Elizabeth Fry (Pitman 1884)/Adverts

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Crown 8vo.3s. 6d. each Volume.


EMINENT WOMEN SERIES.

Edited by John H. Ingram.



VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED:—

George Eliot. By Mathilde Blind.

Emily Brontë. By A. Mary F. Robinson.

George Sand. By Bertha Thomas.

Mary Lamb. By Anne Gilchrist.

Maria Edgeworth. By Helen Zimmern.

Margaret Fuller. By Julia Ward Howe.

Elizabeth Fry. By Mrs. E. R. Pitman.



VOLUMES IN THE PRESS:—

Countess of Albany. By Vernon Lee.

Harriet Martineau. By Mrs. F. Miller.

Susannah Wesley. By Mrs. Eliza Clarke.

Eminent Women Series.

OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.

George Eliot.By Mathilde Blind.

"Miss Blind's book is a most excellent and careful study of a great genius."—Vanity Fair.

"No page of this interesting monograph should be skipped."—Graphic.

"Nothing is more needed in the present day than short treatises on great writers like these. Miss Blind has spared no pains to make a coherent and attractive narrative, and has succeeded in presenting us with a complete biography; interspersing her account with incisive criticisms."—British Quarterly Review.


"Miss Robinson makes the biographical part of her book of extreme interest, while her criticism of her author is just, searching, and brilliant."—Truth.

"In the volume before us we have a critical biography of the author of 'Wuthering Heights,' and presenting to the mind's eye a clear and definite conception of the truest and most unalloyed genius this country has produced. What Mrs. Gaskell did for Charlotte Bronte, Miss Robinson has with equal grace and sympathy done for her younger sister."—Manchester Courier.

"Emily Brontë is lovingly and faithfully presented both as a woman and as a writer, and the volume is one for which all lovers of literature will thank Miss Robinson, and the Editor who persuaded her to perform the task."—Derby Mercury.


"Miss Thomas' book is well written and fairly complete; she is well intentioned, always fair, and her book deserves decided recommendation as an introduction to its subject."—Athenæum.

"In this unpretending volume general readers will find all that they need to know about the life and writings of George Sand. Miss Thomas has accomplished a rather difficult task with great adroitness."—St. James' Gazette.

"A life of George Sand written carefully and with adequate knowledge, must, and doubtless will, be of interest to many readers, and this little book shows both care and knowledge."—Vanity Fair.

"Mrs. Gilchrist's 'Mary Lamb' is a painstaking cultivated sketch, written with knowledge and feeling."—Pall Mall Gazette.

"To her task of recording this life, Mrs. Gilchrist has evidently brought wide reading and accurate knowledge. She is to be congratulated on the clearness and interest of her narrative, on the success with which she has placed before us one of the gentlest and most pathetic figures of English literature."—Academy.

"A thoroughly delightful volume, lovingly sympathetic in its portraiture, and charged with much new and interesting matter."—Harpers' Magazine.

"To all persons who enjoy a narrative of private life, and to all who desire a greater intimacy than they have hitherto enjoyed with Elia and Bridget, we cordially recommend Mrs. Gilchrist's 'Mary Lamb.'"—Vanity Fair.


"A very pleasing resume of the life and works of our gifted countrywoman."—Freeman's Journal.

"An interesting biography."—Echo.

"Miss Zimmern is the first to tell the story as a whole for English readers, and the way in which she describes the Irish home, the literary partnership of eccentric father and obedient daughter, the visit to France, and Miss Edgeworth's sight of certain French celebrities including Madame de Genlis, is full of liveliness."—Pall Mall Gazette.


"A very fresh and engaging piece of biography, and a worthy addition to Mr. Ingram's carefully-selected and well-edited series."—Freeman's Jonrnal.

"Well worthy of association with its popular predecessors, and among the new books that should be read."—Derby Mercury.

Just Published.Price 7s. 6d.

TROPICAL TRIALS.

A Hand-book for Women in the Tropics.

BY

MAJOR S. LEIGH HUNT,

Madras Army,

AND

ALEXANDER S. KENNY, M.R.C.S.E., A.K.C.,

Demonstrator of Anatomy at King's College, London,
Author of "The Tissues and their Structure," and Joint Author with Major S. Leigh Hunt of "On Duty under a Tropical Sun."


CONTENTS.

Introductory: Clothing and Outfit.—Hints on Travelling by Land and by Water.—General Remarks on Diet.—Hints on Domestic Economy; on the Maintenance of Health and the Treatment of Simple Maladies; on the Management and Rearing of Children.


"Every page contains sound common-sense and useful information and all that is laid before the reader is introduced in simple, unaffected language, free from sentiment and trivial padding."—Homeward Mail.

"We cannot imagine a more genuinely useful gift than this handsome volume to any woman likely to be exposed to the many dangers of the tropics."—Daily Telegraph.

"Of the many books and pamphlets that have dealt with the subject of travels in the tropics, none that we have ever seen approach in practical value this handbook, which deserves to be accepted as the standard authority to all who may be led to travel or dwell in China, India, Australia, &c."—Morning Advertiser.

"A very useful volume to any lady about to visit any tropical country."—Vanity Fair.

"We can confidently recommend it to every lady, married or unmarried, who is called upon to exchange an English or American home for one in the tropics."—Life.

"No one can do better than follow to the letter the reasonable counsels of the two authors, military and medical, of this sensible and much needed work."—Whitehall Review.

"After a very careful examination of the volume, we have no hesitation in recommending it as one which will be found thoroughly useful and trustworthy."—Calcutta Englishman.