On this page
-
Text (1)
-
6i 4 The Publishers' Circular Jy&ifcilNi...
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.
-V^^W Ftetotefrtf, S:C. From Cei Ceivfid...
affords some interesting information regarding J the Maories and the missionaries working ampng
at them tractive , and , being the book further is distinguished distinctly readable by several and illustrations .
Prom the same . — ' Crookside Lads ; or , How Bill Ferrers - — - was Won — , / is — a well-told - story - ,, very good t j in its inculcation of moral lessons
—. Prom Messrs . Seeley & Co . —Mr . George
Sutherland , M . A ., writes in a very pleasant strain , in his book , ' Australia , or England in the South / a work which gives an unusually good idea of the
conditions of life in the great island continent . There are twenty-seven illustrations , and the book is one of the cheapest we know of .
From Messrs . Simp kin , Marshal J , < fc Co . —Mr . Ludlow ' s reprint of Jaggard & Blotint ' ( 1623 )
edition of * Mr . William Shakespeare ' s Comedie of " The Tempest , " published according to ^ the True Originall Copies / is a welcome little book
which Shakspearean students should be glad to , have placed within their reach at a very moderate price . Paper and printing are all that could be
desired . Prom Messrs . Smith , Elder , & Co . — ' The
Heir of the Ages / by James Payn . It seems almost ungrateful to call Mr . Payn ' s work disappointing — f ^ - . But it is the author ~ ' s own - fault
J £ " p previous —a strange novels contrariety he has led of us words to expect this— from if by his his pen something far above the average . In his
latest j . workas in the immediate few c ? that have preceded it , , this something is wanting . Mr . Payn is always interesting , always clever—he
brings to his task all the trained experience of an accomplished man of letters ; there is not a page in these --- volumesin fact ___^ that could ____ b __ y the _ most ____ _ __ .
—___ _ — , — , exacting of readers be styled dull or wearisome ^ , but he fails to get a deeper hold of his subject , he is wanting in that subtle instinctive power
that so many women writers possess , and he seems rather to move his characters about with the clever ingenuity of the skilful stage manager
understands than the feeling v all touch their of mo the tives man and who sympathises thoroughly with them ^^ — — . But — frankl — ythis — is almost — a — h —
ypercritical opinion ; , w in the present , dearth of good \ novelists we should indeed be thankful -that we have men . of Mr . Payn ' s calibre among us . The
leading personage in ' The Heir of the Ages ' is Miss from being Dart , a a charming humble companion ly drawn character rises to , who be a ,
most successful novelist , and receives , as much as a thousand pounds for her first novel—a circumstance , by the way , that we should scarcely have
deemed probable after a perusal of Mr . Payn ' s 'Reminiscences / While in the position of companion she is wooed by Major Milburnan
unprincipled scamp , who already has a wife , living , > and but happ is eventuall ily Miss y Dart the mean escapes s of fro rescuing m the snare from ¦¦¦¦¦ ,
poverty clusive m the agazine editor in of which the Millennium she firat makes , the her exmark as a writer . By this act also she secures
l her iterary own happ ' s iness wife , . and There subsequentl are numerous y becomes good a characters in the book—notably 'Aunt Jane /
Roger —and Leyden the plot the is worked antiquary out , and with Mary a skill Milburn that renders its narration interesting throughout .
,,: From the same . —It was a felicitous fancy that caused Mr . F . Anstey to interweave his latest fic-
tion with the story of a Buddhist idol , and he has unfolded humour --- - and his -r-- skill narrative . — - In -- with the - - prologue - characteristic - ~~ to ~ * A Fallen force HK , :
* r % m m _ . , —— ^— __ — ^^ J A i — " ™ ^ ^ m ^ S ^^^^^ fc Idol history _ / we of are the given idol * , some which account from the _ of first the * seems previous to ! ' have been possessed with a mischievous ,
malevolent . disposition In this the ; and idol then has . follows found its the story to proper , way England -j- — -i j and — is presented j ^ - by a young lady if Sybil ¦
Elsworth ^ p , , as a present to her lover -C ? , . Ronald , If «*•¦ - __• Champion , an artist . From the time of its entrance into his house it causes everything to go
mounting wrong . First a ladder Bonald to ' p s lace old it factotum on a bracket , Bales , falls , in down and breaks some valuable articles of vertu . - » _> « __* m m ^ --k ___^__ M ^^ - ^ M m « - __
pet Next " . ^ dog it , is and the * for means this of reason killing ^ ^ ^ she Mrs * discounten . Willoughb ances ^ ^ y ' s Ronald ' s engagement to her niece Sybil . Then it is
the clever fiendish but grotesque cause of p his icture painting of the an sai exceeding d niece . In ly short , misfortun e crowds — ^ upon — ^ . misfortune , and ^
meanwhile the idol complacently squats with a diabolical grin on its face as if conscious of and glorying in the mishaps it has caused . How the
l devi eave l is the eventuall reader y to ex find orcised out , . so Thare to speak are , we two must exceptionall t y t good characters in- the workwe may
—mm ~~ — — — — . — , y — -w remark—Lionel Babcock , a talkative , consequential brother wielder oi the brush , and Herr Nebelsen , a Norwegian and believer in Theosophyand
occultism . The latter is an exceedingly amusing from portraiture our . slight ' A sketch Fallen is Idol wildl / as y , imag will be inative gathered but ;
undoubted for humour ly , incisive equal to force , anything , and brisk Mr . dialogue Anstey , it has is yet written . '
From Th . a Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge . —The publications of the Society
have recently been very numerous , and include several works of a meritorious character . This is observable in their adaptability for teaching
purposes , and in the healthiness of the tone which is noticeable in books intended for general reading . With regard to the latter we note with
not a little satisfaction the inauguration of a new the t venture he purpose Tmrnose , entitled of of which whifth * The Penny is is to to Li supply surml brary v the the of Fiction million million / !
price with . the Moving best ori in ginal that fiction direction at the the Society lowest
has certainly made a fair start by , publishing 'Three Times Should Tried the / issue a sto of ry books by Mr of . this B . de L . ¦ \
Farjeon . - scription be kept up , the ' penny dreadful' will , soon be knocked out of popular favour .
From the same . — Man and his Handiwork / by the \ Rev . J . Gr . Wood . Avoiding wearisome details , Mr . ;
skill Wood in here litera gives , treatment in that charming which have language won and for ; ry ; his books a unique popularity , a graphic ac- ,
count count countries of of . the the A craftsmanship craftsmanshi considerable -n portion of of different different of the ages aetea work an andd , \ ¦ which v m ^^ m ^ forms ¦!» . ^^ jh r f ' a *>• handsome n w n ^ ~ ^ r r ^>^ mm ¦¦> ^ ¦ ^ ¦ volum v ^ - ^ , m ^ *^ m «¦ e «^ , is j » ¦¦* ¦ take ¦ r « u > nuM ~ w n m up w m * r by — ^ i
is an a account remarkabl of y the interesting weapons contribution of mankind . . Navi This - ! ¦ k gation ^ -Wm /» M ^ * J * under ^>» JL . A ^^« ^^ Jfci A its M / W * J * primitive W ^ * »« - * •/ » W ^^ conditions ^/^ AkV ^ Ji ^^*^^»*» -r is « . Par the V ** V' rw sub — -
ject personal of a ornaments well-condensed , the des preparation cription . Clothing of food , , | , basketworkpotteryand other industrial ioi occu- j
pations ua . on . c 3 i / - * wux are so , , putioi skilfull ^ , , y broug uwidi ht under luuuoi the / i reader v »^^ « ' s i ; attention that the interest rarely flags . '
From the same .- ^ 'The Gospel of Suffering * is a book frothe of MraColin Or f-
new uaw u \ . njn . aiviu m . luu pen pou ui juturo . . kjvliu . V 4 . . Camp v ^» u « jf bell , author of ' Daily Prayers for Busy Homes '
and other devotional books . ^^
6i 4 The Publishers' Circular Jy&Ifcilni...
6 i 4 The Publishers' Circular Jy & ifcilNis
-
-
Citation
-
Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), June 15, 1886, page 614, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_15061886/page/20/
-