On this page
- Pictures (1)
-
Text (1)
-
§&&;?. • • : A V . ......... , . - . .. ...
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
<3®E$$Tg^ . Am Pefon 3l Otd, Ai^Ar^Fon, ...
I , Tbe Trag-edie of XKacbetli , by William Shakspeare . Illustrated by J . Moyr Smith .
' Mr . Moyr Smith has not only illustrated this magnificent volume , but has also written an introduction and notes . He has taken infinite pains to make himself acquainted with the
costumes and armour of ancient Scotland and Scandinavia , and he imports his learning on this \ and kindred subjects into his pictures . Many of the full-page etchings in this book are very effectiveand are marked boetic imaination as well as technical skill .- On the who ] e
i Mr how . ever Moyr , , w Smith e like ' s best conception the exquisite y p of the vi chief gnettes g actors which in are the g p iv lay en of with 4 Macbeth the text ' is of striking the drama and . ,
unconventional , and students and lovers of Shakspeare will find much to charm and interest them in this handsome and artisticJbook . < ^
\ ' ¦¦ Wee rolk , Good Foils , a Fantasy [ , ful by collection Ethel M . of Wil fairy mot tales -Buxton distinguished . A slight by but lightness
graceof touch and considerable imagination of a dreamy poetic type . It is a pleasant idea to make a little lame boy the object of the friendship and goodwill of
the ' Wee Folk , Good Folk / who lead him to enchanted grounds . There is decided originality and
£ fe « hness about Miss Florence doope ^ s illustrations . Boys must be hard to please who do ^ not revel in the of MrFHWinder ' exciting story lost
in Africa pages . The . three . heroes . of the s book start for the Dark Continent to search for a lost willwhich is
posed to be in the pocket of an old coat , hidden in sup an African cave . The plucky adventurers pass through
in incredible circumstances difficulties of ^ , he and Utmost again peril and . again There are are placed some capital descriptions of African scenery in the book ; the interest never flagsand the whole story is told
with picturesque vigour , and startling realism . If Mr . Winder can follow the success which he has
unquestionably won in this up instance , he will speedily take rank with the best writers of story-books for
boys .
Jule s Verne is a past master in imaginative fiction , and in his new < v w w story ¦ w k A ^^^ b ^ < lrift in MflM tli ft e Pacific 4 b there a ^ fj j is
— — — - — — ^ - — —— w ** r - » - <* w . m . ^^ a *^ ^ r ^^ ^¦ V ^^ ^^ ^ M «>^^^ a ^ ^^ m m ^ ^/ J . t ~? evidence enough that , his hand has not lost its , cunning ^ .
A A excursion group ffrOUD ot Of in lad lada a s . , hundred in in JN ^ Jp ew . W -ton y Zealand ^ aXarx yacht cl , start sfn , and +. on on are a p nlpaaurn leasure blown
out to sea , and nnaJly wrecked on a desert island . Here the lads endeavour to make themselves as happy
and comfortable as possible .
Han over Island , the scene a (* . an ft ot of
their adventures , is
v agu aonifilv ely de de--scribed as 4 somewhere
off the coast of ^ fe Chili —t . i ~ imwm ^* ^* ^ . v ' ^^^
Some of the company are almost ¦ 11 ¦
«> W « h ^^ ¦ ¦ » ^ — as ingenious as Jules
Verne himamongst self , though the clouds in a different with a small way , boy for fastened they construct to its tail a huge Lord kite Beaconsfield , which is once sent said careering that it
. is the unexpected which happens , and thatis certainly true in the clever and fascinating stories of Jules "Verne . The illustrations are ^ ' vigorous and spirited .
There is nothing very remarkable in »» o Story of a Poodle , by Lucy D . Thornton , panied though hi youn s mi stress folks to will the probabl Pyren y ees relish . The the moral descri of ption the book of ' Gaston may be ' s ' said prank to s be when gathered lie accom up in
not the , closing fail in his sentence duty . ' * It a man love his Maker as faithfully as a dog loves his master , he win
Pc04400
§&&;?. • • : A V . ......... , . - . .. ...
§&&;? . • : V . ......... , . - . .. * .: ¦> :,. .-.:.,. -.,- ; . .. v- ..:. .. ^ - ^ . ; / . ; :, . ¦¦ : ¦ : ¦ .,.. ^^^^ M-msmmm ^ - r ^ 11 - - " ¦>> * / V * ' ™
t 5 f 8 The Publishers' Circular Dec . 6 , 1889
-
-
Citation
-
Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), Dec. 6, 1889, page 1578, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_06121889/page/44/
-