 46. CRAWFORD.—Saracinesca. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

47. VELEY.-A Garden of Memories, and other Stories. By MARGARET VELEY.

MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.

EUROPEAN ADVERTISEMENTS

39

MACMILLAN'S COLONIAL LIBRARY.

49. HARDY.-The Woodlanders. By THOMAS HARDY.

50. DILLWYN.-Jill. By E. A. DILLWYN.

51. DILLWYN.-Jill and Jack. By E. A. DILLWYN.

52. WESTBURY.-Frederick Hazzleden.

By HUGH Westbury.

53, 54. The New Antigone: A Romance. 2 vols.

55. BRET HARTE.—The Crusade of "The Excelsior." By BRET HARTE.

56. CUNNINGHAM.—The Cœruleans: A Vacation Idyll. By Sir H. CUNNINGHAM. 57, 58. THE AUTHOR OF “HOGAN, M.P."-Ismay's Children. By the Author of "Hogan, M.P." 2 vols.

59. CRAWFORD.-Zoroaster. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

60. NOEL.-Hithersea Mere. By Lady AUGUSTA NOEL.

61, 62. THE AUTHOR OF “ESTELLE RUSSELL."-Harmonia. of "Estelle Russell." 2 vols.

63. OLIPHANT.—The Second Son. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.

64. CRAWFORD.-Marzio's Crucifix. By F. MARION CRAWFORD. 65. CRAWFORD.-Paul Patoff. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

By the Author

66. MARTINEAU.-Biographical Sketches. By HARRIET MARTINEAU. 67. THE AUTHOR OF “FRIENDS IN COUNCIL.”

"Friends in Council."

Realmah. By the Author of

68. LAFARGUE.-The New Judgment of Paris: a Novel. By PHILIP LAFARGUE. 69. SHORTHOUSE.—A Teacher of the Violin, and other Tales. By J. H. SHORT

HOUSE.

70. NORRIS.-Chris. By W. E. NORRIS.

71. OLIPHANT.-Joyce. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.

72. BRET HARTE.—The Argonauts of North Liberty. By BRET HARTE.

73. CORBETT.-For God and Gold. By JULIAN CORBETT.

74. HARDY.-Wessex Tales.-By THOMAS HARDY.

75. FOTHERGILL.-The Lasses of Leverhouse: a Story. By JESSIE FOTHERGILL. 76. CRAWFORD. With the Immortals. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

77. WARD.-Robert Elsmere. By Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD.

78. Fraternity: a Romance.

79. BRET HARTE.-Cressy. By BRET HARTE. 80. MINTO.-The Mediation of Ralph Hardelot. 81. MURRAY.-The Weaker Vessel.

By WILLIAM MINTO.

By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY.

By J. H. SHORTHOUSE.
By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

82. SHORTHOUSE.—The Countess Eve.
83. YONGE.-Beechcroft at Rockstone.
84. WARD.-Miss Bretherton. By Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD.
85. CORBETT.-Kophetua the Thirteenth.
86. AMIEL.-The Journal Intime of H. F. Amiel.

WARD.

87. LEVY.-Reuben Sachs. By AMY LEVY.

By JULIAN CORBETT

Translated by Mrs. HUMPHRY

88. ARNOLD.-Essays in Criticism. By MATTHEW Arnold. 89. CRAWFORD.-Greifenstein. By F. MARION CRAWFORD. 90. OLIPHANT.-Neighbours on the Green.

Second Series.

By Mrs. OLIPHANT.

91. MURRAY.-Schwartz. By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY. 92. HAMERTON.-French and English: A Comparison. By P. G. HAMERTON. 93. An Author's Love. Being the Unpublished Letters of Prosper Mérimée's "Inconnue." 94. BOLDREWOOD.-Robbery Under Arms. By ROLF BOLDREWOOD.

95. WESTCOTT.—The Gospel of the Resurrection. By B. F. WESTCOTT, D.D.

96. HAMERTON.-The Intellectual Life. By P. G. HAMERTON.

97. YONGE.-A Reputed Changeling.-By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

98. RUSSELL.-Marooned. By W. CLARK RUSSELL.

99. CRAWFORD.-Sant' Ilario. By F. MARION Crawford.

100. BRET HARTE.-The Heritage of Dedlow Marsh, etc. By BRET HARTE.
101. EMERSON. English Traits. By RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
102. WALLACE.-Darwinism. By ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE.
103. WORTHEY.-The New Continent. By Mrs. WORTHEY.
104. MURRAY.-John Vale's Guardian.

By D. C. MURRAY.

MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.

40

THE GOLDEN BOOK OF INDIA

MACMILLAN'S COLONIAL LIBRARY,

105. CARMARTHEN. A Lover of the Beautiful. By the MARCHIONESS OF
CARMARTHEN.

106. CUNNINGHAM.—The Heriots. By Sir HENRY CUNNINGHAM.
107. BOLDREWOOD.—The Miner's Right. By ROLf Boldrewood.
108. LYTTON.—The Ring of Amasis. By the EARL OF LYTTON.
109. JAMES.-The Tragic Muse. By HENRY JAMES.

110. ST. JOHNSTON.—A South Sea Lover. By A. ST. JOHNSTON.

111. CRAWFORD.—A Cigarette-Maker's Romance. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

112. CUNNINGHAM. Wheat and Tares. By Sir H. CUNNINGHAM.

113. YONGE.-More By-Words. By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

114. BOLDREWOOD.—The Squatter's Dream. By ROLF BOLDREWOOD.
115. OLIPHANT.—Kirsteen. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.
116. BOLDREWOOD.-A Colonial Reformer.
117. WALLACE.—The Malay Archipelago.
118. SEELEY.-The Expansion of England.
119. YONGE.-Two Penniless Princesses. By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

By ROLF BOLDREWOOD.
By A. R. WALLACE, F.R.S.
By J. R. SEELEY.

120. MORLEY.-Studies in Literature. By JOHN MORLEY.

121. MURRAY.-He fell among Thieves. By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY and HENRY
HERMAN.

122. CRAWFORD.—Khaled. By F. MARION Crawford.

123. JENNINGS.-The Philadelphian. By L. J. JENNINGS, M.P.
124. BOLDREWOOD.-A Sydney-Side Saxon.

By ROLF BOLDREWOOD.

125. KEENE.-Sketches in Indian Ink. By H. G. KEENE.
126. Tim.

127. BOLDREWOOD.-Nevermore. By ROLF BOLDREWOOD.
128. YONGE.-That Stick. By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.

By F. MARION CRAWFORD.

129. CRAWFORD.-The Witch of Prague. Illustrated.
130. FORBES.—Barracks, Bivouacs, and Battles. By A. FORBES.
131. FALCONER.-Cecilia de Noël. By LANOE FALCONER.
132. SHORTHOUSE.-Blanche, Lady Falaise. By J. HENRY SHORTHOUSE.
133. OLIPHANT.—The Railway Man and his Children. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.
134. VICTOR.—Mariam, or Twenty-one Days. By HORACE VICTOR.
135. WARD.-The History of David Grieve. By Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD.
136. BRET HARTE.—A First Family of Tasajara. By BRET HART.
137. RUSSELL.-A Strange Elopement. By W. CLARke Russell.
138. OLIPHANT.-The Marriage of Elinor. By Mrs. OLIPHANT.
139. CRAWFORD.-The Three Fates. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.
140. PARRY.-The Story of Dick. By Major GAMBIer Parry.
141. ROY.-Helen Treveryan. By JOHN Roy.

142. DILKE AND WILKINSON.—Imperial Defence. By Sir C. DILKE and S.
WILKINSON.

143. PARKIN.-Imperial Federation. By G. R. PARKIN, M.A.

144. CRAWFORD. Children of the King. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.
145. THEODOLI.-Under Pressure. By MARCHESA THEODOLI.

146. OLIPHANT.-The Heir Presumptive and the Heir Apparent.
OLIPHANT.

147. CRAWFORD.-Don Orsino. By F. MARION CRAWFORD.
148. JAMES.—A Collection of Short Stories. By HENRY JAMES.
149. JAMES.-The Lesson of the Master, etc. By HENRY JAMES.

150. WEST.-A Born Player. By MARY WEST, author of "Allegra."

By Mrs.

151. DICKENS.-A Mere Cypher. By MARY ANGELA DICKENS, author of "Cross
Currents."

152. RHOADES.-John Trevennick. By W. C. RHOADES.

153. LYSAGHT.-The Marplot. By S. R. LYSAGHT.

154. RITCHIE,

-

Records of Tennyson, Ruskin, and Browning. By ANNE
THACKERAY RITCHIE.

(OTHER VOLUMES TO FOLLOW.)

To be obtained of all Booksellers in India and the British Colonies, and at Railway Bookstalls.

MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.

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