Page:Christopher Wren--the wages of virtue.djvu/337

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ALSO BY CAPTAIN P. C. WREN


BEAU GESTE


"Well-told, absorbing romance."—Morning Post.

"A story of rare quality from every point of view."—Daily Telegraph.

"Told with rare skill and delicacy."—Westminster Gazette.

"A most stimulating, and at times hair-raising, story of adventure."—Daily Graphic.

"Very exciting reading."—Spectator.

"A spanking yarn, brimming with high spirits and vitality."—The New Statesman.

"His Algerian pen-pictures are quite unusually forceful and descriptive."—The Field.

"Unquestionably a great story."—Truth.

"Should find a big public."—The Graphic.

"The best kind of wholesome romance and the best of all its author's books. A splendid story very splendidly told."—T.P.'s and Cassell's Weekly.

"A wonderfully vivid and enthralling piece of work."—John o' London's Weekly.

"If you want romance of the healthiest kind, 'Beau Geste' will give it you."—Bystander.

"A really stirring and romantic story."—Queen.

"One of the best and strangest adventure stories of recent years."—The Gentlewoman.

"One of the most exciting stories we have read for many a long day—ingenious and thrilling."—Guardian.

"A story to stir the pulses: a vivid picture."—Christian World.

"Its swift popularity is well deserved; it is a novel of high quality."—Oxford Chronicle.

"Deserves every whit of the success which it is now attaining."—Manchester Guardian.

"One of the very best novels that we have read for a very long time."—Western Mail.

"A thrilling story; a really well-written thrill, cleverly lightened by some good humour."—Newcastle Chronicle.

"A story of thrilling adventure and mystery in a superlative degree."—Glasgow Evening News.


Sixth Large Edition. 7s. 6d. net.



JOHN MURRAY, Albemarle Street, LONDON, W.l