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¦ P [ h - kov "" ., 1 ' , ' ' . ,. i, , ...
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r ] Books Received :— v T7.~m Messrs ivr...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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¦ P [ H - Kov "" ., 1 ' , ' ' . ,. I, , ...
¦ P [ - kov "" ., ' ' . ,. i , « 88 3 ¦ ' "' ¦ " ' ' ¦ - ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ' "" ¦ '' -V" ¦ ' •' . ^ ¦ ¦ ^ - ¦ ' ¦ ; ¦ ¦ ¦ Pukli ^¦¦ ¦ ' '' ¦ ¦ ¦ " ¦" ¦ 8 * -- 1 ^ ¦ v ; - ' 8 ' --: Circular --v-o . ' - ^ r >; v- - > . ^ -. iT- . ; . ^;^ . ^; - , - ' ; . - .. v ; -- * - — . •> . ; : ;¦ .. ¦; , ;? io . ; . . 49 , . ¦ . - ^ tt I —
R ] Books Received :— V T7.~M Messrs Ivr...
r Books Received : — v T 7 . ~ m Messrs ivressrs . . 'Williain wiinam Black i ^ iaoicwooa wood <« fc Sons sons .. — — m
ro Daring Anthony the Trollope space of : about an Autobiograp a quarter of hy a / century 2 vols .
J / Ul- ** ' £ 5 J . J . *^ ' , ] novels _ fr t . Anthony which Trollope dealt chiefl poured with forth the a lives series and of f A "I 1 y to * the * 1 middle "IT *
fortunes opersons "belonging upper class 1 ~ 1 ( J / iJkj m . These ^~ ~™ of books have g c ,-j iven librari more of p » leasure the hi to - — her the - ——
—frequenters stamthan the circulating writings of any other es author g that ¦ ¦ uld p be named . People rej b oiced with i the
¦ ¦ ¦ co ^ ^^^ p » f . m ^ W ^^ mT ^^ ^ — ^ ^ " ^ — ¦ ^ ^^ ^ mm- v ™ — ™ ^^ - »» — ~ - ^ P" ~ ^ pp ¦ * ~~ ^ p * » ¦ ~ " ~ — —^ P | -mm —m-m ^ mw ^ mw ^ a personages nd sympathised of Anthony with them Trollope in their ' s sorrows fictions , , them le to be liked dis
liked regarded and looked as peop forward to what was or to - become % ^ —^ , ^— of them . A man cannot — —thus awaken
the u ^^ »^ interest of his readers in book after book without also making himself a lively object of interest ^ , ^^^ m ^ 0 mj ^ mi mmr— ^^ mw - — -mr- . v Any g account — — of — himself ¦ — - -m- — b — y . such - — — " ^ — a ~ m *~
—writer would be eagerly read . In this case vre ! more think tm interesting we may say book that than the autobiograp any of the hy novels is a
which ^ ^ m * ^ mr ^^ " preceded it . Successful — man M — as he was ^^ ¦ r ^^ in later life , up to the age of nearly thirty circumpjp stances mfi were anything but ¦ favourable to him ¦— .
After - r — - — his — novels « took - v ' wo — -- — — have — — — -m- a record — — — ' - -m- of me — " - ^ ™ - thodical toil , pursued even on a railway journey , which is a very curious pieco of literary history .
Trollope himself makes the calculation that he had written more than any other English novelist . He does not pause J . a day % / between the comp Aletion
of scouting one novel the and idea , the that commencement a man should of wait another for , inspiration before the pen begins its course over
the paper . Indeed , at the moment he handed a novel over to a publisher , he was wont to be ready with one or two more such trifles in a
drawer at his side ; and he mentions this fact by way be made — of - ~— — - » — anti , that -mr ^~~ ci pating mmr p he ^ p »^ ^ pp- was » w ^ mmw the * p * pt wri w r remark ^ p » ^ ting *~ ¦ " ^ - ^ f " ^ himself ' «— mm ¦ that ¦** r—mr ^* r am , ^ p was » out ^ h ^ m * ¦ V sure -mmr . mj We ¥ to -mmw
"wish we had space for one or two extracts from ciall Trollope from ' s most the narrati interesting ves of autobiograp his relations hy , es with pey
his publishers inions , magazines of novels , wheth and newspapers er classical , contem or from - porary op , or his own . , ,
From British . Workwoman Office . — ' The British Juvenile Album / JThis is , we imagine , tit although there is no intimation of the fact on the
There le-page is , some the y wholesome ear ' s number reading s of a suited magazine for . v young eil done folks , The and i t he ture full cover -page p h ictures ' Home Jl JL are from Xi , all
« . * . w * . * v . . XllU p L / l ^ Ulll-U V- 'VVV / JL , ? TI tU JL- « -V ¦ ^ ^^ V / 11 A the it at JVLirket starting ' . its face , will win a good word for From tho same- - ' The Crystal JtJ Stories UV & IVtJt ' Vol 3 A
i jo t loO iou urnal pages TDace " » - * of v s ^» of of * . v pure - . wholesome "whnlpsnrn JL literature . A J X- / ^^ - / . ft fiction fiction ULV l . N Illustrnted ^ . b V > y v , n . nu nnmlifir » V . ft mber * . About \ J m . of nf «* JL .
authors 1 L 'ysaght •/ D" - * v , , ) including the vuv _ Rev o . tuv . . Grace «/ J « , j B - ^« . Stebbing Owen v ^ vruu , , tho , tiiu Elizabeth ( author iu ciivy ~ L of v J .
' fiomo Mrs , . Jorning but at the ham same ' s Journal time . there ' The is tone sufficient is whole of - for svent and incident to make it probable that those
Imgl whom y . they are intended will read them wil-From the same— The British WorkwomanTho
--.. v owjijd , . JL f € t > JL > I liVliOltt tr Ul fV UUVillU . lt ,. . J . HU editor ^ twentieth ^ fc uii ^ m ^ A . ^ of ^^ this vol VA umo publication . , goes on , tho which ~__ snmo has lines reached as tho its _
find ^ ^ Qlt those Or or if oHhe We , of the cannot The woll Wftl l British - - . Trno known tay 'w the n Workman com /» r p ictures panion nn . ni nn are the paper -nn . np quite . r ar for fnr e equal men mftii of a , .
, y ¦ Uy iction hi gh varied order . The hvmns letterpress . devotional ia very oaners good ,
^^^ activo sketches , and anecdotes .
From ( Limited Messrs ) . — . ' " The William Rules of Collins the French , Sons Language , & Co / . [
by Q- . A . Chardenal . This volume supplies in proper grammatical order the rules contained in the author ' s * Firat and Second French Courses '
and in his ' French Exercises for Advanced the Pup first ils / part The of elementary the volume rules and h and the accidence second i fill ¦ is
occupied — with | - ^* - — — — the - ^— - ^— syntax ^ ^— w — —^* - — - ^ - rules - ^^ - ^^— - ^ , ^ g , and p ^^ - ~— —mm ^^ . w ^ as ^»^ r ^^ a m ^ m ^ mmm supp r ^^^ ^ hh ^^ ^^^^ pa le ^^ . ^ - * ment the author adds a most useful series of exercises to test the pupil ' s knowledge of the rules .
From Messrs . "Wells Gardner , Darton , & Co . — 'The Snow Queen / by Hans Christian
Anderson . Illustrated by T . l ? ym . The pretty tale of the prince of children ' s story-tellers is here pre- r sented to us in genuine aesthetic guise . The text t
is printed on toned paper in brown ink , with a I line-border to each page , and the drawing and I colouring of the plates are as clever as all I
this artist ' s works . The insertion of a leaf of I tissue paper between each plate , bound in with I tho textinstead of placing it in looselyis a de- I
oided improvement , , and ought to be ada , pted in I all excellen picture ce . books with any pretence to artistic J
From Griffith & Farran . —' The Butterfly ' s Ball and the Grasshopper ' s Feast / and ' The Peacock
at Home * and ' The Elephant ' s Ball / with an introduction by Charles Welsh . Mr . Welsh has followed BB up the well-deserved success of his fac- >
mmmm ^ mW . *^ p * mWmr V » ^^ r ¦— ~ m- — W ^ ^^ ^ ^ simile of * Goody Two Shoes ' by a reprint of the four books for children named above , the first two --w- of --- whichwhen - issued - nearl - _ _ _ y ei _ - ghty - - years - ago
- ^ - w r — , - — — — - f ^ Jf ^ J C \ 9 , Ball had ' a ori sale ginall of y 40 appeared , 000 copies in . the ' The Gent Butterfl leman y' ' s s j Magazine , and was the work of William Roscoe ,
M . P . for Liverpool ; * The Peacock at Home' was ' written Elephant by ' s Mrs Ball . Do ' Mr rset . Welsh ; the authorshi says he has p been of * The un- I
able __ to discover 4 A mm . The ^ B » w ^ •¦ earlier ^ ¦ A editions « # were illus A ^ M . M - and trated Mr b . y Welsh William points Mulread out in y , his the interesting famous painter pre- ,
face that many artists who originally were content to do such modest work have risen to eminence . The reprints are from the press of Field 6 c Tuer ,
and the text and illustrations are facsimile reproductions of originals from the Flaxman collection , purchased by Mr . Tuer at Christie ' s .
From Lancashire Mr . John and . Cheshire Hey ^ vood : a . — Way ' Historic farer ' s N Sites otes i of
the Palatine Counties , Historical , Legendary , F Genealog . S . A . Mr ical . Croston , and Descri work pti s with ve / b no y James ' prenti Croston ce hand ,
, hi 8 previous volumes on ' Old Manchester and its Worthies ' and ' Nooks and Corners of Lancashire and Cheshire ' having proved not merely his
capacity archaeology in authorshi and anti p quity but . his The genuine appreciation love felt for for hi « bV ^ P * s effort h s is shown ¦ by the long bhb list of
submmmmt scri ^^^ ^ p ^ bers P ^» m-mrnr -mmmr - prefixed ^ - ^ — — " ^— - to the - volume — — — , among — — ^^— - which , in addition to a host of private purchasers , we find many of our own subscribers and
readersincludin Mr cop . J g . , K Messrs Messrs . Coraish . . Minshull Triibner of Manchest , & Mr Hug . Elliot ? hes r , Mr , of . Stock Holden Chester , ( 27 ,
of Liverpool , Mr . , Dunning , of Nantwich , and , us many to others Swaithmoor . In his Hall first , chapter near luirness Mr . Croston , the so takes
metime homo of G oorge Fox , tho founder of the Society of The Friends Hull , of , w E hoso lizabet residence han date , , forms locally the known subject as
of the first illustration . In the hall of the building and tho we have earlier ictures meetings KJ of Fox of the ' s Bibl Friends ik ^ e x- and * mt ^ wert >\ his ) chair held wmJtx * ,
CAJUIV 4 * TV \ J A-AC * V \ J p K- ' * ^ - ** **•*¦ x' V ^» •¦ . v- *^*» , 9 * M -m .-r , A m mm- ^ M ** m * r **• m , * m'v * m - / 3 B
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), Nov. 1, 1883, page 1049, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_01111883/page/13/
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